The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 19, 1990, Page 2, Image 2
#l$iUSCBRIEFS
Professors gain prestigious appointments
Seven faculty members at USC have been named Carolina Research
Professors, and nine have been awarded chair professorships.
Five of the 16 are newly appointed chair professors.
The newly appointed Carolina Research Professors are Robert Herzs-tein,
history, and Bjorn Jawerth, mathematics.
Reappointed as Carolina Research Professors were Benjamin Dunlap,
English; John Dawson, chemistry; Donald Griner, English; John MacNicholas,
English; and Ronald Prinz, psychology.
Each Carolina Research Professor will hold the appointment for
three years and receive a $5,000 annual stipend.
The newly appointed chair professors, their chairs and periods of appointment
are Trevor Howard-Hill, C. Wallace Martin Professor of English,
three years; John Freeman, law, John T. Campbell Professor of
Business and Professional Ethics, three years; Glenn Harrison, Dewey
H. Johnson Professor of Economics, five years.
The reappointed chair professors, their chairs and periods of appointments
are Donald Weatherbee, government and international studies,
Donald S. Russell Professor of Contemporary American Foreign Policy,
five years; Robert Jones, J. Rion McKissick Professor of Journalism,
one year; Paul Ellis, chemistry, George H. Bunch Sr. Professor of
Science, five years.
Also, Matthew Bruccoli, Emily Brown Jefferies Professor of English,
five years; Frank Avignone III, Carolina Professor of Physics and
Astronomy, five years; and Yakir Aharonov, USC Professor of Physics,
five years.
Appointment to an endowed chair is considered USC s most prestigious
recognition for scholarly work and achievement
Selection is based on the number and quality of scholarly works;
enhancement of USC's reputation through regional, national and international
recognition of professional work; quality of teaching; service
to the university and personal and professional conduct.
Inventions on display in College of Education
Computers that talk back to students, laser videodisc programs that
teach literary classics and computers that help students learn physics
from Lego models are a few of the many new technologies on display
today during open house at the Educational Technology Center in
USC's College of Education.
Also on display will be technologies for students with visual or
learning disabilities. These include braille keyboards and printers and a
videodisc-based simulation that helps learning-disabled students learn
certain skills by touching a series of prompts on a video screen.
Established in 1984, the Educational Technology Center is designed
to teach practicing and future teachers how to use the latest computers
in their classrooms. The center also provides hardware and software
support services for the college.
The open house will be from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the center, located
in Room 274 of Wardlaw College at Sumter and Greene streets.
Ride with a sober driver.
JUST DO IT!
?
-*r|J > ?*"' r* ' 4 i ilf > * '
tit 3W iiw :j A.< .' ! . ' ' , .
If*?t ?'nt>rf) vort) J??*V/ .-n " r . " "V : 1
The BIG DEAL about Whaley
* Shuttlecock service across s
Video surveillance systei
Full furniture package
Laundry facilities
Sleep/study lofts
Swimmine pool
u ?
Ajlls
Office Hours: OK/l_7Qni
M-F 9:30-5:30 # Oil I
211 Main St.
WOSC-FM _
I Is
Eu|{; is
W rrt ^ g ;s
Bel p_LZ fl 2 o - Ia
KS 3 3 " 6 w> 9#
Kq rr <4-i ^ "o ?
il Q? Cfl O cj 3 ? ^
^ S
H w ^ o ^ ? 81
H a 111-2 r?
H u 2 z 3 lS
m a c s.? J?
in u5a *
s>f IH
BM USE M
I fTjrp
X JL M V/ Continued from p
of the house to talk to English and
Schnell, who were at the window.
Although they were able to get
their cat safely out the window,
Schnell said, "We didn't want to
jump out of the window because it
was a 25-foot drop. But they (Darien
and West) drug out a mattress
just in case."
English praised the fire department
fnr crettina fr? the hnnce cn
quickly.
"It only took them five minutes
to get here," he said.
Darien said they tried to move
things out of the house during the
fire.
Aftermath
neighbors, but they don't plan to
stay there for long.
"We don't want to wear out our
welcome on anyone's couch," Darien
said.
The residents are also concerned
about insurance.
"It costs so much to get started
again," Woods said.
"We called our realtor's office
(Patton Properties), and they said
the earliest they could get someone
here was Monday morning," Darien
said.
USC Vice President for Student
Flprtions...
V,UI
sides our governor's race here was
what was going on with Jesse
Helms. We had more people interested
in that than anything else."
Ertz said he felt that the "something
extra" was what made election
coverage stand out. The
coverage of Helms, an interview
with Lee Atwater and the up-todate
results were the "extra" that
set WIS-TV apart from other
coverage, Ertz said.
Thelen said The State's coverage
had to go a step beyond what
television had already covered.
Their coverage used extensive
graphics to show results and put
the information from election night
into a "nutshell" so results could
be easily read.
iGi Jf '
r's Mill is...
treet
m
\
I
j
I
& ASSOCIATES
f t r m J * m' jj
~Z3
IEATWMS,
age J
'The windows started exploding
while we were in there," he said.
The fire department put a ladder
up to the bedroom window to get
Schnell and English out. The fire
was put out with the house still
standing, but it has extensive internal
damage.
At the time of the incident, the
fire department was not sure what
i .t
causea me oiaze.
"I can't believe how lucky we
are," Darien said. "With the gas
heat and stove and the motorcycle
(inside the living room), it could
have been a lot worse. If Mike and
I had been asleep, it might have *
been different."
m
Continued from page 1
Affairs Dennis Pruitt, who hadn't
been notified of the fire until Sunday
afternoon, said the university
would do everything it could to
help the students.
"Last year we helped 15 students
who were in the same situation,"
Pruitt said. "If they need it,
we have rooms in the residence
halls that are available, and we
will assist them in any way
possible."
Suber has lived in the house for
a year and a half. "Nothing like
this has ever happened to me," he
said.
ntinnpd from naoe 1
Time was the most important
concern of The State's election
night coverage, Thelen said.
"No matter how good a newspaper
you produce, if you don't
get it to people on time, they
aren't going to read it," Thelen
said. "So we wanted to make damn
sure election night that not only
were we good, but we were
disciplined."
The three news sources spent
money as well as time on election
night, and the three men said they
totaled about $40,500 on the
coverage.
The discussion was part of a
program sponsored by the Society
of Professional Journalists.
rv x-vn. I
! ~ """buy on
Pie
' LIZARD'S
O CORNELL ARMS
QL
g buy ONE meal and get ?
0 (Does
1
I OFFER
I FOR E
I
I
Illll 1111111 11C
ppppypsMiiitea ||j|j
BRICE STA
f Who's getting a raise at USC?
Interim President Arthur Smith has approved raises for v >y
top adminstrators within the USC system for 1990-1991.
These raises have already gone into effect.
1 989-1
U?pVy nUI I III lloil cuvji /o 4>aiaiy ^aiaij
Executive vice presidents
Pete Denton 3% 109,229 112,505
Kenneth Schwab 1% 110,158 111,261
Arthur Smith 4.5% 112,154 117,200 V
George Reeves 4% 102,470 105,969
Senior vice presidents
V Paul Huray 4% 99,361 103,335
David Rinker , 4.5% 88,996 93.001
James Rex 5.5% 87.090 91.880
^ Paul Ward 3.5% 87,995 91,075
Thomas Stepp 5.5% 84.465 89,111
Jane Jameson 5.5% 79,032 83.379
Carl Stokes 4% 76.484 79,543
System vice presidents ;
Martin Solomon 4% 92,311 96,003
George Terry 5% 74,404 , 78,124
Ardis Savory 5.5% 71.447 75,375
Jacob Jennings 4% 71,874 74,749
Lynne Mahalley 4.5% 70,989 74,184
== Vice presidents / *'
Oennis Pruilt 4.5% 94,531 98.785 v f
Richard Wertz 4.625% 71,812 74,584 \ S
V\ :
Marcus Session/The Gamecock \
Walk confidently, briskly and try
never to walk alone.
Dress for freedom of movement: no
n'9n heels of tight sKirts.
Avoid poorly lighted streets and don't
V f t wa'^ c'ose t0 bushes, doorways, or alY
leys. If necessary, walk carefully in the
street.
Plan your route and tell someone the route and
when to expect you.
Carry emergency money for phone or transportion.
Never accept rides and try to avoid standing alone
at a bus stop.
NETWORK
252-8393
24 Hours
I I ^ r ^ H
E, GET ONE FREE! j
ase bring this coupon to I
THICKET, 921 SUMTER STREET O
BUILDING (across from HORSESHOE) c
iECOND meal of equal or lesser value FREE! O
not include beverages or desserts)
GOOD EVERYDAY 4PM-10PM.
AT-IN ONLY. NO CARRY-OUTS. . I
Expires 11/25/90
? ?? ?-. ? ...l
A.T.M. ON
^WHEELS
MUM NOV. 22