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Honor Code to allow M^jSSV S?'u ^ IT f'u ?5 OpOtliO III auditorium on Sunday night,
S for mora faculty inunluammn Iffly S,",h r ~ ^ 9 Tina Turner is the queen of
MJMMI 0000 2. T/ m:all those Thursday games, ^ V rock V roll, page 5.
.j / Kickoff Magazine. ^ ?
The Gamecock
Founded 1908 _ Friday
Volume 78, No. 46 University of South Carolina November 22, 1985
International
_ law degree
approved
By JULIET NADER
Assistant news editor
A new graduate degree in international
law was approved
yesterday at the Academic Af
lairs ana faculty Liaison Committee
of the Board of Trustees'
meeting in the Osborne Ad^
ministration Building.
Master of Arts in International
Legal studies degrees will be
available to American law school
graduates already holding a Juris
Doctorate. Master of Laws
degrees will be available to other
participants. Program requirements
are similar for both
degrees.
Law school Dean Harry
Lightsey said the degree program
was deemed necessary when he
received 40 applications from in
y lernauonai law students who
wanted to do their graduate work
at USC. He said there was no
program to accommodate them.
The program will require four
more classes and one additional
faculty member.
USC President James Holderman
said the program will add an
exciting new dimension to the law
school.
' SG Senate
By STEPHEN C. GUILFOYLE
Staff writer
The proposed student activity
Golden Spur received a blow Wedn<
dent Government Senate voted i
$60,000 to the project.
Based on the findings of her comi
^ Sen. Babbs Henry recommended
allocate funds to the project. She
organizations on campus, only I
survey to the committee.
Eight organizations said they wa
amvuits ccuici, nircc wanted a siuc
one wanted it to be used for some
Sen. James Brown said it was s
that helped the committ<
recommendation.
NINETY-TWO STUDENTS retu
committee had left in front of the 5
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Burn, tiger, bum
) I Senior defensive end Tony Guyton toi
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Rain, rain go away
Student* get firsthand axperiance of whaQhBjgMiomjmfllLJimaLh^
| like as the rain continues.
> *
votes not to allocate
,, Committee report
;sday as the Stu- ? _
0 0 "oca,e of students surve
nitee's research,
the Senate not
said out of 150 ment office, and 72 percent said they wanted the
12 returned the Spur to be a lounge for students; 20 percent said
they wanted some other use for it, and eight percent
nted the student said they wanted a student activities center.
lent lounge, and Brown said other surveys were turned over to the
other purpose. committee, including one with 592 names requesting
tudent response the Spur not be turned into an office.
1 f* m Q A I t C U A ?lo/\ A ?U "-"*1 r
u j ml aisu saiu ulcic was anunici survey irom me
USC School of Medicine requesting the Spur be
opened as a lounge.
rned surveys the "I think the Medical School should be commenditudent
Govern- ed for taking an interest in what is going on, because
yJMP
rchM the Ciemson tiger in the annual Phi Kappa P?i fraternity Tiger Burn pep rel
Journalis
by editor
By MARISA J. PORTO
News editor
Joseph Shoquist, managing
editor for spccial projects at the
Milwaukee Journal, has replaced
retired USC College of Journalism
Dean Albert T. Scroggins.
USC President James Holderman
made the announcement to
the journalism faculty yesterday.
"Joe Shoquist enjoys tremendous
respect among journalists
thoughout the nation, and the
Milwaukee Journal has been a
pacesetter for outstanding journalism
under his leadership,"
Holderman said.
Shoquist is president of the Accrediting
Council on Education
in Journalism and Mass
Communications.
The search for a journalism
dean began when Scroggins
retired last year after 20 years at
USC.
Shoquist received his
bachelor's and master's degrees
from the University of Iowa journalism
school and began his
career at Idaho Newspapers in
th#? I Q4flc
"USC is a dynamic institution,
one that has achieved national
and international recognition in
money for
finds 72 pa
'yed want lot
they are all the way across town,
was overwhelmingly in favor of a
can decide what the students woul
the Spur," Brown said.
BROWN INTRODUCED leg
meeting to move the $60,000 from
into the general fund, and the Sen
He said the finance committee m
funds if they have a request for th
SG Vice President Amy Hous
rlr
~i <$ . 'R? M-;'? i
<
v? . *:
V-^: .
< ' I'
JOSEPH GARNETT/Tt* G?r?cock
lly co sponsored this year by Kappa
;m positio
r
Trom iviii
Joseph Shoquist
New journalism dean
many fields, and it is an exciting
prospect to become associated
with it," Shoquist said. "It has
the opportunity to grow and
strengthen its position nationally
as well as in the state, and I am
looking forward to being a part
of that growth."
Shoquist, praising (JSC's journalism
program as one of the best
in the nation, said he viewed his
appointment as a challenge and
an opportunity.
See "Dean," page 2.
Golden Spui
* force would cont
rnPflT possibilities for th
" I***' * I In other busine
a resolution sayir
r IJTV/VO the rights of all st
J/fi/fc? in the Faculty Ser
& tion students not?
jurisdiction.
Student reaction
lounge. Now we THE COMMI
Id like done with Senate's recomme
stitution for judi
resolution.
;islation in the The resolution ;
the special fund student represent;
ate approved. and Petitions Cc
tion, the committi
ay re-allocate the violations from tl
e money. dent on the comn
er said the task The Senate pas:
0 unit;11 is a
police repc
USC kidnap victin
j BBs shot through
1 student, causing i
I By HAL MILLARD
I o??i#
UIQII fVlllUI
A male USC student was kidnapped
and assaulted Nov. 19,
according to a report filed in the
University Police Department.
The incident occurred when a
USC student was approached by
an unknown person and forced
into a white Chevrolet Citation at
Large Davis Field on 1300 Greene
St.
He was driven to the top level
of the Pendleton Street Garage
and became involved in a fight
after exiting the vehicle.
THE STUDENT received
several cuts from a broken bottle
during the fight.
He was transported to Thomson
Student Health Center and
later to Richland Memorial
Hospital.
An assault occurred on the 5th
floor of Douglas dormitory Nov.
14, where a female student was
met by an unknown person who
started verbally assaulting her.
The victim was physically
n filled
waukee
r% I - 1
Keiocation,
fund-raiser
in planning
By JULIET NADER
and HAL MILLARD
Staff writers
Now that the journalism
school has a dean, a fundraising
campaign and a relocation
arc planned for the near
future.
"We're hoping we could
raise several millions of
dollars," said USC President
James B. Holderman. "We're
going to target some key
people."
When the engineering
department moves into the
Swearingen Center, its new
building, the journalism
department will move into
Sumwalt College, the current
engineering building.
Money from the fund-raiser
See "Fund," page 2.
' offices
inue to meet to investigate other
\e Spur.
ss, Sen. Ed Sookikian introduced
ig the Senate concerns itself with
udents. He said certain legislation
late would take continuing educa;eeking
degrees out of the Senate's
TTEE formed by the Faculty
ndation "usurps the Student Conicial
process," according to the
also states that because there is no
ition on the Academic Standards
iminittee for Continuing Educaee
should remove all student code
heir jurisdiction and place a stulittee.
sed the resolution.
issa ulted,
. _
ins say
7 receives cuts;
windows strike
njury to back
assaulted when she tried to strike
the suspect.
THE SUSPECT grabbed the
student's hands and pushed her
against a wail, resulting in
scrapes and bruises on her face
and body.
Two incidents of BBs shot
through windows were also
reported.
One incident was reported this
week and one last week resulted
in a student being struck in the
back by a BB.
A grand larceny was reported
last week when a computer at the
USC Computer Annex was stolen
by unknown persons.
ACCESS TO the annex can only
be gained by a magnetic card.
Numerous cases of larceny on
campus have been reported in the
past week involving the usual
campus items: wallets, purses,
bikes, various personal items,
phones and textbooks.