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?fe*'vt'uuk<a*3r?.? 4* 1 hii I cm. wjlUjk jSH fiff H fig jg S op fin SB mb SB South Carofina'? Beat Colleg* Ntwtpapcr fVl O R d 3 y Volume LXX, No. "73 University of South Carolina, Columbia, S.C. April B, 19B1 USC r< center By Tom Coyne Staff Writer USC withdrew its proposal for an en vironmental health science center at Thursday's Commission on Higher Education meeting because the commission, has delayed action on the proposal for several months, according to USC Provost Frank Borkowski. Borkowski said action was delayed in January when the commission asked USC for an organizational chart showing how other colleges would work with the center. "We were requested in January to give an organizational chart," Borkowski said. "That was all we were asked for." in MARCH tne commission focused on South Carolina's desegregation plan, and in April the proposal wasn't on the agenda, Borkowski said. "They (the commission) made a request that we discuss the center with other institutions," Borkowski said. "Other institutions have had more than enough time to review the proposal." Borkowski said he did not know why the commission was delaying the action, but he said he did not feel it was related to the recent General Studies controversy. The proposal was tabled pending the organizational chart. The chart and Anti-wa By Donald Weatherbee Assistant News Editor A representative from the Columbia chap Anti-War Mobilization Friday led s organizations' spokesmen in calling for suppc demonstration at the Pentagon. Spokesmen from local organizations spokesman Ray Permenter III in front of tl mond Federal Building on Assembly Street statements endorsing the upcoming demonstr Spokesmen from the Columbia chapters of in Solidarity with the People of El Salvado Organization for Women and the South Caroli Human Rights for Sexual Minorities were Dre; According to Permenter, PAM, which i? organizing force behind the demonstration "U.S. hands off El Salvador; money for jc needs, not the Pentagon; stop the draft; ai repression and all forms of bigotry." PERMENTER said the demands will be ? states where PAM organizers have planner - Bj : W&& ^1 I H BMhr ;<\v '\x >. ;R;'^(|H;^ ^vr'. Kft&k .v.vRv . ^^^BBBBMBPBB^HHBhb^^HBB^ Hassan Ismael 'tracts plans nairotivo niltlina hnui nfkno I ..UXUMTV VUVI1IIV liVVT UU1CI 1110l>lLUtlUI12> <41111 agencies would be involved with the center. Commission Chairman James E. Bostic Jr. denied the commission had neglected the proposed center. He said the commission had not taken any action in its three previous meetings because two committees needed to discuss the proposal further. Borkowski said, "The center was to be the catalyst for various requests the College of Health receives from industries." BORKOWSKI said the center would provide services to industries by testing substances or the effect of noise. It would give visibility to the nature of the services of the university," he said. A commission staff member said the commission had not received the chart until February and there was no explanation of tho nharf V V??M * v . The staff member said the proposal was not on this month's agenda because the revised proposal had not been submitted to the commission until Tuesday. Borkowski said the proposal was withdrawn because "it is not in the best interests of the university to continue and to be put in the place of justifying the proposal. "The university lias no intention of resubmitting the proposal at this time," Borkowski said. r group a demonstrations to be held sim demonstration. However, hes; ter of People's Columbia will be the site of a d everal local Permenter said the demand >rt of a May 3rd the people attending the mai people that have or will be aff joined PAM proposals. le Strom Thur- "We are meeting at the fc to make brief within this building are mos ation. agencies that will be hurt fc the Committee said. r, the National "That is, all but the Dep ina Coalition on military that will be given a sent. $iyoDUiion," nesaid. 5 the principle Permenter said the increas , is demanding many truly deserving people t >bs and human a "strong and massive" anti-v nd end racism, El Salvador to be the next Viet Sue Bowman, spokesman fc echoed in other Committee in Solidarity With i marches and the American government is 4 jjgf Egyptic 3j?J 'impres By Teresa Naw? An adviser to Egyptian Pre USC's Sumwalt College of 14S ??-? ^ : positively impressed, accor Dr. Hassan Ismael toured ? x *computer centers to learn edu< used in Egyptian education K engineering Dean John Waugh "Ismael was very kind in school," Waugh said. "Of cou would take some time before it HISMAEL, 70, is an engineeri the joint Egypt-American Science and Technology. He i 130,000-student University of < education, culture and researc As a former dean of the Uni school, Ismael was interested engineering facilities. "He seemed to be verv Dositi HNHBH our programs, particularly in computer-aided instruction," \ Hassan was interested ir engineering classes. Waugh s 11 s mm | i L _ 1 L |^^^n|^|ffipr _ & a __ ..? 4 USC withdrew its proposals for an t center at last week's Commission on High that the commission had neglected making isksfor su ultaneously with the Pentagon Salvador." She sai< aid it hasn't been determined if opponents to the El! emonstration. s 44 are not just the demands of "IN THE Americ rch, but address the needs of without representa ected by the Reagan economic openly accepted ari Bowman said. "In deral building today because without being mach it of South Carolina's federal live without debililit >y any cut-backs," Permenter "They (the El Sa anyone," Bowman ! artment of Defense and the up an unpopular war budget of approximately protect economic in else who will help." ed defense budget will "cause Most of the spoke o go without," and he called for the conference rar movement "unless we want incident when a se i rutin. move or get permiss >r the Columbia chapter of the Permenter disapf the People of El Salvador, said and returned, sayin, 'clearly on the wrong side in El front of the adjacei in engineerin - * ? sea witn uni K. Weaver universities to distri Editor to be a national lead sident Anwar el-Sadat visited WAUG? is servin( Engineering Friday and left n major universlt,' ding to the school s dean. classes worldwide, the school s laboratories and Ismae| s interest :ational techniques that can he major reason for hj al institutions, according to Egyptian UIliversiti ... . . . . . .. laboratories for eng the things he sajd about the united States to get I rse. anvthini? he learned hprp . ... - ' . - . "T" ismaei s lour folk could be adapted in Egypt. wife of the Egyptian ng consultant and chairman of attempt to establish Consultative Committee on Egypt, Waugh said, s also former president of the .1 think the visit b Cairo and a past minister for university officials h courage an intercha versity of Cairo's engineering i in certain ieaiures 01 ust's " IHL DECISION who had nothing ba vely impressed with several of visit," he said, media-based instruction and USC is involved w Vaugh said. with Egypt, includin i USC's use of videotaped Massachusetts Instl aid USC was one of the first is a study of cracks ii Ok-.-: 111 ifmtm><??**1 x ^ ... i Jk... : ?& ... W&mi> ik**:... ' <ss:a-:vss V.. )n l/iV/inmAM#n/ A/ai. ... fivfiuiOTMor nttann sciences er Education meeting, charging f a decision on the proposal. ipport J the amount of communist influence on Salvadorangovernment "is small." an Revolution, the cry was 'no taxation tion' and the American revolutionar ies ns from the French to fight the British." El Salvador the issue is the right to live line gunned in the night and the right to a ting poverty. lvadorans) will take guns and aid from said, "since the U.S. has chosen to prop and unrepresentative government to iterests they will look to Cuba or anyone smen repeated similar positions, and went smoothly, except for an earlier curity guard told Permenter's group to ;ion from a federal marshall to stay. >eared with the guard for a few mompnts g he was told not to hold the conference in it federal court building. ig adviser iversity bute the taped classes and has continued er in the program. I as chairman of a national consortium of es that distribute about 450 videotaped in self-paced engineering classes was a is visit to the USC facility. Waugh said es suffer from a lack of sophisticated ineering students and Ismael was in the roreign aid to improve facilities. >ws a visit last week by Jihan el-Sadat, president. The visit is part of an ongoing closer educational ties between USC and y ur. ismael was an equal effort by both and representatives from Egypt to ennge between the two countries," Waugh was greatly influenced by Mrs. Sadat, d to say about the university after her ith several ongoing educational projects ig two being done in cooperation with the tute of Technology. One of these projects n the Egyptian soil's crust.