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SC Center for the Book

Join Senator Ernest "Fritz" Hollings at a Launch Party for his new book, Making Government Work
Friday, 06 June 2008
"Fritz" Hollings, a former Governor of South Carolina and six-term U.S. Senator who has distinguished himself as a stalwart advocate of fiscally responsible progressive programs. In this political memoir, Hollings takes aim at our increasingly flawed political system and a government that has gone "into the ditch." As remedy he pulls antidotes from anecdotes about his personal experiences in making government work in spite of itself for the past half century.

To read more about Senator Hollings's book, please click here to visit the USC Press Web site.

You're invited to a Book Launch in Columbia or Charleston honoring Former U.S. Senator Ernest F. "Fritz" Hollings and Celebrating the publication of his book Making Government Work

 See below for information:

COLUMBIA
Monday, June 16, 2008
4:30 until 7:00 in the evening
Thomas Cooper Library
The University of South Carolina
 
  CHARLESTON
Friday, June 20, 2008
5:00 until 7:00 in the evening
Holliday Alumni Center
The Citadel
69 Hagood Avenue
Charleston, South Carolina
 
  Acceptances only by June 16 to
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or Shannon Ryan (803) 777-5136
 
 Senator Hollings will sign books throughout the receptions. 
Books will be available for purchase. 

"Performance is better than promise" has long been the motto of Ernest F. "Fritz" Hollings, a former Governor of South Carolina and six-term U.S. Senator who has distinguished himself as a stalwart advocate of fiscally responsible progressive programs. In this political memoir, Hollings takes aim at our increasingly flawed political system and a government that has gone "into the ditch." As remedy he pulls antidotes from anecdotes about his personal experiences in making government work in spite of itself for the past half century.

Hollings's long political career speaks volumes about the potential of the elected and the electorate to use government for the good of all. As South Carolina's Governor in the early 1960s, Hollings oversaw the social transition of the state into the civil rights era and from an agriculture-based economy to an industry-based system with international partnerships. In the U.S. Senate from 1966 to 2005, he took point on shepherding new policies to address hunger, environmental conservation, energy consumption, communications, international trade, campaign finance, the federal budget, space exploration, and national defense. Hollings's instructive recollections of these efforts form a user's manual for our representative democracy as he shares compelling—and often candidly colorful—accounts of the smart stewardship of resources and authority needed to enact policies that make positive differences in the lives of Americans.

Confrontational at times toward those issues and institutions he cites as responsible for knocking government off course, Hollings lays out clearly his deep commitment to improving our system of government, strengthening regulations on free trade, countering dependence on campaign contributions, and enhancing our communications and education programs to compete better in an information-driven global marketplace. This prescriptive compendium of sound thinking from an experienced agent of change seeks to reinvigorate a floundering system and actively calls good people and good ideas back into the service of America's bright future.

 
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