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-p Ellerbe tfaron * J ^ BRYAN JC Senior AU-Ameriean and Olympian 1 wound up to throw her 201b. weight, up at 71' 3 1/4" to set the America] already had set at a previous meet. STAFF REPORTS 1 The University of South Carolina's track and field teams hosted the Carolina Indoor Open today in the Indoor Facility, j The men's team is ranked No. 3 and ( the women's team is tied for No. 5. RELIGIOUS / Tues. 18 12:30-12:45pm 7:00 pm Wed. 19 12:30-12:45pm Thurs. 20 12:30-12:45pm Fri. 21 12:30-1:30pm Sat. 22 2:00-8:30pm Sun. 23 2:00-8:30pm Mon. 24 12:30-12:45pm Tues. 25 7:30am 8:45-9:45am 12:30-12:45pm Sponsored by Carolii Office of the President,! For more /^TTT TVT cm ci Veterans t Mei 27:5 BAB nuu ? weight reco Senior of Ail-American G; Dawn Ellerbe cte broke her own 1/: American record in the 201b. la weight throw. "E m Her toss of 71' 3 pr 1/2 is also the w! ,s ? unofficial World th 0 * record. Ellerbe m became the only athlete in the fii ? A - country to throw L over 70'in the wi M event. wi In the shot put, Ellerbe th finished second with an NCAA w; Indoor Championship be automatic wi qualifying mark of 53' 3 1/2 N Her throw was rn a personal best th by two feet. ai A 1 1 American Lisa of M i s i p e k a th hnston the gamecock finishec| second in lawn Ellerbe gets in the 201b. This throw ended weight with a a 1 a record that she toss of 64' 3 1 1/47 Crystal ar Brownlee gave a the Lady Gamecocks a sweep of the tl svent with at third place toss of 58' 2 1/2"/ tl Brownlee, an Ail-American and NCAA Indoor Championship automatic tl qualifier in the shot put and the weight, won the shot put on a personal best toss L AWARENESS D February 18-25 Mid-day Prayer in the Muslim Russell House, Room 303. "God In Three Acts." A one-n of religious and moral themes heart. Norman Dietz. Rutled Mid-day Prayer in the Hindu t Russell House, Room 303. Mid-day Prayer in the Orthod( Russell House, Room 303. "Spiritual and Healing." Lunc and staff, Thomas More Cent (Lunch $2. Call number below for resei Partners in Dialogue. "The Jc Wholeness: Interfaith Efforts 1 Gambrell Hall Auditorium. Partners in Dialogue (continui I Mid-day Prayer in the Jewish Russell House, Room 303. President's Interfaith Prayer E Russell House Ballroom. (Tickets $2 available at Russell HOuse Ir "God Goes to College: Religic Education." Dr. William Willirr Duke Universtiy, Russell Hout Mid-day Prayer in the Baha'i t Russell House, Room 303. na Chaplains' Association, US< Student Affairs, Department of Partners in Dialogue information call 799-7363 or 7 IVTA CI lonor Soci eting: 18-97 supm uilding im 801 SPO. rd distance '55' 4 3/4". Mispeka gave the Lady amecocks their second sweep of the ly with a personal best throw of 52" 5 2". "Today was a warm-up for a our dies," throws coach Larry Judge said. Iverybody throws well today, and this spares us for the SEC Championships, here our goals will be to sweep all of e throwing events." Senior Deanna Smith won the 400 eters with a time of 1:00.02. Two freshmen picked up first place fished for the Lady Gamecocks. Joyce Poebles won the 800 meters ith a time of 2:27.12 ancTRodena Banon the 55 meters with a time of 7.11. Rhody Williams finished third in e 55 meters with at time of 7.21. Williams won the 55 meter hurdles ith a time if 8.32. Kevin Mannon and Ryan Harrison >th set personal bests in the 351b. sight throw. Mannon won the event with an CAA Championships automatic lalifying toss of 68' 8 1/2". Mannon is e only athlete in the country with an itomatic qualifying mark. Harrison finished second with a toss 67' 3 1/4". Mannon and Harrison's rows give them the two best throws the country this year. olew urnn nV?r\4- nnl xinfL IVXClllllV/ll C410V VYU1I U1C OllUL {JUL Wltli toss of 63'. Brad Snyder was seconds at 61' 3". id Jeff Shalayda finished third with personal best toss of 60' 8 1/2" to give le Gamecocks a sweep of the event. Ail-American Corey Bridges won le 55 meter dash with a time of 6.29. Jamall Williams finished second in le event with at time of 6.41. freshman Pat Tvarunas and Micheal amier finished 1-2 in the pole vault AYS AT USC tradition. lan dramatic presentation ; to expand the spirit and ge Chapel radition. dx Christian tradition. h and program for faculty er. rvations) )urney Towards :o Overcome Racism," Bd) tradition Ireakfast iformation Desk) >n and Values in Higher ion, Dean of the Chapel, se Theatre. radition 2 Inter-faith Council Religious Studies, and 99-3854 r I RTS Arkansas con momentum 1 LARRY WILLIAMS Senior Writer It continues to get bigger for the University of South Carolina men's basketball team. After losing to Georgia and rebounding with a stirring 97-83 victory at No. 8 Cincinnati during last week's two-game road trip, the Gamecocks (18-6,11-1 SEC) will be looking to win for the 14th time in 15 tries when they take on the Arkansas Razorbacks (14-8,75 SEC) Tuesday. The game, which has a 9:30 p.m. start, is being televised nationally by ESPN. USC will be hoping to end a five-game losing streak to the Razorbacks. With their 77-74 loss to Georgia Feb. 12 ? one that halted their winning streak at 12 ? the Gamecocks' lead over Kentucky in the SEC East was reduced to oneand-a-half games. With the Wildcats' 85-56 win ? over Florida Saturday, USC's lead 1 was reduced to one game. 1 In the their dramatic win over ( the Bearcats Saturday, the t Gamecocks blistered the nets for a t school-record 15 3-pointers. Senior guard Larry Davis scored a gamehigh 32 points, while sophomore guard BJ McKie scored 25 points. Arkansas defeated the Georgia Bulldogs 78-74 Saturday. Glendon Alexander scored eight points late in the first half, and he and Pat Bradley made seven big free throws in the final 1:04 as Arkansas survived some long-range shooting by Georgia's Derrick Dukes. GVROU ! ^ * Mem] #10j/6 #4 6 ' V-M V? "<Mm It'sA* Mailt QBE SILENT join now ^Bi 3 les to town t( lefore nation; T<U? TJ I 1? 1?J U,, 1K +u? lilts xvcizajiucicivs itsu uy ?u ai> wit? lalf and by 11 with 3:30 to play. But Dukes hit three 3-pointers in he final 2:46 as Georgia (18-6, 7-5 SEC) closed to 76-72 with 48 seconds o play ? the closest the Bulldogs lad been since the opening minute. Nicky Davis, a former Richland Northeast star, missed two free hrows and Ray Harrison made two >f his own to cut it to 76-64 with 35 seconds remaining. Bradley, who lad made 19 straight free throws, nissed one and made the second vith 24 seconds left. Michael Chadwick missed a 3x>inter with less than 10 seconds o play, and Ali Thompson tied up he rebound. The possession error was in Arkansas' favor and Bradley added wo free throws with 5.7 seconds to >lay. The Razorbacks haven't been ible to get on track this season, laving endured losses to Oral loberts, Florida, and Ole Miss twice). When the Razorbacks raveled to Cincinnati Jan. 18 to ake on the Bearcats, they were throttled 92-57. On Jan. 26, they were beaten at home 83-73 by Kentucky. Offensively, the Razorbacks can present problems for USC. Their 82.1 points per game average ranks second in the SEC behind Kentucky. Their 46.3 field goal percentage is also second to the Wildcats. Defensively, Arkansas is struggling, ranking 11th in the SEC in scoring defense with a 72 points \AVSARI >rf ' \ % * . . ' '-*? cKle Glendon AI? 2 So. #4 6-5 Fr. llllllll; -,I?i v;. I -2 jWflKp S'SP^8 #2*5-1 (T So One Man. Thirti ^ / 7 ihi us< Feb 13-22 Dray to Routine WOIl Exams Pap smears ^7/ Birth control Affordable heal Evening and Breast exams Joyce B. Wi Board Cortifip Menstrual problems STD C treatment ) stop hoops al television per game clip. Last year when these two teams met at Bud Walton Arena in Fayetteville, the Razorbacks dominated the Gamecocks 81-69. The Razorbacks' Kareem Reid, a 26 percent 3-point shooter coming into the game, nailed three treys in the game's first two minutes as the Razorbacks never trailed. Arkansas, which won its fifthstraight game with the win over the Gamecocks, opened the game on an 8-0 run and led 11-3 after Reid made his.third 3-pointer with just 3:16 gone. USC closed the margin to four at 11-7, but the Razorbacks went on an 18-5 run and led 29-12 after a Darnell Robinson layup at 6:56. USC cut the lead to 11, but Arkansas again led by 17 (41-24) at intermission. The Razorbacks quickly upped the lead to 45-24 after a Sunday Adebayo layup, but Carolina outscored Arkansas 15-5 and closed to within 50-39 at 13:06 on a BJ McKie 3-pointer. That was as close as the Gamecocks would get. McKie tied his career high with 24 points, nailincr R.S trovs while Molvin Watson had 15 points and Larry Davis scored 12. Reid led the Razorbacks with 22 points. NotCS.' Tuesday's game is sold out. USC's next game is Thursday at The Citadel. Tip-off is 7 p.m. KANSAS zander i V I 'MHBB LeeWilso ' i SSHHH L|-SiK LUomen. Comes Back om the War ftFRE C n Hall 777-2551 ien's Health Concept /g Toor Tomorrow Ith care with next day appointments weekend appointments available se Certified Nurse Practitioner d physician protocols and support. 1920 Bull Street !olumbia, SC 29201 Phone 779-4333 - i .