University
I.
to honor
Edwards
Hill, LC
Fronh Page I.
course and get a professor who
doesn't communicate with
students they will be turned off on
the whole field."
Both persons are preparing for
their positions. Hill said a
summer SGA budget must be
made now.
He said SGA's budget may not
be cut as much as he proposed
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D) AVI S O?N's
Leaders in government
education, business and historic
preservation, headed by the state'i
chief executive, Gov. James B
Edwards, will receive honorar3
degrees from the University ol
South Carolina at commencemeni
ceremonies May 10.
In addition to the governor, othei
recipients announced by Presideni
William H. Patterson will be
Jennie Dreher of Columbia
chairman of the Board of Advisors
of the National Trust for Historic
Preservation; Guenther 1.0.
Ruebcke of Wilson Point, Conn.,
vice chairman and executive vice
president of American Hoechst
Corporation; and Dr. R. Cathcart
Smith of Conway, chairman of the
S.C. Commission on Higher
Education.
Gov. Edwards also will be
commencement speaker at the 11
a.m. public ceremonies in Carolina
Coliseum.
>tt favor
before the election. He was
quoted in the Feb. 27 "Gamecock
as saying "The budget can be cut
to $35,000 without hurting SGA."
Hill said Tuesday he would like
such a budget but going much
below $40,000 for a year's budget
might hurt SGA's effectiveness.
What is more important than
cutting the budget, he said, is
spending the money efficiently.
"I hate to say in the
~4
)0
d
A Charleston oral surgeon and
state senator, Edwards became
governor in January 1975. While in
the legislature he was in
strumental in establish' the new
program in criminal tice now
being implemented at USC.
Dreher is a native of Columbia
and an alumna of the University.
She has been on the Board of Ad
visors of the National Trust of
Historic Preservation since 1969
and chairperson since 1973. As
chairperson of that body she serves
on the Board of Trustees of the
National Trust for Historic
Preservation. She has been
secretary of the Richland County
Historic Preservation Commission
since 1963.
Dreher was a member of the first
advisory committee for the study
of the restoration of The Horseshoe
at the University.
Ruebcke, who lives in New York
City, has been responsible for the
food S1
"Gamecock" before I'm elected
that I'm going to do something
and not do it," he said "I try to
keep my promises as much as
possible," Hill said.
Hill said he Is interviewing
people for positions in his cabinet
and the 150 student-faculty
committees. "I want somebody
who's got a lot on the ball, who's
dependable and hard-working."
Potential position-holders, he
major development of the Hoechst
Fibers Indistries Division, the
Dyes and Pigments Division and
Marbert Cosemetics of American
Hoechst Corp. His firm has a fiber
plant. in Spartanburg employing
2,800 South Carolinians and has
announced plans to build another
facility in Orangeburg.
Dr. Smith, who has practiced
internal medicine in Conway since
1947, has been chairman of the
Commission on Higher Education
since 1972 and was on the State
Board of Education from 1964-68.
He was the first chairman of the
Horry County Higher Education
Commission which established the
Coastal Carolina Regional Campus
of USC in 1954.
Honorary degrees at Carolina
are conferred by the University's
Board of Trustees on the recom
mendation of the president after
consultation with a faculty com
mittee on honorary degrees.
erVice c
said, are being chosen from
among defeated SGA candidates
and from lists provided by
student organization heads.
"During the campaign I met a lot
of people," he said "Not only
people who were working with
me, but who were working for
other. (campaign)
organizations."
Some student committee
members not graduating and
leaving the University will be
retained, Hill said. "I think there
needs to be continuity on a
committee. Certainly that's
important, but at the same time
you need some new blood on
committees."
He said of the outgoing
Leventis administration, "I think
Leigh and I will be pushing for a
lot of the same things as far as
issues and things."
Hill said he would work more
closely with the Student Senate
than Leventis did. "Leigh had
trouble with the Senate last year.
The Senate turned out to be a
fairly responsible body and they
wanted a balance of power. I
History exchangej;
USC history students have a
chance to study at Warwick
University, near Coventry,
England, next fall in an exchange
program.
Applications can be picked up at
Room 100 of Currell College and
GAME
The Gamecock Is the offici
University of South Carolina anm
Mondays and Thursdays. durn
and once a week during the si
Publications and Communicatio
Opinions expressed in The Gat
and not those of the University of
The University of South Carol
st itution.
Change of address forms, sul
correspondence should be senti
USC, Columbia, 29208. Subscrip
and $2 for the summer sessions
Second class postage paat n
Candidates interviewed
The Student Affairs Search
Committee, whose interview
sessions are open to students has
announced the folowing interview
schedule for Dean of Student Af
fairs candidates.
-Dr. Kay White, Thursday,
March 27 at 3:30 p.m. in Room 310
of the Russell House. White is
Assistant Vice President for
Student Affairs at Michigan State
University.
-Dr. Paul Fidler, Monday March
31 at 3:30 p.m. in the Russel House
Theater. Fidler is Associate Dean
for Student Affairs at USC.
-Dr. James Wickenden, Tuesday
April 1 at 3:30 p.m. in the Russell
House Theater. Wickenden is Vice
president of Campus Programs at
Stockton State College.
-Dr. Glen Stillion, Thursday
April 3, at 3:30 p.m. in room 310 of
the Russell House. Stillion is Vice
Chancellor for Student Develop
ment at Western Carolina
University.
hanges
guess Leigh didn't expect that."
There was also a problem with
the Leventis cabinet, Hil said. "I
think some became discouraged
because they didn't think the
student government was doing
anything." Hill said he would
hold regular cabinet meetings
which Leventis did not do.
Lott said he is talking to every
senator-elect to learn their in
terests before making committee
assignments.
He said there will be an April 16
workshop to acquaint new
senators with parliamentary
procedure and teach them how to
write bills. Sixty of the 65
senators are new to the Senate,
Lott said.
Both Hill and Lott said com
munication between the branches
of SGA and with other University
organizations is important in
getting their proposals carried
out. Lott said, "I think only half
the job is running the senate. The
other half is working with other
organizations."
program available
are due April 4. Four students,
probably juniors or first semester
seniors, will be chosen for the
program, which the history
department says will cost the
student about what a normal
semester at USC costs.
COCK
al student newspaper of the
I is published twice weekly, on
g the fall and spring semester
immer by the USC Board of
Os.
necock are those of the editors
South Carolina.
Ina is an equal opportunity in
bscription requests and other
to The Gamecock, Drawer A,
lion rates are $3 per semester
Iolumbia. S.C.