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News Br S.C. insurant (AP) - Automobile insui expe- ive, unfairly writt finai. ,ial burdens on both panies, citizens and age committee. More than 150 people tui hearing on proposed legi: way auto insurance policie Currentlv. anv motori: record, can get automol considered high risk are i Facility, which distributes insurance companies in Sc The facility has prover claim they are losing mill] Drivers, too, have comp them to pay higher rates. Citizens and agents alik subcommittee of the Ho dustry Committee that tht That proposal, which legislature, would abolisl organize the Associated Carolina. The non-profit associa ?iir:4nr*#? for hiuh r have to pay much higher the association solvent. Another qujj ATHENS, GREECE (A1 Greece Thursday, addii thousands of people ca squares across the natio earlier. Many schools, stores a Athenians were afraid the more buildings. No newlatest quake, which meas Police said more the collapsed and hundreds Wednesday night. Many c by two previous quakes o^ One Athenian died and quake, which measured ( centered 42 miles west of Pool rule ch (AP) ? New operating swimming pools in South the state Department Control. A major change, if th be that each pool would 1 by May 1,1983. None are train operators in 20-hou waste treatment or watei i 1? ?_ i\ew puQiic poois M proposals. The proposals are exj month, and if approved they would be considers within 90 days, the rules i Luke Ha use Riverbanks (AP) ? Riverside zoo i nnri Knilri a ffnrilln pyhi Council. Riverbanks Park Co Johnson said it would co zoo would acquire if it h said a new exhibit woul< the seven-yearold zoo. Attendance dropped 7 1979. Since the zoo opent of 29 percent. Its operating budget 1 1974 figure Johnson said Atlanta to j ATLANTA (AP) ? I provide almost $1 millic city of Atlanta to assist i and disappearances of 5 Mattingly announced Th Mattingly, R-Ga., i Washington office sayii $979,000 "for a varie y i MaynardJackson." City officials had cor ment had offered assist federal services, they \ help for the investigat % probe is costing up to $21 Mattingly said $650,0< from the Justice Depai come from other federai will be used to coordinat private aid coming in," I Clergy rant WASHINGTON (AP) says if Americans note ] be willing to set aside a < Thurmond reintrodu designate the third Su Ministers Day. a simila year. Thurmond said, "Mir who vare fo* -tiic ^pii Uu throughout the year" ar w* . ^iefs je proposal rance in South Carolina is too en, and creates unnecessary motorist and insurance comnts have told a House subned out Wednesday at a public slation that would change the sare written in the state. | _ a. _ii _ i_ ? _ : si, regarcuess 01 nis ariving bile insurance. Those drivers insured through a Reinsurance , all losses and claims among all ?uth Carolina. i unpopular with insurers, who ions every year under the setup, ilained that the system forces e turned out Wednesday to tell a use Labor, Commerce and Injy favor a new plan. is under consideration in the h the Reinsurance Facility and Automobile Insurers of South tion would handle all auto inisk drivers. Those drivers would rates that would be set to keep $jj<3 in Athens H.or'Another earthquake rocked IU nif iinu uubtriy ui mping out in the streets and n after a quake less than a day md offices were closed because it new tremors would bring down casualties were reported in the ured 5.8 on the Richter scale, m 170 houses in rural areas were damaged in the quake )f the houses had been weakened ^er the past two weeks. 30 were injured in Wednesday's 3.2 on the Richter scale and was Athens in the Gulf of Corinth. ange proposed. rules for the nearly 2,000 public Carolina are being proposed by of Health and Environmental ; regulations are enacted, would lave to have a certified operator now required. DHEC proposes to ir courses similar to those given -plant operators. fould need fences under the >ected to the DHEC board next then to the Legislature, where sd. If the lawmakers do not act go into effect, said DHEC official needs money seeds $1.1 million to make repairs ibit, it told the Richland County >m miss ion chairman Lawrence st $750,000 to show off gorillas the tad facilities to display them. He i be likely to boost attendance at percent last year, compared to id attendance has dropped a total ast year was 8 percent under the get more aid Resident Reagan has agreed to >n in additional federal aid to the n the investigation of the slayings '.i DiacK cnnaren, u.b. ?>en. MacK lursday. ssued a statement from his ig the White House will allocate of programs requested by Mayor nplained that, while the governance frcm FBI agents and other lad been unable to win financial ion. City officials estimated the >0,000 per month. X) will be available immediately rtment and another $329,000 will 1 agencies. A portion of the money e and administer "all the offers of tie said. :ed with pickles ? Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., National Fickle Week, they should Jay to honor ministers ced a resolution Wednesday to mday in September as National r proposal failed in the House last listers, priests, rabbis and others al of uuiiioub of Aiuuncun* e often taken for granted Case< consi< WASHINGTON (AP) ? y it oevi cutty ut Eiuuv:diiuii i.n. Bell says he hopes to bring college desegration cases against eight states "back to the discussion table." "1 think we've gone to confrontation too quickly there," Bell said Wednesday. Beli told 75 college presidents that he was 'trying to weigh philosophically" the new administration's stand on the college-desegration cases and on athletic violations of Title IX, which bans sex discrimination in education. In complaints issued in January under a deadline imposed by a federal judge. cihj V/Ui ici duministration told Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Kentucky, Missouri, Pennsylvania, South Carolina and West Virginia that their public colleges retained vestiges of illegal segregation. The Department of Education still is waiting for the states to respond to its ! complaints. Earlier, several of the college presidents, who are in Washington to lobby for the American Association of State Colleges and Universities, held a news conference to decry what tney saia wouia De tne disasterous results of President Reagan's Desegr* may phi ORANGEBURG (AP)? / torate degree now offered University of South Carolina w phased out and only be avaiiabl South Carolina State College (state's desegregation plan n federal and state approval. Dr. James Bos tic, chairman state Commission on ] Education, said the Ed.D. prog USC would be phased out as the plan to enhance the currici S.C. State. Bostic is vice-chairman committee appointed by Go\ Riley to draft the desegregatii in response to an order by tl Education Department. USC College of Educatior Jack Mulhearn said the uni currently offers Ed.D. degi education administration ar other areas, one of which cooperation with Clemson Unii Mulhearn told the Orai Today at; Building tours College from 9 a.m. t Building dedicate of Barnwell College ! trance of college. R foyer at 4:30 p.m. ? USC baseball - Cai Rrnadiis ;it n.m. RI1 Film - "Pinocc $1.50 and "Last Tai ! p.m. and 12 a.m. for J i weather Friday: Sunny and High in the 60s. w^Ciir^X-UW50s. delay HI prprl proposed multi-billion dollar jp cuts in student aid. |? Harold Abel, president of p Central Michigan Univer- p sity, suggested Reagan p reduce tobacco subsidies, |? water projects or shipping I subsidies before cutting education funds. I But Bell urged the college | officials to accept the I proposed cuts in student aid 1 for the good of the nation. r "We hadn't ought to | launch a vigorous frontal attack that will tear down what the president is trying to do...We are not j emasculating the | programs," he said. i Reagan has proposed || ending in-school interest t Subsidies on loans to college | students, restricting how R much students can borrow, ending the $2 billion Social | Security student benefit and p narrowing eligibility for || basic grants. p Bell said the cost of his department's aid programs | has grown faster than in- | flation ? from $648 million in I 1974 to more than $5 billion I now. Sen. Claiborne Pell, D- | R.I., told the college officials Ithat they should organize ; fund-raising political action [. committees. [ "We can't just bellyache E about the cuts. We have to offer some alternatives," said Pell, who suggested a $10 billion cut in defense spending coupled with tax cuts. egation j ise out I i doc- Times & Democrat th at tKo IKo riooorrrocratinn mm * vuv VlWV^I V^UVAVIA ixildbe phasing out all Ed. le from USC and that the co< if the with Clcmsoo would? eceives , . . . The predominately , qt fKg Orangeburg would Higher degree only in the ai :ram at 8di^trationBo8ti part of Meanwhile, USC v llum at offer doctor of phiio* education administr of the to Mulhearn. The r. Dick residency an< on plan requirements, whili he U.S. oriented to practi< ministrators, he said i Dean Discontinuing the iversity have a definite imj rees in College of Educatio id four plained, because i is in devoted a strong eff /ersity. eight years to refinir igeburg it. use 1 - Tours of Barnwell j o noon. jn - Formal dedication ; at 4 p.m. at main en- j eception will follow in olina against Alderson ! hio" at <i and 8 p.m. for j ngo in Paris" at 10:15 *2.00. mild. Low in the 40s. ; UMiMmJOjuMi&h in the *<-???' ? ? " ?' The railroad bet\ Bates West give this you fly a kite. Kites, blosson\ remind everyone that sp Stan Hawkins) olan avi JSC do* iat he understood Most c plan calls for College < U. programs at adminisl imperative effort state, a aid. program ' black college at The d offer an Ed.D. by theg< ea of education provides ic said. enhance fould continue to the addi sophy degrees in as the ex ation, according One is Fh.U. carries to ^ndl A 1 a n g u a g e enhance b the Ed.D. is duplicat jing school ad- federal c state. program would Bosti< >act on the USC progra m, Mulhearn ex- engineei its faculty has science, ort over the past are bein ig and developing in an e students Drug sm illegal in I AIM In n m>i i ? iti a uhu1i1ii1uu& vote, the House tentatively has passed legislation imposing tougher penalties on persons convicted of smuggling drugs into South Carolina. The bill for the first time makes it illegal to smuggle narcotics into the state. Previously, law enforcement officers had to rely on possession laws to prosecute offenders. The legislation passed 1010, drawing applause from lawmakers, who debated the bill extensively. The measure was prompted by an epidemic of drug smugglings off the South Carolina coast in "which record ?amounts ofmarijuana were seized and jjlljip' |bhihbik veen the PE Center and mg man a good place to ts and summer ciothes ring is here. (Photo by proval ctorate if the doctoral students in the >f Education, including school trators from throughout the 1 ire enrolled in the Ed.D. i, the dean said. esegregation plan approved wernor's committee Tuesday i a $7.8 million in program meats at S.C. State, including tion of new programs as well pansion of existing offerings. sue which the committee had e while blueprinting program ment at S.C. State was ion of programs, which the >rder cited as a problem in the c said significant new ims in agribusiness, ring technology, computer marketing and economics g recommended for S.C. State tffort to attract more white ; to the school. uggling S.C. dozens of arrests were made. The measure calls for sentences of one to 30 years upon conviction of smuggling 10 pounds or more into the state. The bill also calls for fines ranging from $10,000 to $200,000. Hep. Thomas Hughston, DGreenwood, said the legislation brings South Carolina in line with drug penalties in neighboring states and therefore should eliminate the state as a haven for drug smugglers. The legislation also sets forth sentences and fines for p e i' sons c o n v i c t e d of smuggling cocaine, morphine, hrroinr opium, ?nd other narcotics.