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State CE From Page 1 Brunton said there is a limit to the number of educational facilities a state can support. South Carolina lagged behind and is now catching up, so it is hard to evaluate the end, he said. "The STATE may be right," said Brunton. South Carolina may have reached the point where no additional schools are needed, and care should be taken about expansions. Brun ton said some combinations may be desirable in the future. The conversion of regional campuses to four-year colleges would not hurt USC, said Brun TV MU| CEN' Selling & Servicing Zenith Products Featuring Our Own Service Departmi turns C Hi-Fi Eqi You will, too, when you hear this excit ing collection of receivers, speakers, tuners, amplifiers, tape decks, turn tables and headsets - all from Pioneer. FREE! Come in for a Pioneer demonstra- X tion and receive a giant full color poster of Blood, Sweat & Tears. Authorized Servic Products. Open il I 2714 nEImE ST. itching. U ton, but it would affect USC and other schools. These newly developed campuses would remove regional transfers from the main campus, President Jones said; however, the graduate students from these schools would come into the USC system as would other graduate students. Brunton said the specialized students would transfer to larger univer sities. Brunton pointed out that a small school, such as these cam puses, can have the library, equipment and resources, that are available at larger colleges and universities. & MIc [ER at the Same Location for 17 Years. mnt for Your Convenience n with VEER' aipment e for Pioneer PM Fridays. PH. 256.0541 p With F President Jones said these campuses would not have the "broad offerings of USC." These schools would offer busi ness adminstration, education, and basically, liberal arts courses. The USC president said these expanded regional campuses would be the "road to USC graduate school" for the Black Soro, The first black sorority at the University has groWvn out of the black community on campus to meet the needs of its women, and a second group will soon materialize. Angela Wright, who helped initiate the Iota Chi chapter of Delta Sigma Theta, said the group's pur pose is to form a sisterhood between the black women on campus. She said the sorority, with 17 members, is working with Brothers and Sis ters, a program to prevent juvenile delinquency in the Columbia area, Willow School for Girls and Wilkin son Home for girls. They also plan a joint project with Alpha Kappa Alpha for Central Corrections Institute. AKA, also a traditional black sorority, will soon initiate its first members, according to Cheryl Moore, president of an interest group of women who are pledging LOSE 20 POUNDS IN TWO WEEKS! 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Send only $2.00 ($2.25 for Rush Service) -- cash is O.K. - to Infor mation Sources' Co., P.O. Box 982, Dept. ST. Carpinteria, Calif. 93013. Don't order unless you expect to lose 20 pounds in two weeks! Because that's what the Ski Team Diet will do! Easy To Open Gamecock Charge Account, *100 - Limit) BRITTON S acilities: attending students. Francis Marion College, the former USC-Florence regional campus, is "doing very well," according to Brunton. He said Florence was growing met ropolitan area and there are not many four-year institutions in the Pee Dee area. In fact, Coker at Hartsville, and Francis Mar rities Es tab!i the sorority and who plan to pledge. The interest group consists of 20 women, six of whom will be initiated this semester. Moore said, "On this large South ern white university I see AKA as something that black women of diverse backgrounds can identify with." She said it allows more self awareness and an outlet to project it. "We're so scattered as far as our professions go that we don't get a chance to associate." But she thinks the sorority will help alleviate this by establishing a better rapport with black University women, stu dents at Benedict College and Allen University and members of the Columbia community. The group's major purpose is ser vice, Moore said. They have planned Operation Expedition, a program with the Wilkinson Home for girls, and have brought the girls McGill Scholar Aspiring young Southern newspapermen and women in need of financial assistance to attend the last two years of col lege have until May 1 to apply for Ralph McGill Scholarship Fund grants for the 1973-74 academic year. The Ralph McGill Scholarship Fund was .created to honor the late Ralph Emersot McGill, publisher of The Atlanta Constitution. The Fund's Advisory Com mittee has stipulated that grants will be made in amounts not to exceed $1,500 for a full academic year of college for each recipient. Awards will be based on journalistic interest and aptitude, plus need. Jack W. Tarver, president of The Atlanta Journal and Con stitution and chairman of the Fund's Advisory Committee, said the group agreed that the amount of each grant would be based on the individual's own financial requirements. GAME The Gamecock is published twice w ing the fall and spring semesters with and exam periods. Change of address forms, subscrip should be sent to The Gamecock, Dra Subscription rate is $3 per semeste from the student activity fund entitling Offices of The Gamecock are rooms on the university campus. Telephone and 777-3888, advertising. Second ch Scholof the Arts Robert Ward. Charnce;or INTERNAT IONA L MUS CHAMBER MUSIC * ORCHESTRA *VOCAL ENSEMB USA -ITALY - SWITZERLAND June 17-Augus 18 1973 Brunton ion at Florence are the only four-year colleges in the Pee Dee. Florence extension was the first regional campus to become a four-year college. As The STATE editorial pointed out, South Carolina should tailor its educational system to meet the market. shed to the memorial service for stu dents slain at the Orangeburg Mas sacre and to the performance of No Place To Be Somebody. She said the group would like to take the girls to the circus coming to Columbia, but need donations since their funds cannot facilitate the project. The University Union donated the tickets to No Place To Be Somebody on a trial basis, she said, and the Wesley Foundation has contributed a van for their use. The group will not become a chap ter until next year, according to Moore, mainly because only six members will be on campus. They, along with the Deltas, have been invited to join the Panhellenic Coun cil of sororities on campus, which is waiving any fees this semester. Advisor for the AKAs is Dean Wil lie Harriford, who is also advisor for one of the black fraternities to be established on campus,Alpha Phi. 3hips Available Grants are available to qual ified young men and women whose roots lie in the fourteen Southern states. Tarver said the Advisory Committee also will act as the selection committee. He said applicants must show an "abiding interest" and aptitude for newspaper writing and editing and successful applicants must convince the committee that they are deter mined to make a career of news papering. Other members of the com mittee are: Herbert Davidson, editor and publisher of The Daytona Beach News-Journal; John Popham, managing editor of The Chattanooga Times; Syl van Meyer, editor of The Miami News; and William H. Fields, vice president and executive editor of The Atlanta Journal and Constitution. Application blanks may be obtained from the Ralph McGill Scholarship Fund, Box 4689, Atlanta, Georgia 30302. QOCK eekly on Monday and Thursday dur the exception of university holidays tions requests and other mail items wer A, USC, Columbia, S. C., 29208. r. The Gamecock received $38,000 i full-time students to a subscription. 317, 318 and 319 in Russell House is are 777-4178 and 777-4249, news, mss postage paid at Columbia, S. C. IC PROGRAM LE