University of South Carolina Libraries
Volume LXX, No.13 University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. Sep 26,1979 JHBb BBHNn ISnJInl ? v^MHRHf # -V ^ Off-campus housi money, jewi By James Hale Sur Gamecock Staff Writer rac Six Woodland Terrace apartments were broken ? inf a 1 oof maror&lrortrl onrl tOQ on/I iro rinno orti/^loc nf fVto uiias imov vy wiwiiu, aiiu fimi aiivi vai ivuo ai vivivo vi uiv jewelry were taken, according to USC campus police Sh< reports. k apj The first report from the tenements was from lac Katherine Bergeson of apt. 9-F. She reported apj to campus security thai she and her husband se< returned to their apartment Saturday at 8:50 p.m. to find their bedroom window broken, and the contents \ f t 11 . i _ _ _ a a _i il. - +1 a m!. oi a purse ana wauei scauerea on me noor. a i lmex op< watch was also missing. Soi Bobo Williams of apt. 7-H said he and his wife ( returned from the Carolina-Duke football game and hoi found a glass broken out of the door, two rings gone an and an unknown amount of coins missing. wo sai KAREN HANNER of apt. 8-C and Robin Kesterson tic -fr. n _ 1 -i 1 1L 1. J tk/. t oi /-*jr aiso repurieu uiey reiurucu u uiii uic guuic auu v found money missing. Hanner reported that ap- or parently someone entered the apartment from an inc unsecured door and took $5. Kesterson said they Ha returned to find a cut screen, a glass pane removed I and $15 missing. inv William McNulty of 4-A said he returned early ite Sunday morning, and found the screen torn off the no rear door, and the chain broken off the door. McNulty be! said nothing was missing. th< John Leslie of 32-E reported that he and his wife out iiTcra nf rtf tnmn for fho uiaotranH anH rotnmoH cm WWV UMV W* iVITU AW* uiv fTwnviivi UIIVI m VVUA t?VM UU| Board of trus By Sharon Buchanan Qam?cock Staff Writer USC systemwide capital recommendations for fiscal yef 10OA Q1 haira po/innflv orinrAira/l Kir tka (\Aa?rl < iwvtua uuvv i vva/iiuj mvvii appiuvw 1J J 111^ MUaiVA ^ trustees and submitted to the S.C. Commission on High* Education for review, according to David Rinker, systeir vice president for Facilities Planning. Capital Funding for permanent improvements is th actual building of structures as opposed to funding fc operations which is the budget. "A nnmhpr nf fhima nrniprts u/prp nnnrnvpd hv fhp Sfjif Legislature last session, but vetoed by Gov. Dick Riley, Rinker said. "The legislature then attempted to overrid the veto, but eventually upheld Riley's decision. That i why they were resubmitted this year." THE RATIONALE for the veto last year was basically a economic one. There were severe budgetary constraint and the legislature needed to take a longer look at tli projects being recommended, according to Rinker. The projects being re-submitted have already been a 1 I 11 1 1 i. A _ ...UL _ 1 1 A M proved uy uie uuitru ui irusiws wiui an auuuiuuai iv jyc cent inflation increase tacked on to each proposal, Rink< said. The Commission on Higher Education should come t with a decision on the proposals by their Novemb meeting. v ?- ? 4 1 tl? At I. f A 1i no commission win review ine capitai projects, o most likely will not change any of the monetary figure B ^ -vfuse ' ..ii""'?^ -mmm * p^K^wufflp rig burglarized; _ I if Homestead, elry taken *ssz ?- mnuuiance lday evening to find a glass pane removed, and a waspronoui lio and $3 in coins missing. . 550011 coi Lay Chandler, a resident of the apartments, said tnem at tni : residents were still discovering articles missing. become ver > added this was not the first time this year the ? irtments had been robbed. She said there was a for Fred an< k of fieciirttv natrols and exterior lights around the artments, an<J that residents were planning to seek SINCLAI purity improvements. usc footbj "He start VOODLAND TERRACE, off-campus housing regained c< crated by Residential Life Services, is located on FVnnk Rnrr nth Beltline Blvd. ton^fyhU ?hief Harrelson of the USC campus police said Thecoron isehreaking and entering had increased in this todav altho ia since last June, and at present this problem is ?? rse here than any other area around campus. He ~ Cariensai d the perimeter of the apartments was par- Tuesday's w ularly bad. aood J . Campus security has been patroling the area three vouncster 11 four times per eight hour shift and is planning to rease efforts in patroling the area, according to BARRON rrelson. Knoxville, 1 iarrelson said he suspects that juveniles were lifting weigl solved in this incident because of the nature of the before the st ms taken. He added that campus security received .,jje cam( calls reporting suspicious activity in the area k. fore the first breaking and entering report. He said ^Sinclair w i apartments were in need of additional locks, promising \ tside lighting and other improvements which he is Carolina ini ggesting Residential Life Services make. ??? tees approve ca Rinker said. Instead, each recommendation will be ap- 1 proved, disapproved, or deferred, he added. In addition to ' ii* the oroiects that have been submitted after last summer's rf veto, there are also projects that may have been previously Jr submitted as part of the Five Year Master Plan, but not for ? i approval, Rinker explained. ; < le "The Commission requires a five-year projection for j ir capital needs. Each year it needs to be updated by dropping the previous year and adding a new year on," Rinker said, i ;e "Therefore, some of the projects may have been through j uie process before Dut only as a part of the Five-Year Flan, le' Now, for the first time, the projects have come up for is recommendation this fiscal year, and they will be voted on," he added. n RINKER HOPES to see the capital recommendations ?, approved this year, but he said it is hard to tell what the le outcome will be. -v. ' "The prospects we put forward are very desirable ones, p but there is a backlog of projects because of the veto/* r- Rinker said. "It all depends on how closely thfc legislature er follows the decisions of the commission and the needs of the jf sutw, nesuiu. er The legislature should follow the priority groups submitted to them, according to Rinker. ut "We feel strongly that priority should not be given to one ?, campus over anotner, out within ine priority groups sud football player 1 ? x: > UKlUie JJldtLlte USC freshman defensive end Scott Sinclair, 19, died ternoon before football practice. Sinclair, a native of Fla., was stricken in the Carolina training room while the workout. as administered first aid until the arrival of the Carolina paramedics. He was transported to Baptist Hospital and iced dead on arrival at 3:29 p.m. nes from a special family, and all of our prayers are with s time," head football coach Jim Carlen said. "Games y insignificant when a tragedy of this type takes place, and coaches are very much like a family, and we all hurt i his family." R'S OLDER brother Fred is also a member of the ill squad. I t A% I *1 1 A * t 1 1 :ea Dreaming neavny ana jusi Keeiea over ana never , >nsciousness," according to Richland County Coroner [j on III. "I understand his brother is on his way to Florida I parents." er said an autopsy will be performed at Baptist Hospital ugh he said as far as he could tell Sinclair died "a natural d members of the team were informed before the start of 'orkout. Practice was held until 7 p.m. "I'm not in a very now," he said when practice was over. "I just lost a love very much." SAID Sinclair complained of a sore throat while in renn., last week. The coroner said Sinclair had been its, but said he did not know if he had been working out art of Tuesday's session. b in to get taped, sat down on the table and started lauilu " hocaiH ^ * UJ , IIV UUIM. as redshirted with an arm injury in 1978. Regarded as a roung defensive lineman, Sinclair was a starter for the nior Varsity team in last week's victory over Tennessee. pital f undinq mitted. Within these groups, priorities can be set up within the individual campuses," Rinker said. THE FIRST priority group includes $2,120,000 for >ystemwide handicap modifications and $3,391,000 for iystemwide escalation contingency. At the Columbia campus $8,072,000 is proposed for a business administration iddition, and $2,400,000 is for Central Utilities Phase IV. At the Aiken campus $1,232,000 is proposed for a library iddition, $2,110,000 for a Fine Arts Center, and $2,418,300 for i laboratory/classroom building. At the Coastal Carolina inmniie SO ATM ASW1 in n./vnni.y.J ? IS f 111: T>_: I .aiiipuo f?,vM,uw is piu^incu iui a niuiaiiis-oncc auiition At the Spartanburg extension $5,102,900 is proposed :or a Humanities and Science Building, and $4,333,500 is proposed for a Fine Arts/P. E. Center at the Sumter :ampus. There are also proposals for Beaufort, Lancaster and Union campuses. The total amount of state funding asked for in the first priority group is $35,278,200. The second priority group total is 116.990.100. and the third nrioritv ornun tnt.nl is $10,522,300. The grand total for state funding proposals is $62,790,600. If the Commission on Higher Education approves the recommendations, the bill will go to the State Legislature when they convene in January, according to B.A. Daetwvler Kvstf>m vice nresirient for business and finance