The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, April 08, 1976, Page Page 2, Image 2
IJSC eontin
courses for
Six bridging courses, designed
for people who need to brush up on
key college preparatory subjects
before going to college, will be
offered at USC beginning April 19.
Basic math tutoring, American
history. American national
government, English grammar
and composition, reading and
study skills and introduction to the
sciences will be offered, with
classes meeting for a six-week
period from 6 to 9 p.m. on Monday
trover nor
to address
ODK dinner
The 1976 President's Banquet,
sponsored by Omicron Delta
Kappa (ODK) and Mortar Board,
will be held on the Carolina
Coliseum Concourse at 7 p.m.
Monday.
Governor James B. Edwards
will speak at the banquet. Entertainment
is to be provided by
the Radiant Vibrations, directed
by Richard Conant. Guests at the
banquet include ODK and Mortar
OaqpH momKorc nrociHnnfc r\f all
UUU1U I11VII1UV1 Q, VOlUVlllO VI (til
USC student organizations, USC
President William H. Patterson,
all USC vice presidents and
Provost Keith Davis.
All USC students may attend the
banquet. Cost for tickets is $6.
?? i i ??? i i
DAVE Wll
I hi
,v
T"
Fi
GFRAI D 1
A
1
I
Your newly-<
o
uing educai
prospective
and Wednesday or Tuesday and
Thursday.
A maximum of two courses may
be taken. Interested persons
should contact the USC Division of
Continuing Education between 8:30
a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday at 777-3808.
Anyone may apply for the
courses, which cost $60 each. The
program has received Veterans
Administration approval so that
Law- From Page 1
system up to 7 per cent of
the freshmen class could have been
admitted by a screening committee
designated by USC
President William H. Patterson.
This policy was opposed by many
faculty members and students who
felt that it was merely a blind to
allow certain political appointments.
After the events of last summer
in which admissions standards
were waived by the board for about
i r . J i ^ a. i_ _ _1 ! i 1 ?
io biuuenis, me aamuiing
procedures were returned to the
law faculty. This was done in the
face of possible loss of accreditation,
because the board's
action violated the standards of the
American Bar Association's
Council on Legal Education.
ENT W
-SFORD, Presic
IW: 10-12
rh: 9-11:30, 2-5
ri: 10-12, 1-3
I. MOSLEY, Vic
Aon: 9-10, 1-5
"TL. O.nA c
in: o:ou-o
Wed: 1-5, 7-9
=ri: 1-5
SAN
sleeted officers arc
ffice, Russell Hous
don offers
3 students
veterans entering the program can
qualify for VA benefits.
Time spent in preparatory
training will not be counted against
veterans benefits when the veteran
enrolls in vocational or other
higher education programs.
Robert Foster
Therefore, this summer and next
fall only those who earn their way
into the law school will be admitted.
The abolition of the wild
card provision will mean that a
student must either pass the entrance
examinations or, if he is a
borderline case, the PSAT, according
to Foster.
ITERNMEI
lent RUSSE
*,e President
IDRA BELL, Sea
MWF: 3-5
TTh: 12-5
i available to serve
e, during these hot
Groups
personnel, SAC decided to cut
AMrtfAMinn rt11rv/%nfi/\nr< f A
uigaiii^aiiuiiai aituvauuna iu
create funds for the two areas,
Dominick said.
SAC picked up the two additional
areas partly because of USC's 8 per
cent budget cut imposed by the
General Assembly last year,
Dominick said. After the cut USC
officials decided the areas must
come under the SAC budget or
suffer cutbacks.
Except for these areas SAC felt
little effect from the 8 per ceni
cutback, Dominick said.
In regard to any specific
organization's requests and subsequent
allocations Sue Ann
Houghton, SAC adviser, said, "It is
not fair to look at each club
separately. One must look at the
whole budget." Singling out
specific clubs for differentces in
requests and allocations is
misleading, she added.
However, Dominick said the
organizations were funded on a
program basis. "If a program was
not worthy of funding we didn't
fund it," he said.
The SAC did not compare the
programs of any clubs and decide
the request of one should be funded
on the basis of being more valuable
Twain impressions
Mark Twain, or at least actor
Jack Thomas' portrayal of the
author and philosopher will be
presented at 'he Capstone Campus
Room April 20 starting at 8:15 p.m.
The Russell House-University
Union presentation will feature
NT ewwu
l i PUTNAM C.h
? ? ? w ? II * 1|| V/ I \
Student Supreme C
Tues: 1-2
Wed: 1-2
Thurs: 1-2
Fri: 1-3
REX GALE, Tr<
Mon-Fri: 2-4
"etary
vou in the Stnrl oni
_ ? -- - - ?' w w v? III
irs or by appointme
From Page 1
than another's, Roughton said. The
needs of each organization were
considered separately, she said.
New travel guidelines accounted
for cuts in the sports club's
allocations. "We reduced travel in
some cases by as much as onethird,"
Dominick said. An ap
propriation rate of six cents per
mile, rather than the previous 14
cents per mile, was established.
SAC also recommended the use of
personal vehicles in organizational
travel.
The $30-a-day allocation, formally
used for organizations'
motel and hotel expenses while on
trips, has been altered. The SAC's
new lodging appropriaions are
based on group totals, Dominick
said.
A contingency fund of approximately
$24,000 was appropriated
for special circumstances,
Dominick said. For
example, the contingency money
can be used for an organization
that reaches the finals of a particular
competition and needs
extra appropriations, he said.
SAC did not approve funds unless
a group was chartered, Dominick
said.
it to perform
Thomas relating portions of
Twain's greatest works including
Life on the Mississippi and The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
He will also recite parts of Twain's
short stories.
E!MS
def Justice
ourt
sasurer
Government
nt.