University of South Carolina Libraries
Entries for is a box in the newsroom RATEBOOK ! designate for Datebook ] entries. ] The Career Center and the Religious Studies Department will j sponsor a Seminaiy Day on Thursday, from noon til 3 p.m., in Gambrell Hall > Lobby. I Mondays Fraternity Council, 4:30 p.m. Peer Conduct Board, 7:30 p.m., RH303 ! Homecoming Commission, 630 p.m., RH 348 Sorority Council, 5 p.m. 1 Tuesdays AAAS, 6 p.m., RH Theater Bodybuilding & Fitness Club, 7 p.m., Blatt 135 Phi Sigma Pi, 8:30 p.m., ( Nursing 127 Oxfam Carolina, 4 p.m., the * PALM Center, 728 Pickens St. ] Newman Club, 7 p.m., St. Thomas More Center Carolina Cares, 7 p.m., RH 302 I 733 Santee Avenue Five Points 256-7764 http://www. colasc. com/monterre If you are under the age of 21 it is il B(( 23oz. Dc 1 4 ; Hillel, 7 p.m., RH 203 * Young Democrats, 7 p.m. RH 305 Wednesdays _ T _ _ J 1 _ m a i r _ ___ l<eaaersnip ieam, ^:j.o p.m. Campus Judicial Board, 3:30 p.m. Student Government Senate, 5 p.m., RH Theater Amnesty International, 5 p.m., RH302 Scuba Club, 5:30 p.m., Blatt P.E. Center PALM Ministries, Body & Soul, 5:30 p.m., 728 Pickens St. Intervarsity Chapter Prayer, 7:15 a.m., RH 315 Women Student's Association, 3 p.m., RH American Marketing Associations, 8:30 p.m., BA 002 Fellowship of Christian Athletes, 9:15 p.m. BGLA, 8 p.m., BA 436 Into the Streets, 4 p.m., Preston Seminar Room Carolina Productions Concerts, 7 p.m., RH Witten Room Carolina for Kids, 8:30 p.m., du ono LV11 JUL College Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Gambrell 250 International Students Association, every other week, 8:30 p.m., RH 315 Mountaineering and White Water Club, 7:3- p.m., RH 205 Habitat for Humanity, 7 p.m., Gambrell 204. ^ Park Your @#! a if For Monday Live remote and $2.75 Killian's Pii $6.95 Dos Equis j $2.50 Margaritas $1.50 Rolling Roc v iack legal to purchase alcoholic beverages OME OF THE : HRAF v rn^m mm mm >mestic $2.50 Eve RKIBf MBL < POLE continued from page 1 program for the elderly. Clinton and other Democratic candidates have hammered Dole and the Republican Congress for proposing last year to cut $270 billion from future Medicare spending. In radio and television ads, the Democrats are airing audio and video tapes of Dole telling an audience last year that he was among 12 Republicans who opposed Medicare when it was created in 1965. He also says in the clip that he was "proud" of that vote and still believed that the program doesn't work. Dole admitted to the FIU audience that he had, indeed, opposed Medicare when it first came to a vote because he favored an alternative plan, called Elder Care. "But I've supported (Medicare) ever since," he added, retelling how he had promised his late mother that he would always protect her Social Security and Medicare benefits. Dole also pledged to appoint a bipartisan commission to study ways to reform Medicare before the trust fund goes bankrupt Clinton has made a similar proposal. Dble seemed annoyed by the relentless Democratic attacks, complaining that Clinton publicly proclaims that" 'Bob Dole is a decent man, I sort of like Bob Dole,' then he goes out and spends a million dollars saying what a bad guy I am " Classifiei Call 777-1184 t Monterrey Jack's Night Football giveaways with 93.5 its litchers k ROCK 93.5 thE rOck aLterNativE i. All ABC Regulations Enforced. ff&JU T! ryday! [ * ' ? ' ' ; -1 Dole also made a rare appeal to backers of Reform Party candidate Ross Perot, whose ranks have apparently grown in recent days. "He can't win," he said of Perot. "If you. want to beat Bill Clinton, then vote for us.... I can beat one candidate; I can't beat two." In an unabashed appeal to unite Cuban Americans behind him, Dole wound up his speech with a familiar GOP charge: The Democratic presiderit is soft on Fidel Castro. "Bill Clinton is a bigger friend of the Castro regime than he is of the CubanAmerican community," Dole said, to approving cheers. "He's just hoping that the community will listen to his rhetoric and forget about his record." The Republican downplayed Clinton's signing of the so-called Helms-Burton bill because he later delayed implementing a key provision. And he criticized the head of the U.S. Information Agency, a Clinton appointee, for opposing the relocation of Radio Marti to Miami. As he has in recent days, Dole also continued to hit the Clinton campaign for collected contributions from AsianAmericans at such unlikely places as a Buddhist Temple in Los Angeles, where monks take vows of poverty. "I expect sometime before the campaign ends they'll be holding fundraisers in homeless shelters," Dole said. ds work, to advertise. FUI Specializing in ci Ken Dennis, R.C. (803) 561-9818 1900 O CO/ disci ?Z1 /Q service: \v> C f p y 1 f (MM (f ?s\ This is no | Keep MQ Market Research 'ublic Relations Advertising felemarketing dedia Managemenl vSP Ky moving fo I ' , j MIV K I I I Muscular Dystrc TURN 1-800-572 ^4 ? JJ 101^ Jfl USC Students - 20% Off All Processing and Printing One Hour Color Printing I* One Hour Slide Processing I1 B & W Processing || Enlargements I. Duplicate Slides Copy Work Slide Imaging Digital Printing Photo CD Scanning Digital Cameras NATIVE HAIR CLINI LL SERVICE SALOr lstomizing hair coloring uts for your lifestyle. By appointment only 1 Broad River Rd., Suite B100 Hint on all 4 CO/ ?with coupon | Zl /Q > I hoice Is^v V f ' time to turn back. A's lifesaving research rward. iphy Association -1717 20%? w off ; Photo - CD i Scons i 1459 Sumter St. | Across from YMCA C. Kodak an , bmJ?/nt ^STATION I Digital Copu Prints 1 % 5.99 1 i 1459 Sumter St. Across from YMCA_ | 10 i\cosmetology = yp) J ASSOCIATION j MEMBER and unique Beside Lizard's Thicket 2 doors down from Hooters around the back. discount on all products with coupon