University of South Carolina Libraries
f *v i jfiE533S39HrM'**nBttHi r v fni titrl?iTiiiH.rffggS^ tem^Bk rM^-:-^4E& MKraDHn^^^^HTi Willia,. Putnam, budget board Executivi budget matters at the state Budget and C Actomhlu nnt niithnriTn nnw nnnitnl imnrn Bernard Daetwyler, senior vice president Capital bonds By Forrest Brown A state Budget and Control Board decision recommending that the General Assembly refrain from authorizing any capital improvement bonds next year may not affect USC, according to Bernard Daetwyler, senior vice president for business affairs. Daetwyler said USC has not received any official word from the state, and any definite effects of the decision will not be known until later this week. The board made the decision Thursday because of a gloomy cvuuuiujr, I l&llfg UU1IU UCUl ttllU IllgU interest rates, and heeded requests by two of its members to leave the door open for bond issues to cover emergency needs. Daetwyler said projects already started at USC, such as the addition to J OlVl Hi Wo 3rp rtiittino WW ^ Ml V- ^ V* Iklxil ^ season and will week until Chris Here are a few < I Born to be King Islands The Odusseu Webster's Color Atlos of Kitchen techniques The Pocket Bartenders C Faeries Wings Tour U.S.A. Complete Book of Collec Mostcrpicces of Michelat i Whu Nothing Seems to ' I The Book of Hour$ I The Face of IJncojn 1 3400 Worlds Jokes, Rid . ? .. ! BOOK: I , ( i k . 7^- ; '' -.- ' ;3 M S^BsiKii? jb.' ! mem 1 ^ . I >>?tllii HUt ~ V ' ? >wl I ) Director, Gov. Dick Riley, and state Treas lontrol Board meeting last woek. The board vement bonds next year. This decision may for business affairs. decision may n thp husinpss ariministratinn huilriina would not be affected by the decision. "The B.A. building is on schedule, and it will continue on schedule," he said. USC could be hurt by the decision if any new projects were needed, and the General Assembly refrained from authorizing the capital improvement bonds. "It could delay any further capital projects, but it wouldn't cancel any. It may not have any effect on the university at all. I don't know if the university is going to ask for new projects," Daetwyler said. Any state agency planning new projects would be set back by a ban in capital improvement bonds for next . year. "There is no way of telling right now what agencies will be affected," Daetwylersaid. didwf Sahus? our sale books oul m/UII 4-I+L UC dUUIIIg IICW uu< ;tmas. of the books availa $10. $2. $3. the World $9. $14. iuide . $3. $7. $2. rti'ble Cars 1940-1980 $14. loelo $ 12 Ul/nrb Amimnrp FT > v v ^ ^ ( $15. 12 Idles and Puns $5 3 University Book ?un? "Your Partner in Ed EMret .. Photo by Ruth Schooler urer Grady Patterson discuss i i ai a aI r* i ittuummunuHa max irnj uenerai not affect USC, according to ot affect USC State Treasurer Grady Patterson ioia ienow Doara memoers ne aian t think they should recommend authorization of anv bonds. South Carolina is paying in excess of $90 million annually on a $620 million debt. The legal limit for the annual payment is $100 million, Patterson said. After the meeting, Patterson said a $217 million backlog of bonds has been authorized but not yet issued. The board's two legislative members ? Senate Finance Committee Chairman Rembert Dennis and House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Tom Mangum ? insisted on the emergency outs. "I don't think this board should tie the hands of the Ways and Means Committee and the Finance Committee," Mangum said. The board went ^long with the lawmakers' request. cut giwiuj (Ml : for the Christmas es and subjects eve >ui nAia/? lUlt IIWV. 98 98 98 98 aa 32 .98 .98 .98 .98 .98 .98 .98 .98 j? wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmbhmmh State senato CHE desegrei (AP) - The state Commissi recommenaauon 10 aesegrega nocuous and inadequate," said st The plan calls for the addition < state's public college trustee bof appointed or recommended by th Designed as a temporary soli the governor to give special co making the appointments. A JOINT legislative panel mendation for an hour Thurs recommend a permanent solutioi Committee member Chapmai Education Committee, said he > rather than a stop-gap, measure I "I'd rather go at it tooth and something permanent," said the South Carolina promised last i more minorities on college gover part of a statewide college d< Education Department deman Carolina. BUT THE General Assembly terms on a method of integratii desegregation plan was put into a CHE Assistant Director Jam committee that the commission measure, designed to ease press authorities while a permanent so Solomon said the comm desegregation approach recom committee that drafted the volun Under that approach, the sev restructured to make them ur chances of minority representati BUT LEGISLATION based 01 Senate last spring, Solomon saic would be better to move in s stalemate. A point of contention in the CI Thp PitaHpl thp ctntp'c military from the plan. By tradition, The of school graduates. Setzler and Rep. Phil Brad Solomon on the commission's de alumni requirement, indicating can pass that would open the cc graduates. The Citadel is a "unique xnstit don't see how someone who is r tended The Citadel can understai \t+A / 1 U5 r criticizes f gation plan * on on Higher Education's te college boards is "innate Sen. Harry Chapman. jf one member to each of the irds, with the new members le governor. ltion, the proposal calls for nsideration to minorities in f SI talked about the recom- ? day, then asked CHE to 1 n, chairman of the Senate ^ vants to take a permanent, to the General Assembly. toenail and come out with Greenville Democrat. ^ear to work toward putting ning boards. The pledge was jsegregauon pian me u.a. ided drawn up for South has been unable to come to ng college boards since the iction. tes Soloman told the joint 's plan would be an interim ure from federal civil rights lution is sought. ission still supports a mended by the governor's * itary agreement. en trustee boards would be liform and to increase the on. n that approach died in the i, and the commission felt it tages rather than reach a H(E proposal is the fact that r college, was not exempted Citadel's board is composed Hey, R-Greenville, quizzed eision to cut out The Citadel a doubt that any legislation >llege's board to non-Citadel ution," Bradley said, "and I lot a graduate or has not atnd its problems."