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JDampus Guitarist T Christopher Berg, director of the classical guitar studies program at USC, will perform in concert at 8 D.m. March 9 in Gambrell auditorium. Berg, who recently studied under master guitarist and composer Andres Segovia, will present a program of classical music from Spain, Brazil. Venezuela and Mexico. In his debut recital at Gifted Studei A summer enrichment program for gifted and talented students (TAG '82) will be offered this summer i by USC's College of General Studies. Designed to stimulate and enhance the academic abilities of participants, TAG is open to students currently enrolled in grades five to eight. Fifth and sixth eraders will be exnosed to a wide range of thought in the humanities, while seventh and eighth grade participants will concentrate on biology and computer science. Participants will live in a USC dormitory that has been reserved exclusively for TAG '82. Carefully selected H This W featurin Degas Gauguin Mc Homer r Kandinsky F Klee Rer Lautrec Rc Magritte * And Fant Quality Ai f i Briefsl. o Perform Carnegie Hall, the New York Times said Berg was "compelling ana "managed with special sensitivity." He has toured the United States several times and performed in New York, Washington, Boston, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Seattle, Baltimore, Nashville and other cities. The concert is free and open to the public. ills Program and trained college students will serve as counselors, and there will be at least one counselor for each 10 students. Along with their studies, TAG participants will have an opportunity to take part in extracurricular activities, including athletics, crafts, parties and movies. In all cases, students will be accompanied and supervised by counselors and TAG staff. Three two-week sessions will be offered this summer: June 13-26. June 27-July 10, and July 11-24. The cost of $360 per session includes tuition, room, board, instructional material and health services. ;ekOnly! g the works of : Miro Utri >digliani Van Co lionet Verm( icasso Wye nbrandt Brueg, )usseau Cezan ieurat Chac [ Many More! astic Prices: "t Reproductions Poet Hall To Read Work Award-winning American >oet Donald Hall will read rom nis worn iviarcn iu in Jie second program of the 1982 USC Writers Series. Hall's reading, sponsored >y the USC Department of English and College of humanities and Social Sciences, will begin at 8 p.m. n the auditorium of the USC College of Business Adninistration. It is free and )pen to the public and will be ollowed by a reception in he third foor lobby of jambrell Hall. The .author of more than a lozen volumes of poetry, hall is considered one of America's best living poets md a superb reader. Of his >oetry, Hall writes: "The fjoem is a vehicle for self discovery . . .The premise is that if you discover something that is deep enough inside yourself, it's going to be a part of other people's insides, too, and reveal themselves to themselves." A native New Englander, Mall, 54, lives with his wife, poet Jane Kenyon, in his ancestral farm house in New Hampshire. He has lived there since 1975. RINi T Oil Frarn* Print, Mat Be; WHERE: ? TIME: 9; te; date: n lei ne all 3\\ Sponsored b> v Armiflviva Hnnis To S * 1 ""I ? ~ The Office Of SG 1 By TOM COYNE Newt fditor A 1*U ,vU unnnnAcaH W QtllHpnt rirtvprnmpnt miliUUgll 1 Ulllllllg Uliuppvovu tu> U?HUV..> ? treasurer, Chris Acquaviva, a junior from Holmdel, N.J. is not sitting back waiting for the win. He has continued to campaign and hopes to transform the office of treasurer to a more powerful force. "Several years ago, when the Student Allocations Committee was in charge of budgets the treasurer was chairman of the committee and had a vote," Acquaviva said. "Currently a senator chairs the Student Finance Committee and although the treasurer is on the committee, he does not have the right to vote." Acquaviva said the reason for this is the senate thinks the executive offices should be separate from the senate and therefore should not have a vote on tneir commmee. "1 think the different branches of Student Government should be able to work together in unity for the good of the student body," Acquaviva said. "I think the treasurer should be chairman and should have a vote because they better represent the student body," Acquaviva said. A senator only represents his district while the treasurer is elected by the entire campus." Acquaviva said he would also like to look into getting more funding for activities, but he said he would be opposed to any more fee increases for students. Acquaviva said he would also like to see the Student Lobby Day be extended and see students become more involved in other issues that affect students. He said he was particularly interested in seeing money that normally goes into the state contingency fund be given to state colleges to alleviate problems of cutting courses and other problems stemming from the budget cuts. ; "If the state took the money usually placed in the contingency fund it would give great aid to the state schools and ' there would still be $78 million in the state contingency fund," Acquaviva said. rSALE hree Large Prints Only $8.50 le Large Print $3.50 Mats Only $4.00 3S Only $3.50 and $6.50 special and Frame for only $12.00 AISO i i*H?i il I nror C1UUI Ul LODCI n IUIUD : in Front of Russell House (if rain - in the Lobby) am - 6pm /ion., March 1 - Fri., March 5 /: Russell House university Union ^ -I- I Isual Art Committee f L. k l> russefl house 5 Itrengthen treasurer ?jvyn.*v> ;r I * ' , . fr Chris Acquaviva The GAMECOCK ? the student newspaper of the University of South Carolina and is published four times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays during the fall and spring semesters and weekly on Wednesdays during both summer sessions, with the exception of university holidays and examination periods. Opinions expressed in the GAMECOCK are those of the editors and not those of the University of South Carolina. The University of South Carolina is an equal opportunity institution. The Board of Student Publications and Communications is the publisher of the Ij A rn ri_ IJ L * ne siuoeni media Department is the parent organization of the GAMECOCK. ? Change of address forms, subscription requests and other correspondence should ' be sent to the GAMECOCK, Bo* 85131, University of South Carolina, Columbia, S C. 29200. Subscription rates are $15.00 for one (1) year. $8.00 per fall or spring semester and 51.00 for both summer sessions. Third class postage paid at Columbia, S.C. Pick up a fresh perspective today The Christian Science Monitor is a daily world newspaper that gives you a clearer view of both national and international news. Correspondents around the globe i know how to anticipate, investigate, and funnel the news directly to you in a j trim, stimulating style. What's more, they don't stop with problems ? they probe for solutions. See for yourself. Pick up a copy at: j I! UNION STATION Second Floor Russell House Or to subscribe, call this toll-free number: 800-225-7090