Georgia student aid review, 1975 May 1 - November 17

~11 5300
IPt
57
vfJf.2 -no.!

May 1, 1975

aid review
Vol. II, No. 1

GENERAL ASSEMBLY INCREASES STUDENT AID APPROPRIATION
While the Commission and its two companion agencies, Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority and Georgia Higher Education Assistance Corporation, will operate on a slightly reduced budget for personal services and operating expenses between July 1, 1975 and June 30, 1976, the department will have 16.3 percent more State and federal funds with which to assist students.
Following is a brief comparison of funds for the current academic year and for the 1975-76 academic year.

STUDENT AID PROGRAM
State Direct Student Loans Georgia Tuition Grants Georgia Incentive Scholarships LEPD Scholarships State Interest on Loans
TOTAL STUDENT AID FUNDS

FY 75 BUDGET
$1,995,000 5,046,932 1,030,000 10,000 296,000
$8,377,932

FY 76 BUDGET

CHANGE

$2,233,500 6,007,311 1,280,000 12,000 214,000
$9,746,811

$ 238,500 960,379 250,000 2,000 (82,000)
$1,368,879

The largest single student aid program in Georgia continues to be the system of guaranteed student loans from commercial lending institutions. State and federal student aid funds, coupled with an estimated commercial lender loan volume of $10,000,000 for the 1975-76 academic year, will provide almost $20 million in financial aid to Georgians this next year.
GEORGIA INCENTIVE SCHOLARSHIPS: YEAR NUMBER TWO
Georgia's newest major financial aid program for students won't be "new" forever. Not only has the GIS program survived its first year of existence, but it has evolved into a mature student aid delivery system with solid informational and electronic data processing support.
By the time the 1975 Georgia General Assembly had approved the $880,000 appropriation of state funds for GIS and had adjourned, revised application packets were ready for distribution to high schools and campus financial aid offices. An initial mailing of application packets to each high school guidance counselor in the state has been completed; supplies of forms have been shipped to the 97 colleges, universities, nursing schools and vocational schools in Georgia which participate in the program. Additional packets are available upon request.
Next year's state appropriation, combined with more than $300,000 in federal funds, will enable Georgia to continue awarding nonrepayable grants of up to $450 per academic year to eligible Georgia residents attending eligible institutions who demonstrate substantial financial need. "Eligible Georgia resident" denotes a person who has lived in Georgia for at least 12 consecutive months prior to the date of registration for school and who has begun ... or will begin ... postsecondary education after April 1, 1974.

As of April 14, 1975, a total of 2542 freshmen and veterans had received assistance through the GIS program during its first year of operation. Administrators of the program anticipate, however, that a substantially higher number of students will benefit from the program during the 1975-1976 academic year. A larger segment of the population is eligible ... freshmen and sophomores this year ... and application materials are available much earlier than last year. More than 500 applications for aid during the upcoming school year have already been received by GHEAA.
Accompanying the FY 76 appropriations act was a proviso concerning the GIS program, which prohibits the awarding of grants for summer term study until the program is adequately funded to assist eligible students at all undergraduate levels.
A close look at the applications received to date reveals that many of the application forms submitted to GHEAA are incomplete. The most common reason for returning an application to a student is failure to have the financial aid officer complete Part B of the form. Therefore, students should be reminded to complete both sides of the application (Parts A and C) and to answer questions fully. All applicants, both new and renewal, must file a confidential financial statement, either College Scholarship Service's PCS or the SFS provided in the application packet.
COMMISSION ELECTS OFFICERS AND EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
The 16 men and women serving on the State Scholarship Commission and the boards of the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority and the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Corporation gathered for the second quarterly meeting of 1975 on Thursday, April 17.
After discussions of recently-passed legislation affecting the department and the budget for the next fiscal year, members of the Commission approved changes in program regulations, health career loan fields and quotas and an application for a new federally supported traineeship grant.
Dr. Carey T. Vinzant of Forsyth was reelected to chair the Commission during the 1976 fiscal year. Judge William Ingram of Cartersville was reelected vice-chairman. Dr. Donald E. Payton continues serving as executive director, secretary and treasurer.
Named to join Dr. Vinzant and Judge Ingram on the Commission's executive committee were the following persons: Billy Dilworth of Carnesville, Walter Farr of Peachtree City, Lovelace Hair of Buena Vista, Patrick Mathis of Decatur, James McCallum of Broxton, Dr. George L. Simpson of Atlanta and Chancellor of the University System of Georgia, Dr. William G. Studer of Atlanta and L. R. Turpen of Clarkesville.
Other members of the Commission are Berta Friedman of Savannah, Charles Harris of Ocilla and Chairman of the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia, E. Wilson Hawes of Thomson, Walter McCrary of Americus, James McIntyre of Atlanta and Director of the Office of Planning and Budget, and State Superintendent of Schools Dr. Jack Nix of Atlanta.
GTG: $500 TO FRESHMEN
Georgia residents who enter a Georgia private college or university this fall as freshmen will receive a 25 percent larger grant than sophomore, junior and senior students under the Georgia Tuition Grant program.

An eligible freshman student .. defined as a student who has earned fewer than 45 quarter hours or 30 semester hours of credit . will receive a maximum grant of $500 per academic year, while all other undergraduates will receive $400 per academic year.
In the same House Bill (No. 1109) which increased the freshman grant to $500, a provision was included which prohibits the Authority's making grants to graduate students until a specific appropriation for that purpose is provided in the general appropriations act.
Minor revisions in the regulations governing the Georgia Tuition Grant program to accommodate larger grant paYments to freshmen will be distributed to colleges and universities.
HEALTH CAREER SEMINARS
One hundred and sixty student advisers .. guidance counselors and career exploration personnel ... from Georgia high schools have met the April 15 deadline date for application to attend the fifth annual series of Health Careers Seminars cosponsored by the Medical College of Georgia and the State Scholarship Commission. The 60 selected participants will be notified of their acceptance by May 15.
Two groups of 30 advisers will attend lectures, discussion groups and on-the-job visits on the Medical College of Georgia campus in Augusta and in adjacent health care facilities. Keeping up with what's going on in health careers can be quite a job and the seminars facilitate the compilation of first-hand information on a variety of occupations and professions.
The 1975 seminars are scheduled for the weeks of July 21 and July 28. A Monday morning registration is the first chance the participants have to get acquainted with the people with whom they will be working during the week. And "working" describes many of the session's activities which continue until noon on Friday.
Begun in 1971 as part of a recruitment project focusing on Northwest Georgia, the seminars have been expanded in the past four years to include advisers from all parts of the state. Approximately 200 counselors and school administrators have attended the sessions in Augusta, and the seminars are now an established part of the services provided by the Commission's Division of Career Services.
PLACEMENT PROJECT REPORT
The Commission-coordinated health manpower recruitment project for graduating students in 10 health care fields is now in its "show and tell" phase. Slide-sound shows, averaging six minutes each, are being presented to students at 68 educational institutions around the state. Booklets describing the 20 participating communities accompany the visual presentation.
When the current phase has been completed by May 15, students will begin visiting sites to talk with community representatives about emploYment possibilities. Local community committees are vigorously planning their orientation sessions which range from day-long to weekend visits in the community.
IN WASHINGTON ...
The Hiqher Education Act of 1965 expires on June 30, 1975. Therefore,

since the summer of 1973 Congress has been considering possible changes in this legislation which may affect, among other education matters, the federally supported student aid programs.
The House Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education, chaired by Rep. James G. O'Hara of Michigan, is continuing hearings on House Resolution 3471 which would amend the student aid provisions of the Higher Education Act of 1965.
Title IV of the Act of 1965 regulates the guaranteed student loan program, and changes in the program have been proposed. One proposed change directly affecting the student is a lowering of loan maximums for student borrowers. Concern for students who might find themselves faced with large sums of money to repay ...more than they might be able to handle . has prompted the sponsors of the resolution to suggest a $1000 limit for freshman borrowers and a $1500 limit for all other undergraduate and graduate borrowers. An undergraduate could borrow up to $5000 total; a student- continuing through graduate school could borrow up to $10,000 (including what may have been borrowed on undergraduate education). Although Georgia's annual loan limits are currently less than federal limits, the proposed changes would decrease the limits here.
H.R. 3471 also would affect the State Student Incentive Grant program, the federal-state matching program through which our state has established the Georgia Incentive Scholarship program. The resolution proposes a substantial expansion of the SSIG program, from the current appropriation level of $20 million to a level of $200 million annually.
The method used to allocate federal funds among the states, however, is a matter of controversy. Funds are now allocated to participating states based on the enrollment in higher education. Proposed is a rather complicated formula which would base allocations to states on the state's overall appropriation in support of higher education ... rather than on student enrollment. The effect of such a change in allocation method would be to reduce Georgia's current allocation by almost 50 percent.
The members of the State Scholarship Commission, in their April 17 meeting, adopted a resolution opposing the formula proposed in H.R. 3471. The National Association of State Scholarship Programs, in testimony by NASSP President Ronald J. Iverson of Vermont, has expressed to the subcommittee its opposition to the proposed allocation formula.
Although the current law expires in about two months, it contains provision for a one-year extension. Administrators of student aid programs anticipate such an extension and that final action will be taken by Congress sometime next spring.
STUDENT AID REVIEW is published by the State Scholarship Commission. Donald E. Payton, Executive Director/David Tucker, Editor 9 LaVista Perimeter Park, Suite 110 2187 Northlake Parkway Tucker, Georgia 30084

C4
E3fS
, PI
S1'l
~
,-
d.

October 20,

1975





State Programs: A Report

1

The State Scholarship Commission and its companion agencies, the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority and tbe Georgia Higher Education Assistance Corporation, administer major student aid programs in Georgia. Appropriations were made by the Georgia General Assembly during the 197~ session this past winter, and the student aid programs this fall are assisting thousands of Georgia residents who are continuing their education beyond high school.

GEORGIA

The entire Georgia Incentive Scholarship appropriation

INCENTIVE

of $1.2 million has been committed to students for the

SCHOLARSHIPS

1975-1976 academic year. The Commission office received

approximately 10,000 applications from students over the

state. Slightly more than half those applicants---

5500 students---completed the required financial information. Of that

number, 3750 students have been awarded Georgia Incentive Scholarships

for postsecondary study at institutions in the state of Georgia. Awards

this year through the GIS program average $325 each.

There is a long waiting list of eligible students to be awarded any funds which might become available through cancellations during the year. Therefore, with the exception of applicants who are also veterans, students should be informed that no further GIS awards will be made this academic year, and the institutional student financial aid officers should cease certifying the 1975-1976 application forms.

STATE

Fourteen hundred Georgia residents have received State

DIRECT

Direct Student Loans for study this year in health care

STUDENT

fields approved for service cancellation. Again, the

LOANS

entire appropriation---$1.5 million---has been expended,

and more than 800 health career students either have been

denied loans or have been placed on a waiting list for

any funds which may be available through cancellations. Institutional

student financial aid officers should inform late health career applicants

for State Direct Student Loans of the unavailability of any current year

funds and should cease certifying applications for this specific group

of students.

General studies students, however, who have exhausted all other means of obtaining an educational loan through commercial lending institutions of their educational institution may still apply to the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority as a lender of last resort. The Authority still has, as of this date, a small amount of direct loan funds available for general studies students.

LAW

Four students who are dependents of law enforcement

ENFORCEMENT

personnel who were permanently disabled or killed in

PERSONNEL

the line of duty since January of 1969 have received

DEPENDENTS

awards through the Law Enforcement Personnel Dependents

SCHOLARSHIPS Scholarship program administered by the State Scholarship

Commission. The LEPD program provides to eligible students

non-repayable grants of up to $2000 per academic year for study at colleges

and vocational schools.

GEORGIA

During the regular 1975 legislative session, the General

TUITION

Assembly amended the independent college tuition equali-

GRANTS

zation grant law to direct the department to pay grants of

$500 per academic year to freshman students at Georgia

private colleges beginning with the 1975-1976 school year.

Grants to all other eligible undergraduate students were to be held at the

level of $400 per academic year. The General Assembly at that time also

appropriated the funds needed to pay the larger grants to freshman students.

Due to the condition of the state's economy in early summer, the Governor and the General Assembly found it necessary to hold a special session to reduce overall state appropriations for this fiscal year by approximately $130 million. One of the many cuts made in the budgets of state departments was that of withdrawing the amount of funds earlier appropriated for paying the larger grants to freshman students enrolled in private colleges.

The intent of the appropriations act is that all students eligible to receive tuition equalization grants receive equal grants of $400 per academic year during the current fiscal year. On the other hand, the amendment of the general state law which governs the tuition grant program states that, beginning with the current fall school term, GHEAA is to pay eligible freshman students grants of $500 per academic year. A conflict exists, and GHEAA requested on July 24 an opinion of the Attorney
General on the matter.

In short, the Attorney General has ruled that an appropriations bill such as the one reducing state spending passed during the special session cannot supersede the state general law. Therefore, GHEAA will pay, for the fall quarter or semester, grants computed on the basis of $500 for freshman students and $400 for all other undergraduate students. To continue disbursements at such a level, however, will cause a shortage of funds in the Tuition Grant Program according to current cost projections made by the Authority. The General Assembly will have to resolve this situation early in the 1976 legislative session. Depending upon their action, grant payments for the winter, spring and/or summer school terms
may be affected.

Probe 1975
Each fall thousands of high school students attend Probe Regional Fairs to talk with representatives of colleges and universities, nursing schools and vocational schools. Since attending postsecondary institutions costs money, the State Scholarship Commission was invited to be present at each Probe Session to talk with students about financial aid programs. A staff member from the Commission will also attend Probe Counselor Workshops.

The sessions began in late September and will continue into November. Here's the'remainder of the schedule.

PROBE REGIONAL FAIRS

Vidalia Area

October 20

American Legion, Highway 280 East

Waycross Area

October 21

Waycross Mall, U. S. 1 South

Brunswick Area

October 22

Brunswick Mall

Savannah Area

October 23

Oglethorpe Mall, Abercorn Street Extension

Dalton Area

October 27

Student Center, Dalton Junior College

Rome Area

October 28

Riverbend Mall

Newnan Area

October 29

Newnan Armory

Columbus Area

October 30

Columbus Square, Macon Road

Thomasville Area

November 3

Central High School Gymnasium, Thomasville

Valdosta Area

November 3

Mathis City Auditorium

Albany Area

November 4

Albany Downtowner Motor Inn

Fitzgerald Area

November 5

National Guard Armory, Fitzgerald

Cordele Area

November 5

National Guard Armory, Cordele

Macon Area

November 6

Macon Mall, Eisenhower Parkway

5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m.

PROBE COUNSELOR WORKSHOPS

Savannah Area

October 23

Ramada Inn, Savannah

Rome Area

October 28

Krannert Center, Berry College, Mt. Berry

Columbus Area

October 30

Turner Center, Columbus College

Albany Area

November 4

Albany Downtowner Motor Inn

Macon Area

November 6

Macon Hilton Hotel

10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. 10:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m.

sse Selected to Host Seminar
Earlier this fallon August 8 the Georgia State Scholarship Commission hosted an Educational Staff Seminar sponsored by the Institute for Educational Leadership of the George Washington University, Washington, D.C. The seminars are part of a professional development program designed for staff members employed by the executive and legislative branches of the federal government in the field of education. ESS supplements Washington work experience with a variety of in-service training seminars and in-the-field observations.

Under the direction of SSC Executive Director Don Payton, fourteen staff persons from Washington discussed Georgia's various programs of student financial assistance ... their history, growth, administration, inter-relationship with federal student aid programs and department goals and objectives. Contributing to the presentations were SSC staff members and representatives from commercial lending institutions in the Atlanta area.
Participating in this one-day, but comprehensive, look at student aid programs in Georgia were persons from the staff of the U.s. House of Representives Committee on Education and Labor, the U.s. Senate Committee of Labor and Public Welfare, the U.s. Senate Committee on Appropriations, the U.s. Office of Education, the Library of Congress and the General Accounting Office.
Student Loan Volume Up
Federal amendments to the guaranteed student loan program law which became effective in 1974 have slowly brought about a turn-around and some new life to the program this past year. For fiscal 1975 the guaranteed student loan volume totaled $11,128,318---an increase of 26 percent over Fiscal 1974. The dollar volume of loans made to students by commercial lenders during the past year increased by ten percent over fiscal 1974.
A substantially larger annual amount of loan funds is needed to meet the needs of Georgia students and families in the years ahead. The Corporation will be submitting proposals to the Governor and the 1976 General Assembly which should, if approved, have a substantial positive effect on the student loan program here in Georgia.

STUDENT AID REVIEW

i published b the St te S h lelf hIp Commission

9 LdVi ta Prim tcr P rk. SUIt 110

,

D n Pa} ton, E (uti Dir tor

eGEORGI

Tu k r, Gear ia 30084

EP RIM T

TY L

1

l;t:G \.>1

J

BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE
P ID
PermIt No.3

!J r~
,P
57
VM.~
,j

November 17, 1975





Vol. II, No. 3

APPLICATION FORMS FOR 1976-1977 ACADEMIC YEAR

"Apply earlyl" That s.eems to be everybody's advice to students who plan for educational financial aid. And it's good planning, indeed.

The Commission recognizes the importance of supplying the appropriate forms as early in the year as possible. Timely application benefits students as well as the Commission staff members who process the forms. Each year since the inception of the Georgia Incentive Scholarship program, the Commission has distributed applications earlier than in the previous year.

GIS

For the approaching academic year---1976-1977---it is anticipated that

Packet

Georgia Incentive Scholarship application forms will be available by Feb-

ruary 1, 1976. The delivery date, to some extent, may depend on the ap-

propriations actions of the General Assembly which convenes in January in that funding

level affects the classification of students eligible to apply. The application pack-

et will include the GIS application itself with an attached instruction sheet, exten-

sive descriptions of other state and federal financial aid programs, and a precoded

Student's Financial Statement from the College Scholarship Service.

The new GIS application will require the applicant to supply the Commission with the same basic information that is required on the present form. The design and typography are being changed, however, to facilitate completing and processing of the form.

Student advisers who assist students in completing the GIS form should emphasize to the student that the completed form---both the original and the copy---must be sent to the financial aid office of the educational institution the applicant plans to attend ... not to the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority. Many applications this year were mailed directly to GHEAA without the institutional certification.

SDSL

Applications for other state programs will also be distributed in late win-

and

ter and early spring of 1976. Applications for the State Direct Student Loan

GTG

program.predominately for students in health-care fields of study should

be printed by March 1, 1976. Georgia Tuition Grant applications for Georgia

residents attending 28 private colleges and universities in the state will be distrib-

uted to eligible and participating institutions by May 1, 1976.

High school guidance offices and institutional financial aid offices will be sent supplies of Georgia Incentive Scholarship application forms. State Direct Student Loan applications will be mailed to financial aid offices and will be available from the Commission's staff of career consultants. Georgia Tuition Grant applications will be distributed in quantities to the eligible private colleges and universities.

GEORGIA INCENTIVE SCHOLARSHIPS
The entire Georgia Incentive Scholarship appropriation of $1.2 million has been committed to students for the 1975-1976 academic year. Institutional student financial aid officers should stop certifying and submitting for processing all 1975-1976 application forms.

All applicants submitting completed forms will continue to receive formal notification of their status from the Georgia Higher Education Assistance Authority. Incomplete applications, on the other hand, will result in no formal notification to the applicant.

Approximately 5,000 students completed the GIS application process and have been notified either of an award---3,750 awards---or a denial. A number of students started the application process, but never provided the Authority with the necessary family fnancial information needed for final processing.

Awards

GIS award recipients who transfer from one eligible educational insti-

not

tution to another during the middle of a school year run the risk of

portable

losing scholarship assistance for the remainder of the school year. The

awards are not portable. The transferring student must reapply after

being admitted to the new institution, and factors such as redetermined need and the

availability of funds figure in the final decision.

Funding for the Georgia Incentive Scholarship program comes from two sources: (1) an annual appropriation of state funds directly from the Georgia General Assembly, and (2) an annual allocation of federal funds which must be "matched" at least dollar for dolo lar by the state under provisions of the State Student Incentive Grant program created by the Higher Education Amendments of 1972.

The total federal SSIG funding level for the 1975-1976 academic year was $19 million, with Georgia's share being $312,363 for the GIS program. Congress has already approved a total of $44 million for the 1976-1977 academic year, thereby increasing Georgia's projected share of these federal grant dollars to $773,331.

CAMPUS LOAN INTERVIEWS BEGIN
On-campus interviews by a GHEAA representative of student borrowers in the State Direct Student Loan program began on November 10 and will continue through February. The cooperation of the student financial aid community and the institutions helped make these initial interview sessions very successful last year. Current plans call for follow-up regional interview sessions in June and July for those students who attend out-of-state schools and the Georgia school students who miss the campus interview segment for one reason or another.
Since the interview sessions are usually the only opportunity student borrowers (both health career and general studies) have each year to personally meet with Authority personnel and discuss the various aspects and responsibilities of the SDSL accounts, GHEAA requires mandatory attendance by students in order to qualify for continued assistance. Only 12 students did not receive renewal loan assistance for the current year due to their failure to meet for a personal interview.

GEORGIA TUITION GRANTS
The 28 Georgia private colleges and universities whose Georgia resident students are eligible for tuition grants have all submitted certification lists for the fall school term. GHEAA staff members are presently compiling statistical data and providing cost projections for the remainder of the school year to the General Assembly. Based on these Authority projections, a supplemental appropriation is a necessity in order to continue paying grants at the levels of $500 for freshman students and $400 for all other undergraduate students.

RECRUITMENT AND PLACEMENT PROJECT: EXTENSION AND EXPANSION
A one-year extension of the Commission's Recruitment and Placement project has been approved by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. During the next year, the project will be expanded to include 16 additional Georgia counties and six additional health care fields.
Designed to help rural communities with hospitals attract and keep well-trained health care personnel, the project will now be involved with a total of 36 counties and 16 categories of heal~ care professionals.
Beginning in October, five Northeast Georgia counties made commitments to participate in the project. Local committees have been organized in Franklin, Habersham, Rabun, Towns and Union Counties. Five counties will join the project in January and six counties will begin participation in April of next year.
The recently-added health care fields are dietetics, health administration, medical records administration, nurse anesthesia, occupational therapy, and speech pathology/ audiology.
More information concerning the project is available from Project Coordinator Phillip Cover at the office of the State Scholarship Commission.
SERVICES OF CAREER CONSULTANTS CUT DURING EMPLOYMENT FREEZE
For several years the Commission has provided personal contact to students, parents and school personnel through its Career Services Division. Begun as a program of recruitment of students into critical health-care fields, the service has been broadened within the past year to include the dissemination of information about federal, state and institutional financial aid programs.
The state has been divided into six regions ... each with a consultant ... in order to serve all public and private high schools. Since this summer, however, two regions have been without career consultants.
These two vacancies have not been filled because of the freeze on employing new personnel. Therefore the remaining four consultants must cover even larger territories and school personnel may experience some delay in receiving services. It is anticipated that the positions eventually can be filled and the Commission's field services returned to normal.
BASIC GRANTS: FOR ALL UNDERGRADUATES
Basic Grant applications for the 1976-1977 academic year should be available and distributed to high schools by the first week in February, according to Mary Lovett, Chief of the Basic Grants Branch of the Office of Education's Region IV office in Atlanta.
Beginning with the upcoming academic year, all undergraduate students will be eligible to apply for Basic Grants. No longer will the aid be limited to students who did not attend a postsecondary educational program before April 1, 1973. Part-time, as well as full-time, students will continue to be eligible.

COLLEGE SCHOLARSHIP SERVICE COMPUTATION -SCHOOL
The Southern Reqional Office of the College Entrance Examination Board has announced a CSS Financial Aid Administration School at Clayton Junior College in Morrow on December 15 and 16, 1975. Larry Patterson will be the on-site director and host of the workshop which will include sessions on needs analysis, financial aid guidance and general administration. The CEEB office in Atlanta can furnish additional information about registration, the daily schedule and local accommodations.
DATES FOR GEORGIA AID ADMINISTRA~ORS TO REMEMBER
F'a...bruary 15-18, 1976 ................................ 1976 Annua-1 SASFAA Meeting Sheraton Biltmore Hotel Atlanta, Georgia
April 21-23, 1976 ............................... 1976 Annual GASFAA Meetinq Savannah, Georgia

STUDE T AID REVIEW

is published b ' the Stc te Sholar hip Commi sion

9 LNi ta Perimeter Park, Suit 110 2187 N rthlake Park ay

Don P yton, E ccutiv Director

David Tuc ocr, Editor

Tucker, Georgia 30084

BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
PermIt 0.3

eGEORGIA

TY .JF btUK 1..... Gt: G

j .;) 2