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2 DATEBOOK Entries for the Datebook may b submitted to The Gamecock on th third floor of the Russell Houst There is a box designated for th Datebook in the newsroom. The Judicial Board will meet a 3:30 p.m. today in RH 322. The Japanese club will meet a 7 p.m. Thursday in Gambrell Hal Lobby. Wednesdays PALM Campus Ministry, din ner and program, 5:30 p.m., 72* Pickens St. Student National Pharma ceutical Association, first and thirc Wednesdays of each month, 5:3C p.m., Coker Life Sciences Building Lounge. For more information, call 544-0899 and ask for Sonia. Young Democrats, 7 p.m., RH 315 Student Government Senate, 5 p.m., RH Theater Women Students' Association, 6 p.m., RH 203 Carolina Productions Marketing Committee, 6 p.m., RH 201 Carolina Productions Black Cultural Commission, 7 p.m., RH 348 College Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Gambrell 250. For information, call their voice mail at 343-7194 The Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Association, 8 p.m., ?A room 364 Test-Taking Strategies, noon -1 p.m., Towers Conference Room and Russell House 303 Thursdays Habitat for Humanity, 5:30 p.m., RH 205 Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30-9 p.m, RH 315 Baptist Student Union: Heart to Heart, 7 p.m., BSU Center Campus Crusade for Christ "Prime Time," 7:30 p.m., Calcott 15 Carolina Productions Homecoming Commission, 7 p.m., RH 201. Contact Lori Toland for information. Sundays PALM Campus Ministry, worCock-a-doodle, you. ? j Qualit) Bicycle Anti-T From 1 The e ship and dinner, 5:30 p.m., 728 Picke ens St. 5. Student Government Execue tive Cabinet, 6 p.m., Witten Room Sorority Christian Fellowship, 7:30-9 p.m. in the basement of the t South Tower. For information, call 779-7173 T).11? r\' r?i * ' - oanroom uance uiud, 4-0 t p.m., Blatt PE Center 107 i Mondays Carolina Productions Concerts Commission, 7:30 p.m., RH 201 Model United Nations Club, 1 8:30 p.m., RH 302 Alpha Phi Alpha Service Table, ' 11 a.m.- 2 p.m., Greene Street Sorority Council, 5 p.m., RH Theater Fraternity Council, 4:30 p.m. Carolina Productions Traditional Events Commission, 6 p.m., RH 309 Carolina Productions Performing Arts Commission, 6:30 p.m., RH 201 Carolina Productions Special Programs Commission, 7 p.m., RH 348 Student Nurses Association, last Monday of every month, 1:15 2:15 p.m., College of Nursing room 125 Tuesdays Newman Club, 7 p.m., St. Thomas More Center. Hillel, 7:30 p.m., RH 315. Contact 544-0607 for more information sap.1t. aii.vj r? ? K/4AVIU \wiUULlibO XV1X1CU 1UI a Greener Earth), 7-8 p.m., RH 302 Dissertation Writing Support Group, 3:30 - 5 p.m., the Counseling and Human Development Center, 900 Assembly St., room 212 or call 777-5223 Association of African American Students, 6 p.m. P.E.E.R.S. meeting, every other week, RH 315 Carolina Productions Ideas and Issues Commission, 7:30 p.m., RH Witten room Carolina Productions Cinematic Arts Commission, 7 p.m., RH 201 RHA Senate at 7 p.m., RH 322. Read The Gamecock. / 'BIKE CLUB I J IUNKJI heft Protecti "he Makers c i Gamecock "[ Judicial Boai Meeting a new roommate is a strange and exciting experience. For Mike and John, it was no different. Like most incoming freshmen, orientation began on the phone. The two boys spoke and it seemed as though they had been twins separated at birth, sharing interests in everything from movies to cars. Little did they know, sharing would take on a new meaning in the coming months. Late in the semester, it was reported to Mike, that John had been secretly seeing his girlfriend. Angered, Mike jumped in his car and drove to resolve Jury will heai by Jordan's a< Associated Press LUMBERTON, N.C. ?A judge says jurors can hear statements Daniel Andre Green, who is charged with killing Michael Jordan's father, allegedly made to another jail inmate. Green's lawyers argued at a hearing earlier this month that the statements unfairly prejudiced their client, who has pleaded innocent to first-degree murder. The ruling was entered Tuesday by Superior Court Judge Gregory Weeks. No trial date has been set. Green, 20, who has legally changed his name to Lord Dannayaal As-Saddiq Al-Amin Salaam LPAllah, was charged by authorities along with Larry Demery in August 1993 in the death of James Jordan, whose body was found in a South Carolina swamp. Demery has pleaded guilty to first- j degree murder and agreed to testify j /^j\ pers [l^\l w HE ANTI-Th ~|L ill . D IMc on K Phone: 803/2561 ^ Wednesday rd describes a the matter, arriving to find John leav ing his girlfriend's residence hall. I As Mike followed shouting profanities, John hurriedly entered his car. . Michael pulled out a gun and fired four shots at the vehicle before running from the scene, witnesses said. Shots SmnshpH thp nasQonfTor "rin. dow, punctured the radiator and cracked wa the rear windshield. John escaped un- wit harmed. era After taking reports from witnesses, USCPD later apprehended Mike at his to 1 girlfriend's dorm room and turned him the over to state law enforcement officers, ed He was then taken to Richland Coun- Wa * statements ccused killer against Green. Green talked to inmate Lamont Howard in the Robeson County jail. District Attorney Johnson Britt said during a hearing earlier this month that Howard knows things known only to investigators and the suspected killer. Howard poses a dilemma for Britt and defense lawyer Woodberry Bowen, who represented Howard in another case. If Howard is called to the witness stand, Bowen could face a conflict of interest in the Green case. The defense motion said Howard also bragged to other inmates that he had been paid $25,000 by the Jordan family to implicate Green. A statement to police by another inmate also will be fair game in the trial, Weeks ruled Tuesday. That statement was made by a federal inmate being housed here who claimed the FBI offered him a plea bargain if he would tes ify against Green, the defense contended ur congenial onai stereo... a a ^ A A . A A ^ r II f f///T/fW^//// JSC 90.5FM I ' ?K??<lS|8f t^S f 3Ml> _IUI\I 1EFT DEVICI <Ju Reg. $; Dim rim HALLO SAi twThrui 6666 Fax: 803/252-0459 , October 25,1995 ssault and 1 ty Detention CenIW* ter, where he was NflCr held on a $20,000 H surety bond and LlAuui charged with assault and battery with intent to kill. A records check revealed that Mike s wanted for his alleged involvement h a drive-by shooting at a Columbia ck house and other assault charges. In addition to state charges and due lis enrollment as a USC student and nature of the crime, Mike also optto come before the Judicial Board, iving his right to appear in person, Sub needs Associated Pres? CHARLESTON ?Two states fight ing for ownership of the lost Confed erate submarine Hunley met wit! the U.S. Navy in Washington t< discuss where its final resting place will be once it is recovered from th< bottom of the ocean. Although no resolution was fi nalized at Tuesday's meeting , U.S Sen. Strom Thurmond said Soutl Carolina and Alabama expressec their positions and concerns on th< fate of the CSS Hunley, the first sub marine to sink a warship. A search team announced earli er this year that it had discovere< the location of the sub outside Charleston, which disappeared aftei sinking a Union frigate Feb. 17,1864 However, the suspected location ol the Hunley has not been released foi security reasons. "Thfl TTnnlov ie on inowJIVilv im ***v AAVUiiVJ Ull U1V1 CVUU1J nilportant piece of naval, military and Southern histoiy, and it is vital that it is brought up from the ocean floor in the immediate future," Thurmond, R-S.C., said. Because the submarine was built in Mobile, Ala., officials there also have pushed to have sent there. Republican state Sen. Glenn McConnell, chairman of the South Carolina commission, said the sub beScoring p< in the pa Irl>i inn E FOR BIC St J93 29.95 v Our IVEEA LE OCT. 3 CI Phone: 803/777-4160 mattery case he was represented by attorneys. Declaring Mike's unrestricted presence a threat to his as well as the safety of other students, the Board moved for immediate suspension. According to the university's summary suspension policy, anyone suspended is expressly prohibited from returning to campus or to make personal or telephone contact with any student, faculty or staff member. This is a sample case that came before the Judicial Board to give students and idea of what the judicial discipline process is like. There is no absolute punishments for an infraction. final home longs in South Carolina. "The boat was home-ported in . Charleston, it operated out of ! Charleston, and it's part of South j Carolina heritage," he said. ; McConnell also wants the nine } Confederate soldiers who went down with the submarine buried in Charleston. "Frankly, I think they need to go j to Magnolia Cemetery to join the I crews of the other Hunleys," he said. ? Other crew members perished during testing of the sub and are buried at Magnolia Cemetery. McConnell said Monday a private \ corporation has offered to fund the > recovery of the Hunley. He declined to identify the corporation, but said a representative f had made the offer to a "substantial" . member of state government. "All they want is some credit for having participated in the project," McConnell [ said. The cost to pull the submarine from the ocean off Sullivan's Island has been estimated at $300,000, McConnell said. HPU 4.^4.- n 1?X J n A 1 me state ouuget ana U-oniroi Board approved $40,000 Tuesday to ascertain the coordinates of the submarine for itself. Board members said the money might not be necessary if McConnell can get private funds. >!nts f? int ^mec?c^^{ts YCLES! I 1st Fax: 803/777-8673 j v *