The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, February 05, 1982, Image 1
GAME COCK
LXXIV, No. 77 University of South Carolina Friday February 5, 1982
r' Three App]
By RACHEL WATERHOUSE
SUW Writer
With the deadline for filing for Student
Government office today at 5 p.m. three
people have filed for the position of
president and vice president as well as
candidates for secretary, treasurer and
senators.
Elections for Student Government offices
4 * will be held March 4 with run offs March 9.
Ellen Treanor, a junior from Washington,
D.C. currently holds th?? nffin^ r*f ?pprptarv
and is running for president. Treanor has
been involved in many campus activities
including two years involvement with
Student Government and said she has ideas
for improvements.
Treanor is the chairman of the Student
Organization Licensing Commission and the
chairman of the Student Education ComProposed
Discipline
Discussed At SG M
BY RACHEL WATERHOUSE
SUH Writer
A new discipline system proposed by USC T
B. Holderman was the focal point of the
meeting Wednesday.
The new discipline system will keep the ;
rules and ideas, but add a new Judicial j
which will supplement the judicial advisory I
place. One board will serve for social disc
^ and the other for non-social or academic purp
The new Judicial Advisory Board will
director and associate director of the student
representative from the university Legal D<
students and four advisers. A form of a l
Campus Judicial Board, will consist of sevc
two faculty administrators. Five of the stuc
dergraduates since 95 percent of the cases
undergraduates.
Students can appeal to a Judicial Appeal B
be established, consisting of five students ;
? advisers.
* The senators are now in the process ol
proposed new discipline system and the c
Advisory Board will meet to review it Monda;
In other Senate Business. Feb. 8-12 has
National Security Week, and posters will b<
campus displaying a running count of vand<
around campus.
The senate also heard a report on the firs
seating being available. There were 850 tic
through group seating for the Carolina-Cler
** next regular ticket pick-up will be Feb. 16 for
game.
School Of Mec
ijy liUWAN HKNSLEY help ease th
stjff writer said.
The percentage of students Though to
specializing in family schools prod
medicine in the USC School with a solid
of Medicine is twice the basic medica
J national average among the of these new
first two classes. declare the a
in which tl
"This is good news for practice unt
South Carolina. where * ---
~----- ' . pusi-giauua
family pract, .oners remain training Hew
m short supply, particularly Natinnwirl<
in rural areas," says Dr. J. JXal c
Hobertson Hewson, .?
associate dean for clinical f i,
affairs at USC's medical
. , students 1
. sch0?'' graduating c
V S.C. is 330 family prac- School of Mec
titioners short of the optimal chose to spec
standard set by the practice.
American Board of Family Among th
Practice, and the USC medical s
School of Medicine hopes to graduating t
)
_
ly For SG Presid
mission, which deals with budget cuts.
Treanor was a leader in forming the S.O.B.
Newsletter, sponsored by the Student
Organization Board, which she said will
help campus communication.
AcKlAtr A Kr?l f* T-.lo?. _ A. ?? ^
noiucjr 4-llwTCl, a JUII1U1 ilUIIl JUI1I1SIUII, S.L.,
is also a candidate for president. Abel is
involved in the Intrafraternity Council, a
member of the Honors Advisory Board,
Book Exchange Committee, and Bookstore
Advisory Board.
Abel said his campaign centers around his
being a candidate for student concerns. He
would like to see students become more
involved, and make the Student Government
more responsible to students.
Abel's concerns are the students and what
they want to do at the university and what
their problems are.
Also running for president is Kenneth
Allen, a junior from Columbia. Allen is a
-
~?^ ?-??^
current Judicial jjjj
; been declared ||j
2 placed around H
alism and thefts
t week of group ' Mil
kets distributed
nson game. The Glory B. Gault sp
the Notre Dame . change in the USC di
licine Hopes To E;
is shortage, he than one-fourth of the
students show they plan post
graduate training in family
day's medical medicine.
luce graduates
foundation in These figures do not in1
training, most ciude the number of other
doctors will not students who opted to
rea of medicine specialize in pediatrics or
ley intend to internal medicine. Including
il they choose these students. r?5 norrpnt of
te residency the fjrs^ jwo medical
'S?n said. school classes are expected
?, 13 percent of to pursue residency training
100I graduates in a primary care area.
incy training in "Our experience to date is
cine. Of the 22 that we have a very
n thf? fircf ?:..f * * -f
~ "- aau^ittciuiy ptrreeiiiage ui
lass of the USC our students going into
iicine, one-third family practice, and this is
ICIIIAC Ml icuimy in keeping with the school's
mission to prepare students
e second USC to deliver primary health
chool class, care in South Carolina,"
his May, more Hewsonsaid.
ent, Vice Preside
member of the Finance Committee, Powers a
and Responsibilities Committee, and c
Executive Legislative Liaison Committer r
Allen is concerned about many problems I
around the university. He wants students to
feel more involved in their university and c
know what is happening on campus. He 5
wants to "put the student back into the 1
Student Government." 1!
Jim Oxley, a junior from New York, is j
running for vice president. Oxley is
chairman of the Communications Committee,
a member of the Finance Com- <
mittee. and thp Rules r!nmmitfp#? k
Oxley said his campaign is based on spirit 1
and motivation. He realizes the problem of
apathy and wants to get rid of it. He wants
students to get involved in organizations and j
the Student Government. i
<
Barry Gray, a junior from Columbia, is j
eaks at the Student Senate meeting. Th
scipline system.
ase Family Practiti
Family practice or family treat a minor
medicine is the name the Hewsonsaid.
medical profession gives to
what laymen call a general "A segment
practitioner, he said. regrouped and
name from gen<
The emphasis on research to family practi
and narrow specialization medicine and re
after WorldWar II, added to area. In the pv
the explosion of knowledge we've come fror
and money during this time, nowhere to al
left these SDecialists of thi* nowont /if moi
medical profession a dying graduates
breed, he said. specialty."
"What got lost in the
shuffle after World War II, Nationwide
however, was what was schools have ti
really needed to deliver methods of as
health care ? doctors who adequate nu
were iramea in general care. medical schoc
The reassessment of this choose this
began in the 1960s when Hewsonsaid.
patients found they Few students!
sometimes needed to see two about the medic;
or three different doctors to to pursue ar
mt Offices
ilso a candidate for vice president. Gray is
chairman of the Finance Committee, is a
n Pftl hpr flf thii rilloc pAmmifton
? U1VO VU1U1I11I.ICV, aiiU 111C
legislative Council.
Gray said there are a lot of things to be
lone in the Student Government and the
Senate in particular. Gray said he would
ike to see more communication between the
student Government and the students. More
student input would improve and enhance
he quality of the Student Government
according to Gray.
Also running for vice president is Mike
Sheely, a junior from Ballentine, S.C. Sheely
s a member of the Judicial, Academic, and
Residential Life Services Committees.
Sheely said he would like to see more
students in the Student Government, and
nore outside involvement so the senators
:an concentrate on onlv one or two com
nittees and make them more efficient.
Staff Photo by Chris Brown
ie senate discussed a proposed
oner Shortage
problem." specialization before
beginning medical school,
and this tends to make
of medicine methods such as cash
changed the subsidies and scholarships
3ral practice unsuccessful.
ce or family
(vitalized the This uncertainty gives a
ist 10 vpars medical school a chance to
n practically ,nfluence a student s choicc,
ttracting 13 "ewson ,sa'd- Poslt!VC
.Ileal school exposure to family practice
into this e a School of
Medicine can have a major
influence on the specialties
medical our students choose in the
led various residency training."
*3 * ? * '*
surtng that rainny practice at the
mbers of USC School of Medicine is an
>1 students area of high visibility,
specialty, Hewson said. USC is one of
the few American medical
enow enough schools that requires
si profession students to take courses in
l area Of See MKDICINK pag?* 2