Mass Media (Newspaper) - March 13, 1990, Boston, Massachusetts 0n9lBtai Volume 24 Issue 24 The Student Weekly March Education Phys Ed colleges eliminated to move to Harbor Campus Mass Media file photo The future of the building located on Stuart Street is not known Students and faculty of the college will be moved to the Harbor Campus once the new plan is approved by the Regents by Sheri Giglio and Patricia Hayes Mass Media staff The College of Physical Education and the undergraduate College of Education will be eliminated and will be moved to the Harbor Campus as part of a plan that will save approximately million Provost Zompa advised a group of College of Arts and Sciences Department Heads and Chairs of the restructuring at an executive session meeting yesterday The Mass Media learned from an undisclosed source Zompa and College of Arts and Sciences Dean Richard Freeland refused to allow The Mass Media into the meeting Gail Arnold director of the Physical Education program said that Zompa told her Monday morning that the Physical Education program will be eliminated at the end of this semester and that Chancellor Penney will ask the Board of Trustees for a one time grant to allow the program to continue for another year This will enable current juniors to finish the program Arnold said that freshman and sophomores will have to go elsewhere for their degrees Arnold said that based on the Futures Committees report the Physical Education program seemed safe We are extremely cost effective There is no duplication of us within the take in million from all of our majors and give back million to the university to use in other Arnold said If someone could justify to me that this is the thing to do then I couldnt be she said Arnold said that the program is being eliminated because the administration decided that it is not central to the mission How can we not be central to the mission she said We turn out students that get Zompa also announced that the College of Public and Community Services will become the College of Urban Studies and will be moved from the Downtown Campus located at 250 Stuart Street to the Harbor campus The Mass Media learned The plan is scheduled to be implemented as soon as it is approved by the Board of Regents The current College of Education will be abolished and a Center of Excellence for Education will be created The plan also calls for the creation of three colleges within the current College of Arts and Sciences These are The College of Natural and Information Sciences The College of Social Sciences Public Policy and Management and a College of Arts and Humanities The College of Natural and Information Sciences will be comprised of physical sciences environmental sciences engineering math and computer sciences The College of Social Sciences Public Policy and Management will include sociology psychology management economics political science and the gerontology program which is currently at The College of Arts and Humanities will be similar to the one at Associate Chancellor for Planning Donald Babcock said yesterday I dont know that a plan has been completed I know that the Provosts office is working on a restructuring plan to be please go to page 3 Proposed sewage facility raises big stink Columbia Point community UMB concerned Proposal shocks Harbor Point residents by Linda H Butts Mass Media staff A sewage pumping station proposed by the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority to be installed on the land located behind is a controversial topic among residents of Columbia Point After each moderate or heavy rainfall combined sewer overflow CSO is stored in tunnels during the time that area treatment plants are operating at full capacity When these plants have the capacity to accept additional flow the CSO will then be pumped out The proposed construction is part of the Draft Environmental Impact Report According to officials the overall cost of the plan if approved will be million to Hlion According to a report by Moore Associates an engineering firm reviewing the facility the most severe impact will be odors with approximately j please go to page 2 Student thrown off balcony during fight in Clark Center by Jed Hresko Special to The Mass Media Residents and management at Harbor Point the apartment community adjacent to were when they learned last December of the proposed Massachusetts Water Resources Authority sewage facility The intends to locate the proposed Combined Sewage Overflow CSO station on an approximately six acre parcel directly adjacent to Harbor Point If constructed the facility will be clearly visible from the back windows of Harbor Point residents in the and South Point Drive buildings However the visual impact of the proposed sewage facility is only one of residents and managements concerns According to an engineering report pro by Moore Associates and commissioned by Harbor Point manage ment additional problems with the proposal include construction noise other construction disruptions and odor control Nadine Wiley of CMJ Management Harbor Points controlling developers stated that the Moore report was commissioned in order to sift through the Environmental Impact Report Their report states that the noise from the construction of the proposed facilities will exceed allowable standards during blasting and the vibra please go to page 7 Jurewich Contributing reporter A student was thrown from the second floor balcony of the Clark Athletic Center March 5 during a fight with another man Anthony Brown who is not a student at UMB but is a former employee of Service America threw 21yearold UMB student Cesar to the first floor lobby in the Clark Athletic Center Brown had fled the scene of the incident by the time campus police arrived at the center was given first aid by Larry Venis and Mark Hamilton members of the Athletic Center staff was later treated at an area hospital for a broken wrist sustained from the fall On March 6 campus police obtained a warrant for the arrest of Anthony Brown on charges of assault with intent to kill On March 7 Brown surrendered to campus police He was released on his own recognizance and will be arraigned in Dorchester District Court on April 27 in a probable cause hearing Inside this Issue Lobby day in Washington 3 Baseball season preview 24 Diving into JJ Foleys 17 Jail seen in many students future 3