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Stricter attend? A new attendance policy requiring 4yv J AA A - -1- ?! aiuucuia iu miuiu w percent 01 classes will take effect this fall. The previous policy allowed students to miss 25 percent of classes without penalty. The policy, approved by the faculty May 4, states absence from more than 10 percent of a course's classes, whether excused or uucAtuacu, is cAtcssive. mi nisirucior may consider such excess when determining grades, according to the policy. Students cannot miss Tuesday-Thursday classes more than twice or MondayWednesday-Friday classes more than four times without risking penalties, Scholastic Standards Committee Chairman Trevor Howard-Hill said last week. RUSSELL HOUSE will not be open until noon on Sunday this fall. The building will be open until midnight Sunday, from 7 a.m. to midnight Monday through Thursday, from 7 a.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, and from 8 a.m. to 1 a.m. Saturday. SENIORS who want an early start finding a job after graduation should contact the Career Planning and Placement Office in Lieber College or the Placement Office in room 410 of the College of Business Administration. Five senior meetings will be held during the next two weeks to acquaint seniors with Placement Office methods such as setting up a placement file and setting up campus interviews. Engineering students will meet at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in rwm 405 of the engineering building. Thursday, humanities and social sciences, law, journalism, nurI Need Birth Cor Information All information st.riot.lv ronfi J All methods of birth control Convenient clinic hours/loca Student Discount fee | VD testing/treatment Nurse practitioner available Pregnancy testing Problem pregnancy counsel] I Pregnancy terminations/g anesthesia now available ? [j IS"^ j! The Family 11 Planning Clinic | of the Ladies Clinic |j 1411 Barnwell St. Columbia, S.C. TONY' Welcomes YOl See Coupon I gsMwmmmwmwmimwmmwmmmmm*CO{ jFrae Be B (Good thru Sept. 10) J A Vll&y 5 Serving Columbi. 975 Knox Abbot a Cayce 794-5469 ince policy limits sing and criminal justice students will meet in Gambrell 153 at 3:30 p.m. nnn . Science and mathematics, pharmacy and health students will meet at 3:30 Tuesday, Sept. 7 in room 006 of the physical sciences building. Business students will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 8 in Belk Auditorium in the business administration building, and students of applied professional science (general studies) will meet in Coliseum room 3020 at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 9. n a r* a icirici iron ~ i I-/** rwiicsriO iui uo^ employees originally included in the 1982-83 state budget were vetoed this summer by Gov. Dick Riley. The General Assembly had approved 5 percent raises for university workers. SCHOLARSHIPS are harder to get because of sharp federal aid cuts, but private contributors to USC are providing some relief from the money crunch. The USC Educational Foundation, which receives and manages private gifts for university educational programs, has provided $50,000 for general scholarships for freshmen and continuing upperclassmen this fall. nn n USC'S MOVIETONEWS workers got a $132,736 shot in the arm this summer with a federal grant from the Program for Strengthening Research Libraries to continue cataloging the film collection. The grant marks the second time a Southeastern university has received funds through the program, which limits the .miTnnsssB itrol ? dential | available tion ' St |||f | FRES ( purchai 254-7553 I S PIZZA J Back To School Below "1 ever^gc our meal Check our _ daily sandwich specials SPAGHETTI J( f S~? W >Al.AUb j I lulfr COLD PLATES | AVVVm^^ SANDWICHES TONY'S 1 ^ HERO'S OR 1 . SANDWICHES | ilisdlRls# STEAK SAND. | MEAT BALL SAND. ? & Pizza a. for Fifteen Years J Call In For j | Take Out Orders * I J usAil tJrUniHMI Ml MH ? HI W SB QBi (HI ; absences durini news briefs awards to the largest American research libraries. The project involves cataloging more than 60 million feet of film shot by Movietonews cameramen between 1919and I9fi3. 20th Century-Fox donated the collection to USC in 1980. nnn THE UNITED STATES should stay in UNESCO and try to resume the leadership role it had a decade ago, the U.S. National Commission of UNESCO resolved at a conference at USC in June. The conference was led by USC President James B. Holderman, who has chaired the commission since December. Delegates to the conference had an option to choose one of three proposals concerning the United States and its relationship with the United Nations Educational. Social and Cultural Organization: either withdraw from the organization, remain in the organization and change the level and method of participation or continue with present policy. The commission's 100 members come from non-governmental organizations (60), federal, state and local governments (25) and the general public (15). nnn A STADIUM CONSTRUCTION worker was killed May 26 when he fell 93 feet from a scaffold at Williams-Brice Stadium. Josh Moses, 49, of Sumter, a carpenter with Pinnix Construction Co., died of head ?Hacdee! > Speck Card must be r Not vaH E Regular Iced Tec >e at any Hardee's Welcome Bac mmtmt/i Ice Cream Sundaes and Shakes 799-0916 . 1114 College St. &* g tall injuries, acco Coroner Frank Moses is the stadium const being a 25-yea his death in 197 CONSTRUCT addition to th building is on be ready for us a USC official. David Rinke facilities plann month projec' shape." The project i million of whic businesses, i Services. When compl expand the c minals, the lit Daniel Manag Dr. James F. Y this summer. Last year, 4 held in other c classroom spa used. When compl< "without a qi facility in thee The construc of 223 parking being built on I will house 357 c These briefs c in summer is: f r_ al Buyirv vesented before ofdei kl on special sote md: i w||h ( Of CO HBDBMHami :k Stud mdrn wiches ai hi I i uciiuii piujuuus, mt: uuiei r-old man who fell 40 feet to 1. nnn riON of the "mirror image" e Business Administration time and the building should q by spring 1984, according to I r, systems vice president for ing, said this summer the 24t is progressing in "good ,s budgeted for $9 million, $1 h has been raised from state iccording to Information 2ted, the business school will omputer center by 40 ternary by two floors and the ement Center by one floor, Lane, dean of the college, said 5 business classes had to be omnnc KniMinctc hnr*mien oil uilipuo L/\_V-U UOV/ Ull ce in the building was being 3ted, the building will be uestion...the finest business i ountry," Kane said. :tion site now takes the place ' spaces, but a parking garage ;he lower level of the addition ars, creating 134 new spaces. ire summarized from articles iues of the Gamecock. ? ^ 3 rower i ing mdse se<v?ces | \ e services I J any lumbia. j ents! I I IP * ?^ kdivp 1I, Open 7 days weekly i.r * I reuKTUbi btJiveu u 7 A. M. \\ Mon.-Sat. j| rid Deli m semester rding to Richland County Barron III. second person killed during