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Student group From Staff Raports ITnitaH ( JUnnucoc Atfninct Mnoloar War ^ will hold a convocation on the Russell House ^ Patio Nov. 11 between 5 and 7 p.m. The group is a new student organization at y USC. There are chapters in other universities across the country. > United Campuses Against Nuclear War i has chosen Nov. 11 to sponsor information sessions at college campuses. The USC j group will show a film, "The Last \ Epidemic," in Russell House room 301 at 2 j and 8 p.m. on that day. Discussion periods < will follow the movie showings. The film is distributed by an international group called Physicians for Social Responsibility. i Local speakers, whose names will be announced later, will address alternatives to the arms race. The convocation will be moved into - Russell House if it rains. For more information, call Lauri Rowe at 777-2782 or Bruce Pearson at 777-3898. Goo jgjj J|j] ^ ~ ~J ~ _ 3 | 'v -'V^, _ i IHHn ^ i P.- -. - '^\a? j^Hr :=:V. BjjHfc||| -' ijifcft > * -* . qgg? HBjfjfHm ; >v ^SBSBBBSP? gg it LO? to hold convo ABOUT $600,000 from student activity ees will be used annually to help pay off the itadium renovation bond used to finance Villiams-Brice Stadium's new upper deck, iccording to Senior Vice President for 1 business Affairs B.A. Daetwyler. Daetwyler said $750,000 from ticket sales i vill be used to complete paying off the ' annual bond debt of about $1,350,000. The student activity fees' allocation to the < \thletic Department went from $15 last ' year to $20 this year. The amount from < general admission ticket sales used to pay off the bond rose from $1 to $2. The 20-year bond is expected to be sold within the next few weeks at an interest rate of around 9 percent, Daetwyler said. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO professor Jonathan Smith will lecture and lead discussions on religion Nov. 10 in Gambrell Ur.ll OCA IlOU 1 VAI11I . Smith, a Department of New Testament and Early Christian Literature professor, d friends stand i when you need t mHi?^ \ ,?jd\ '' ? |1?1 |S H W ^ ';' /" g: ' '?l J I df-i.. 4 MsSBBSM mBSSSBBmSMBSs - - ^kSHGI , y jBwtBBa mwm ' [SSk - HH8K' Sm |wram renbrau.Here's to g cation agains news briefs will speak on two topics. The first lecture, "Myth and Histories," will begin at 4 p.m. and the second, "The Place, Jerusalem," at 7:30p.m. The afternoon lecture will provide a critique of the method of myth interpretation associated with Smith's elder colleague, Mircea Eliade. The evening lecture will focus on the understanding of Jerusalem in several Jewish and Christian traditions and their implications for theory of cultural anthropology. Smith, the Robert O. Anderson Distinguished Professor in the Humanties at the Chicago school, is also author of two books: "Map Is Not Territory: Studies in the History of Religions," and "Imagining Religion: From Babylon to Jonestown." Both presentations will be free and open to the public. They will be sponsored by USC's ip for you hem. jfri' S8 Wy/Lm ? nHHHr * WHm ; IRHHHri^Ev t you nowhere, but this should get her jn requiring split-second timing, a nd most importantly, some surefooted, ne down to earth, spring for something ; I be Lowenbrau. ^isP M Mends. ?1982 Boer Brewed by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee, Wis. t nuclear war ' Department of Religious Studies. For more information, call Kevin Lewis at 777-2561. USC'S DOCTORAL PROGRAMS ir chemistry, geosciences, mathematics anc nViucina hoiw Kaon lictoH in a nafinnal ctlirl\ pilj iJXVlJ IIUT V P^VVH AIM VVV4 til W afMVIVIIM* WfcUWJ of graduate program quality. The survey, conducted by the Conference Board of Associated Research Councils, evaluated 596 math and physical sciences doctoral programs. The study was published in The Chronicle of Higher Education in September. Programs received standardized scores in faculty quality, graduate quality, fiveyear improvement and reputation. USC's chemistry doctoral program scored in the top six in the chemistry field. USC's geosciences doctoral program was one ot the top four scores in its field. Mathematics and physics programs also ranked ?hove the national average. The GAMECOCK is the student newspaper of the University of Soutn Carolina and s published three times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays 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 GAMECOCK. The Student Media Department is the parent organization of the GAMECOCK. Change of address forms, subscription rmiiMlc jnrl nthor rorrKonndrnce should I be lent to the GAMECOCK, Drawer A, University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. 29208. Subscription rates are $15.00 for (1) yeai, , $8.00 per fall or spring semester and $3.(X for both summer sessions. Third class postage paid at Columbia, S.C. The "Gamecock" is a licensed student organisation of the University of South Carolina and receives funding from student activity fees. ! In Concert J !^5S I Ken Medema j | The Township | I/\uunorium ? | November 12, 1982 j j No Admission Charge, f | Compliments of j a ' 819 Woodrow Street j Call 799-0652 j information. I