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GAMECOCK
LXXI, No. 11 University of South Carolina Wednesday, September 2,1981
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Holderman.
"We were concerned about choosing students and faculty
members who could contribute to the Chinese educational
processes when they got there, and we wanted individuals
who are mature, advanced and experienced so that we could
get the relationship off to a solid start," he said.
USC's first exchange participants were selected from over
150 applicants. They took an intensive course at USC over the
summer that included Chinese language study and a review
of Chinese history, politics and culture.
The summer training coufse also included a review of
American local, state and national government so the USC
students will be able to answer completely and accurately
questions about the United States.
Dr. Hilel Salomon, a history professor and China expert
who taught the crash course, and Dr. Francis Borkowski,
USC's provost and senior vice president for academic affairs,
also are leaving for China this week for a short visit to help
USC's exchange students and faculty members settle in.
They also will tour Shanxi University's campus and new
housing center for foreign students, as well as settle
numerous details related to the continued development of the
Carolina-Shanxi exchange program.
The Shanxi University delegation at USC this week includes
Feng Kecong, Shanxi University vice president;
Wang Zhongxing, vice president of Shanxi Medical College;
Yin Deyu, director of studies at Tauyuan Engineering
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USC DILI
From Staff Reports
USC's first student-faculty exchange delegation to Shanxi
| University in northern China left this morning from
' Columbia Metropol?tan Airport.
Five students and, four faculty members will spend a full
year in China studying the language and culture while pursuing
individual academic interests.
The 20 Chinese exchange delegates are scheduled to arrive
Sept. 14 for up to two years at USC to study engineering, the
sciences and health-related areas.
The exchange program was developed during a January
1980 visit to USC by Chai Zemin, China's ambassador to the
United States and a Shanxi Province native. Zemin returns to
USC today with a six-member official delegation from Shanxi
University to spend a week visiting USC's laboratories and
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p ouier insirucuuriui iucinues. ne aisu win (MiiKipaic m international
studies seminars.
The exchange agreement between the two universities was
signed last October when a 20-member USC delegation,
headed by President James Holderman, visited Shanxi
Province and other sections of China.
The USC participants were selected on the basis of Shanxi
Province's most pressing needs, which include "a heavy
economic, medical and educational thrust," said Dr. James
Kuhlman, director of the James F. Byrnes International
Center and special assistant for international activities to
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USC President James | , ^
Holderman and
Chinese ambassador 14 ^
Chai Zemin met during |J|
Zemin's January 1980
visit. Zemin will return i
io u5l today in
_ prepare 'on for the
? USC-Shanxi University
exchange program.
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College; and faculty members Liu Bo, Lui Kaiying and Zhao I
Chaoaun. '
USC's student participants, all from the Columbia campus,
are Julian Clark of Rock Hill and Charles Haywood of Hilton
Head, economics majors; Maryann Hurst of Camden, a
foreign lauguage student specializing in Chinese; Marcus
Keep of Hilton Head, a chemistry major, and Scott Allan
Lawson of Indianapolis, Ind., a government and international
studies major. Lawson will be in China for the fall
semester and will be replaced second semester by Richard
Walsh, a doctoral student in international studies whose
?n#?rialtv is China
The faculty exchange participants are Jeannette Cannon,
an instructor in the department of preventive medicine and
community health of the School of Medicine, who plans to
research the use of medical paraprofessionals and lay
practitioners in the Chinese health care system; Dr.
Reinhold Engelmayer, a native of Austria and an associate
professor of anthropology and sociology at Coastal Carolina,
who plans to visit museums and archeological sites to study
the paleoanthropology of China; Dr. Betty Hodges, assistant
professor of education at USC Lancaster, who plans to teach
prospective ftngnsn teacners in unina; ana ur. noDeri
Thompson, associate professor in the Department of
Government and International Studies in Columbia, who will
do research on U.S.-China relations.
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