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Entries for the EVENTS! calendar may be submitted to The Gamecock on the third floor of the Russell House. There is a box in the newsroom designated for event entries. *y| i \yilliam Zehfiiss will perform a trombone iVlOnQay recital assisted by Winifred Goodwin, Christopher Mm Banks and members of the Charleston Symphony U Orchestra trombone section at 7:30 p.m. in the School of Music. "Origins of Hysteria: Myths of Menopause" will be held at 6:30 pjn. in the Collie of Nursing Room 508. Harry Blackstone, star of magic and illusion, will perform at 7:30 pjn. in the Carolina Coliseum. Sierra Student Coalition, 7 p.m., RH 203 Fraternity Council, 4:30 p.m. Peer Conduct Board, 7:30 p.m., RH 303 Homecoming Commission, 6:30 p.m., RH 348 Sorority Council, 5 p.m. Into the Streets, 8 p.m., Preston Seminar Room rp 1 Ellen Bass will speak as part of The Clothesline 1 lieSday Project at 7 p.m. in Gambrell 153. mmM The Clothesline Project will be on display ^ from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Greene Street. "Women Building Communities: A Pictorial Look at the Past" will be held at 7 p.m. in the Preston Seminar Room. Harry Blackstone, star of magic and illusion, will perform at 7:30 pjn. in the Carolina Coliseum AAAS, 6 p.m., RH Theater Bodybuilding & Fitness Club, 7 p.m., Blatt 135 Fencing Club, 8 p.m., Blatt 308 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 Literary Roundtable, 8 p.m., RH 201 Carolina Cares, 7 p.m., RH 201 Hillel, 7 p.m., RH 203 Young Democrats, 7 p.m., RH 305 Wpr] n pop! qV The Clothesline Project will be on display YYCUIICSUdJ from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Greene Street. "Spirals of Light," a recital in honor of Women's wHistory Month, will feature music of composer B B Meira Maxine Warshauer, a USC graduate, and the poetry ol Anne Tutzman at 7:30 p.m. in the School of Music recital hall. Art professor Carol Pittman will talk about the portrayal of women in art for "Goddesses, Heroines and Women in Art" at McKissick Museum. The Academic Skills Program will present "Time Management" from 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. in Leconte Room 115. Leadership Team, 4:15 p.m. Campus Judicial Board, 4 p.m., Witten Room Student Government Senate, 5 p.m., RH Theater Scuba Club, 6 p.m., Blatt 135 PALM Ministries, Body & Soul, 5:30 p.m., 728 Pickens St. Intervarsity Chapter Prayer, 7:15 a.m., RH 315 Women Student's Association, 8 p.m., RH American Marketing Associations, 8:30 p.m., BA 002 Fellowship of Christian Athletes, 9:15 p.m. Bisexual, Gay, Lesbian Association, 8 p.m., BA450 Carolina Productions Concerts, 7 p.m., RH Witten Room Carolina for Kids, 8:30 p.m., RH 302 College Republicans, 7:30 p.m., Gambrell 250 International Students Association, every other week Mountaineering and White Water Club, 7:30 p.m., RH 303 ? t Q.on ^ v utuuciit ucgisiatuic, u.uu jj.iii., uainui en Hall 151 Habitat for Humanity, 7:30 p.m., RH 205 rp, j The Clothesline Project will be on display 1 hursday from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Greene Street. "Women's Health: Caring, Curing and Community" will be held at 7:30 pm. in the College A of Business Administration Room 005. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m, RH322 BSU, Heart to Heart, 7 pan., Baptist Student Center Undergraduate ACS, 5 p.m. Campus Crusade for Christ, Prime Time, 7:30 p.m., Callcott 15 Fencing Club, 6 p.m., Blatt 308 Saturday Round Table Gaming Society, 12 p.m., Leconte 112 ' ^ W M Carolina Productions, 8 p.m., RH Theater mi Z7 Sunday A faculty performance at the School of Music will feature Constance Lane on flute and Vonda Darr on harp at 4 p.m. in the recital hall. A V V PALM Campus Ministry, Worship and Dinner, 5:30 p.m., 728 Pickens St. Cabinet, 6 p.m., Witten Rm. . *?, IAndrocles and the Lion takes stage t George Bernard Shaw's touching t early Christianity will run throue Performances are 8 p.m. Tuesday thro and 3 p.m. Sundays. Tickets cost $10 fi public, $8 for senior citizens, military and staff, and $6 for students. Call information. USC offers trip to explore Peru Explore the Amazon Jungle, the the Incas" and remote Andean villages day archaeological expedition to Pei June 14. The cost of the trip is $3,560 airfare from Miami, hotel and lodge aco most meals, excursions, ground tra transfers and archaeological permits, to register is March 28. For more info Florida court COLLEGE PRESS EXCHANGE TALLAHASSEE, Fla.? The Florida Supreme Court Thursday upheld the death sentences of Danny Rolling, convicted for the macabre 1990 serial murders of five college students that sent panic through the University of Florida. Rolling, who pleaded guilty to the murders on the first day of his 1991 trial, faces death in Florida's electric chair for a four-day killing spree that left four women and a man dead and led to a frenzied search for their killer. The crimes were among the most brutal in Florida history. Three victims were raped, one was beheaded and police said the killer had bound and gagged some of his victims and described how he planned to torture them. Rolling's attorneys argued to the state high court that the trial should have I 1^* MI (D^ T H B SSSSSBiamsmm | CHI PI Veterans J: Me 2 7"' f < BAE Roc 777-8170. it Longstreet Rape Crisis Network recruits volunteer ale set during advocates h March 29. Volunteer advocates respond to crisis calls on ugh Saturday the Network's 24-hour hotline. They also meet and sr the general support child and adult victims of sexual assault , USC faculty while the survivors undergo medical examinations. 777-9353 for at all area hospitals. Training is 26 hours and is scheduled for April 5, April 6, April 12 and April 13. Advocates must be at least 18 years old and have access to transportation. The Network encourages "Lost City of women and men of all races, religions and socioj during a 15- economic backgrounds to become advocates. Call ru May 31 to 252-8393 or 252-8394 for information, and includes nmmodations, USC organizations sponsor Organ Donor asportation, Awareness Days The deadline Freshman honor society Alpha Lambda Delta, rmation, call and the Bodybuilding and Fitness Club and the upholds death sentenc been moved from Gainesville, site of the attacked Powell, sexuall] University of Florida, because it was and stabbed her to death, impossible to find jurors who had not After the killings, Rol heard of the case. bodies and arranged t After striking down each argument apartment, posing them in Rolling's appeal, the high court took apparently intended to sh the unusual step of reiterating its support discovered them. In one for the death penalty in each of the woman's severed head wa slayings. stereo turntable, according "Our review of the entire record in reports, this case shows that death is the Two days later, Rolling appropriate sentence in each of these lying in wait for Christa H brutal murders and is not disproportionate killed shortly before noor given the facts of this case," the court sexually abused. Her body, t concluded in a 19-page ruling. after she died. Rolling, a career criminal and the A day later, Rolling br son of a retired Shreveport, La., police apartment of college stui officer, began the killing spree in the Paules and Manuel Tab early morning hours of Aug. 24,1990, stabbing Taboada to det when he broke into the apartment of stalked, raped and killed F students Sonva Larson and Christina Dosiner her hodv. Powell. The killing spree creatt After stabbing Larson to death, Rolling the University of Florit Your congt personal ste wusc 9< FTI * A X M I Repres and skir you war nVTIV7vTV|T7YX.ll I famous mil I IH l I jlllHI Allun Get sc CallR 14f further iLTA CHI lonor Society | eting: 18-97 30Dm luiiding I im 801 _?^ I South Carolina Organ Procurement Agency sponsor Organ Donor Awareness Days March 26-27. The campaign is designed to educate the community and campus about the need for organs in S.C. Those interested can sign-up to be an organ donor at a information table from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. March 26 I and 27 in front of the Russell House on Greene Street Assistive Technology EXPO features equipment for disabled people Assistive Technology, equipement used to heb people with disablitlies function in their daily lives, will be available for demonstration and review at the fourth annual Assistive Technology EXPO March 25-26 at Dutch Square Mall. The South Carolina Department of Education, the S.C. Division of Early Childhood and the Disabilities Collaborative, the USC Center for Developmental Disabilities and the t S.C. Assistive Technology Project For more information call S.C. Services Information System at 935-5300 ;es for serial killer i abused her Hundreds of students left the school. Others took to carrying mace and other < ling took the weapons. hem in the At a Gainesville news conference, in positions State Attorney Rod Smith said he was ock whoever pleased the court had affirmed the derision i instance a to hold Rolling's trial in the town where s placed on a the murders took place, to published "It was a strategy on Rolling's part to be tried in Gainesville and then killed again, complain about it later," Smith said. oyt, wno was a statement trom the victims' families i after being said they were frustrated the case had oo, was posed taken three years to get to this point but happy "that Rolling is moving closer to oke into the his execution." dents Tracy "You never have complete closure, oada. After you always miss your children," said ith, Rolling Anna Hoyt, mother of victim Christa 'aules, again Hoyt. "We don't get an appeal. There's not id a panic at a day goes by that I don't think about la campus. Christa." . . 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