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$5 Million Bu .. ........ ~4 STUDENT UNION BUILDING, photo taken from the rear show building is scheduled for completion by June I at a cost of $1,075,000. What have VICEROYS got that other filter tip cigarettes' havent got? 4.1 THE ANSWER IS 20,000 FILTERS IN EVERY VICEROY TIP Inside every Viceroy tip is a vast network of 20,000 individual filters to filter your smoke over and over again. You get only the full, rich taste of Viceroy's choice to baccos . . . and Viceroys draw so freely. ~di Yes, you get Viceroy's remarkable new tip .. . with 20,000 individual filters .. . plus king-size length for only a penny or two more than cigarettes without filters. WORLD'S LARGEST-SELLING FILTER TIP CIGARETTE N, King-Size ~ ilterip MICE ROY VSROv 4,Only a Penny or Two More than Clgaretes Without Filaer 0] ilding s patio in right foreground. The It is located on Melton Field. Includes C( Of 4 Rising Summer R( GAMECOCK PI Photos by John Foxworth Article by Jack Bass, Managing Editor The University of South Caro lina is currently in the midst of a $5-million-building program. The pictures on this page show four buildings now being con structed on campus whose cost will total over $2% million. Student Union Building The Student Union Building will cost $1,075,000 and is sched uled for completion by June 1, according to Dr. W. H. Patterson, (lean of administration. It is being constructed by M. B. Kahn Con struction Co. of Columbia and was designed by Lyles, Bissett, Car lisle & Wolff of Columbia. It will have a dining room with a seating capacity of over 2,000, bowling alleys, canteen, visitors' lounge, an auditorium, barber shop, beauty shop, offices for student publications, laundry, game room, post office, and is planned to be the center of activ ity for the student body. Meeting rooms will also be provided and a patio is being built in the back. Women's Dormitory The new women's dormitory will cost $450,000 and is scheduled for completion by Feb. 1. Freshman studlents will move in at that time from the Freshman Center and from 1617 Pendleton St., Kirkland Apartments, Dr. Patterson said. The new dorm wvill probably be filled by next fall, Dr. Patterson saidi. Designed by Lockwood Greene architects of Spartanburg, it is being constructed by C. G. Shock iey Construction Co. of Columbia. The new business administration building will cost $590,000 and is scheduled for completion "some time next summer," Dr. Patter son said. It will house all branches of the School of Business Admini stration which is now scetteredl about the campus in DeSaussure, Hamilton and Harper. The ac 'Temporary ' Will End Ne.i Next summer will mark the end of an era at Car-olina. The "age of temporary buildings" wvill come to a close with the scheduled dlemolishing of tem porary buildings C, E and F. Buildings A, B, D and CG have been torn down in previous years andi these three and the laundry are the only remainders of the "temporary" crowded condlitions that marked the campus upon the close of World War II. The laundry building is also scheduled to be torn down. A neOw laundry will be placed in the student union building. The buildings were constructed in 1946 to help alleviate the overflow of students after the war. Dean of Administration W. H. Patterson said the buildings would be torn down next sum mer. The political science de partment, now quartered in Building C, will be relocated in Harper oll1ee ?rogran Xx1 NEW WOMEN'S DORMITOF school, in background. Freshman in next semester. Cost of the builk onstruction Buildings, novation CTURE STORY counting department, economics department, retailing department, and secretarial science department will all be located in the new building. M. B. Kahn Construction Co. are the contractors and Hopkins, Baker and Gill, architects of Flor ence, are the designers. Men's Dormitory Units The first six units of new men's dormitories, which will house fraturnities, is scheduled for com pletion by Sept. 1 and are being built by George A. Creed Con struction Co. at a cost of $450,000, Dr. Patterson said. Designers are Lafaye, Fair and Lafaye of Co lumbia. Either six or seven additional units will be built with bids being offered Jan. 20, Dr. Patterson said. The number depends on funds available, he said. Bids on an ex tension to the engineering lab ad jacent to Steward's Hall will also be offered Jan. 20. Still in the planning stage is a fine arts building which is tenta tively planned to be located in the university aboretum. Dr. Patter son pointed out the aboretum would not be destroyed but that an "art garden" would be main tained wvith much of the present flora remaining. The fine arts building has not yet been approved by the board of trustees, but lDr. Patterson indicatedt that approval wvas expectedl in the necar future andl that construction would prob ably begin sometime in the spring. Summer Renovation Dr. Patterson also announced that Davis, Harper and DeSaus sure Colleges would he renovated during the summer. The last of the 10 tempor-ary buildings built in 1946 will also be demolished this summer, he saidl. The p)olitical science dlepart ment, now in Building C, will be movedl to Hlarper and the depart ment of foreign languages will be- located in DeSaussure next fall. T uildings Age et Summer The psychology and philosophy were among the early occupants of Building C. The school of journalism was once stationed in Building C with hardly more than "a single room with a closet," a far cry from the present school of journalism in Legare which went under an extensive $75,000 renovation last summer. The offices of both the Garnet and Black and The Gamecock were at one time located in one of the temporary buildings which didn't even have the dignity of an alphabetical dlistinction, just "student publi cations building." While Building C is probably the most illustrious of the re maining temporary quarters, E and F are both still in use. Building E ia the music building (itn.d o.. ..e n) Is Well Under Way tY is nearing completion. Photo taken fron Bull Street shows dome of Petigru College, university law students now living in freshman center aisd Kirkland Apartments (1617 Pendleton) are scheduled to move ing, including all furnishings. is $450,000. IN I.' w,:"l NEW SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION is getting its foundation laid by workmen. This building will be located across Bull Street front the west wing of Sinis dormitory. It is scheduled for com pletion next summer at a cost of $590,000. including all fixtures. FIRS SI U N TS o ne me 's d rmi ori s th t wll ouse fra ernties are beg nnin to tak s. Th as ph o o ta en ro m orn r o S u m er nd B oss m S reet . T ese nit ar sch d ul d f o co .e to,. curen\pan. FIRT SIX UnITSe of Wne m s orhiies eecti hand faritiebginn otaesa boro, sphooreaken from coe of Sutcran Blosomnaturet an ytheeuisaeshdldfrcmlto tohcracy, plas.aaddtea-vr eposbltenurd a nual Phi Beta Kappa Scholarship not be confused with all that we for making the highest academic can call euain"D.Aii record (luring the freshman year said. elctin"D.Aii e~.iiitdwr oehW at ('arolina at a rcoent meeting "We can not assume that the Grnr ila .Snes of the chapter. R. W. Morrison, edlucatedl man is a scholar becauseLoieEzathWt,Cars president of the university chap- all scholars must he educated D a'et oehB enls ter, presented the award, men." :ladL.SihanlRxfod. Drm. J. M. Ariail, professor of "Education is andl should be aler English at Columbia College, ad- democratic in the sense that all Ohrmmeso s h n dressed the Phi Beta Kappameaefreadeuliopr-lde lie Wit,Lrta shapter on the subject "Spirit andtniytobant,ndtenyAam.JieBlr,uyMc [deals of Phi Beta Kappa." HeitacrigtthicaaiybuKea,To MCary al stressed that true scholarship lies i sagf hc olgsaieRda,EiaehSudvn,Bl in detecting the significance be- oycnefc yeatet"Bshf,adD.Eln esn hind each fact, in relating the D)r. Ariail statedl.avsr racts to each other andi integrating Miss Snowden, who received the Ofcr r urtaAa. all knowledge with life itself $100 award, is a member of theprsdn;TmM afr, c The meeting in the Law School university "Y." Westminster Fel- peiet ar ht,sceay Auditorium was the observance of ilowship, the American Pharmaceu- tesrr uyMKla,pb the 178th anniversary of the tical Association, Delta Delta lct himn n ai ulr rounding of the national scholar- Delta social fraternity and Co-edchimnoterfehet o Pspfaeriysocain i ChI itite