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S.C. citizen hurricane's * "* By The Associated Press CHARLESTON ? South Carolinians, each their own way, will mark the anniversary of the stat worst hurricane in more than two centuries. For some, remembering the night Hurricane Hu smashed ashore will be a time of quiet reflecti< Others will simply try to forget. Still others will atte diversions ranging from a golf exposition to a gcx bye Hugo celebration. "I don't think there's a correct way or a good w for any one person" to deal with the anniversary, si family counselor Bob Boston. "I've heard some pe pie say they've worked it out and don't want to U about it. There are others who have some memor they want to share, and it feels good when they do." Hurricane Hugo smashed ashore a year ago Frid; Its-135 mph winds and 19-foot storm surge caused estimated $5.9 billion damage and left 29 people de; Officials say the last storm with the power of Hu hit South Carolina in 1752. A year after Hugo, many of the physical scars ha faded. But the emotional healing will take time. Boston said people heal in their own way. Soi may find they still have unresolved feelings a year two from now. He said there is comfort in the remembering and the flurry of news coverage surrounding t anniversary. "Having a week to remember is a real benefit to t people and the community," he said. "Those w don't need to remember aren't going to be hurt by They at worse might be a little bored and turn it o But many people will do the reflecting they need do." Campus crim By College Press Services While the murders of five college students in < ' ' Gainesville, Fla. within three days of the last 1 week of August was unusual, crime watchers s ' say murder is a more common crime on campuses nationwide than most people think. 1 Hard statistics are difficult to find, but crime c observers say they have been surprised by the c results of several recent studies of the problem. 1 'The rate of victimization is higher than any- t ' one had known," said Jan Sherrill of the Campus Violence Prevention Center, based at Mary- i land's Towson State University. F ' Though people have not been studying the i phenomenon for long, some statistics seem to s "show an increase" in murders and other violent v crime at colleges across the country, added Clarinda Raymond, Sherrill's colleague at a Towson. Moreover, Raymond said, the murderers are si 1 often other students. d "I guess we cannot rule out that the Florida murders were committed by a student," Ray- T - mond said. b On Sept. 1, police arrested Edward Lewis d Humphrey, 18, a University of Rorida fresh- U man, for questioning. Police added that they v might have other suspects in the off-campus murders of three UF and two Santa Fe Com- 01 munity College students. c< < F Police found the bodies of 17-year-old bi Christina Powell and her roommate, 18-year-old ci Sonja Larson, in their apartment Aug. 26. Both p< UF freshmen were partially nude and had been stabbed. si Eight hours later police found the stabbed, st decapitated body of Christa Leigh Hoyt, a Santa pi Fe student, in her apartment. V i i i i i i i,r|,'rr^'*r"rrr?rr^r--rr-' . rrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr r :: 0IH-IFTOUTO UK .'rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr 1r?rrrrcrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrri ,rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr-r-i-rrr \ Hand-dipped Y( I Chocolate I Vanilla J Stawberry Blueberry Peach \ / . ? . rogurt never tasted so g - Hand-dipped with premium ice cream texture. actually tastes like ice cream. Just as healthy a yogurt but tastes so much better! You gotta try our yogurt if you haven't i It's good good got Yogurt Y< I Single HUGE dip I kiddU (cone or cup) (cone : 'i2? : c Te ,COUP?n 9/27/90 ! Limit one. coupo^ s remember anniversary ? The city of Charleston and Charleston County wi in hold a joint candlelight observance at City Hall c e's Friday night, a year after Hugo wrenched the roof o the historic structure. In North Charleston, a play d< go picting the storm and recovery will be staged. 3n. Mayor Joseph Riley Jr. said officials have planne nd "a quiet observance of thanks." )d- "We felt we did not want to let the moment pas without giving thanks because we have so much to t ay thankful for," the mayor said. "We're thankful fc lid generosity of those from all over the country. W x>- have thanks we have recovered, and we have than! ilk so few lives were lost." ies A number of other, less-quiet events are also sch( duled. A road race will be held Saturday morning, an ly. the Charleston Symphony Orchestra will hold a fre an concert on Sunday. A golf exposition featuring art and demonstration g? will also be on tap through the weekend. The event i being held one year before the Ryder Cup golf tourna ve ment at nearby Kiawah Island. On the Isle of Palms, which was hard-hit by th "?e storm, residents have organized a goodbye to Hug or celebration. Tents will be put up near the shore. The event wil in feature everything from face painting to sand sculpi he ing and a water balloon toss. Meanwhile, the South Carolina World Champion he ship Rodeo is set for suburban Ladson. ho Promoters promised media covering the even it. "some unique and interesting possibilities such as ff- horse-mounted reporter, sportscasters in Indian cos to tume and weathermen being roped by (cowboy star Tom Mix." e widespread, ( The next day, Aug. 28, Santa Fe student Tra- place," s; :ey Inez Paules, 23, and her roommate, UF se- the Uni nor Manuel Ricardo Toboada, 23, were found Urbana, ?1 A ?U rr .uauucu iu ucaui. Oil-Camp The brutality and timing of the killings Monta jrompted widespread student panic on the UF siana Sta :ampus. Many apparently left for home just as homa Sta -lasses were starting. Some who stayed held fornia at arge slumber parties for protection. Others and Carr (ought weapons. the scene They could find weapons readily advertised Anoth< n The Independent Florida Alligator, the cam- hear of v ?us paper, which suddenly found itself with an schools t nflux of ads for mace, tear gas and stun guns, row adde aid an Alligator ad representative, who did not "ft *s c /ant her name used. a friendl; Some campus leaders nevertheless said UF is s^e said, relatively safe place. Studer "I think security on campus is incredible," campus c lid Michael Browne, UF's student body presi- ers no ent. "Campus crime has been down." Campu Multiple slayings are in fact rare at colleges. an^ prote he most notable instance occurred in Decern- reveal cai er 1989 when a gunman killed 14 female stu- Editors ents and wounded another 13 people at the Virginia, niversity of Montreal. versities 1 administr; Some 1,900 violent crimes were committed crime in t n campuses in 1988, according to the most re- Whatev jnt FBI census of crime in America. While the security, ! BI report is notoriously misleading, the num- to the cai sr probably did not represent all the violent locked or imes because colleges were not required to re- ound cam 3rt them. "It's in propping i In January 1990, Raymond's group released a dents," R; irvey showing that 26 percent of the nation's tors also udents typically do not think of their cam- "Schools ises as dangerous. hiring Dr "They naturally want to believe it's a safe campus as " r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r' r r r' r' r' r' r' r' r r r r rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrcrrrrrrrrrrrr HY, YOU'LL ONLY LOSE YC rrrrr r-rrrrrrrrrrrrr^rrr-r r r r r r r r r ~t_rt_r|_r[_r<_rr.-|_rt_r|_ri_r(_rt_r[_r(_r)_f-t_r|_rt_-r[_ri_r|_r|_'-|_r|_r|_r_ r _ r _r_r r r r J 11 LH "V"! Dgurt i ^ K8|3 H Attontinn miwi i IIVI i ood! I h : Earn Ext s soft : I No Experien* j P.T. Jobs M\ )d! : EveniiK 0 * 1 Telephone "1 Starting $ )gurt TJZ ' : call M; )()t : 779expires 9/2790 * Smith Continued fi be," he said. The reaccreditation team will be working from a self-study document prepared by the USC faculty. The document, which is a result of two years' work, defines the mis,n sion and goals of the university and what the university wants to achieve. One of those goals is to be-recd ognized as one of the top graduate and research institutions in the !S country, Smith said. ,e USC has already earned recog)r nition by having its international e business program ranked first in tne country, use is followed by Harvard, New York University, d ~ I Crime Continued 1 IS two unidentified males. The subjects demanded money from the victim, who responded that he didn't have any, according to police blotter. The victim then fled on foot beIraq Continued from | a Iraq is not the only country that will suffer from the embargo, ac) cording to Osman. "Jordan's economy will suffer. Turkey's ecocommon aid Jeanne Morrow, housing director at versity of Illinois at Champaign? where a student was murdered in her us apartment in mid-August, na State, Ball State, St. John's, Louiite, Northeastern, Wesleyan and Oklaite universities, the University of CaliBerkeley, and Ithaca, Stephens, Hunter oil colleges, among others, have been s of violent crimes recently. ix reason students may be shocked to iolent crimes on their campuses is that hemselves mislead the students, Mord. onstantly reinforced (to students) what y, warm environment the campus is," its, moreover, may not know about :rimes because their campus newspapt report them. ses, worried about the school's image cting victims' privacy, often refuse to npus crimes to reporters. i at Southwest Missouri State, West Oakland and Southern Arkansas uniiave sued during the past year to force itors to give them information about heir communities. 'er the reasons for the false sense of students often inadvertently contribute npus crime rate by leaving doors untaking ill-advised nighttime walks arpus. lportant to make students realize that open a door could endanger other stuaymond said, adding that administraare often lax about preventing crime, must realize that more important than . Wonderful is providing as safe a > J/UaMUlC. rrrr r r r r r r r r r r r r rvr r r T r rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr W IM-r^ rrrr r r r r r rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr-n rrrrr-rrrrrrrrrrr - r r ,n rh Students! ra Dollars De Necessary /ith Flexible g Hours > Research 5 per hour arybeth 0905 rom page 1 Wharton School of Finance at the j University of Pennsylvania and the i University of Chicago. ] However, Smith's chief concern, since becoming interim president, has been the quality upkeep of the < undergraduate program. " 1 "Some people seem to think that ( the gains we have made in gradu- 1 ate education and research come at J the expense of the undergraduate program, or, even worse, that we no longer care about teaching c undergraduates," Smith said. "That i is not true." s The fact that USC is one of few i similar institutions that still re- I quires students to complete a core e rom page 1 fore the attackers could make their next move. Later that same night, p USC police interviewed two sus- p pects who fit a general description b given by the victim. However, as ii of Thursday, no arrests had been 1 made. tl page 1 nomy will suffer. Egypt will suf- tl fer," he said. y "Nearly sixty percent of Jor- C dan's economy comes directly from Iraqi trade. It would be very hard for Jordan to back the em- tl bargo with 100 percent support," si Osman said. E Saddam's call for an Iranian alliance has left many citizens bewildered, according to Osman. 3i "The Iraqi army had fought Iran o for eight years. Now, they felt like th their fight was for nothing. Even 0 SEC Continued from page Kramer's trip to Miami, Smith w said. th The next step, according to Si Smith, will be made by the presi- th dents of the SEC's member ti< institutions. b'< Kramer will make a recommen- g< dation to the presidents, but only al they can take any action. Kramer must talk to or meet with all of the tv presidents at the same time before h< anything can happen. th "The Presbyterian background that I am, I know that Roy Kramer 01 Pack of imimminHmi I $10 OFF FIRST M( j Tri-Star ! ? located close to i 2112 Augusta Rd. Wes 791-9919 (Mon.-Sat.) i coupon expires J fiiimiirrriiiii gym Don't Miss Monterrey Jack's is sponsoring / low-budget bus j_5? trips to "away" I=^2 games Prices include: Round-tri| mixers, ice, and snack to Don't miss the party! VA Tech 9/22 $40 G, NC State 10/27$25 Cle & personal checks group of classes is an example of the strength of the undergraduate program, Smith said. He also boasted about South ^omlinn r?~11 .U? TTO/-1 >_?iiwniia v,uiicgc, uic uol nonors urogram. Nine out of every 10 stulents enrolled in the honors colege are from South Carolina, Smith said. "That is something I am proud )f," Smith said. "It is important for is to remember, especially in the itate of South Carolina, that the indergraduate program is critical, t is the foundation for everything Ise we do." USC police said they are apiroaching the case from the standloint that the incidents are related, iut they can not be sure. Sources aside the department said the poice are "combing the area for hese guys." tough they did not say anything, ou could see it in their eyes," said )sman. Osman said that Iraq would be le conventional favorite if a war hould break out in the Middle ast. "At last count, Iraq has about 60,000 troops. This still is an verwhelming amount compared to le number of U.N. forces," said sman. 1 ants to do things, as we say in le church, decently and in order," mith said. "At the same time, ley want to do things expediausly. I think the thing is to sit tck and wait and see where we d from here, and we're excited x)ut it." Smith said the relationship beyeen USC and the SEC has been lightening since the talks began ree months ago. "I have a very good feeling abjt today," Smith said. Iamboovn fsoaET?? ? ?'" ? ?1 )NTH'S RENT ! I Storage i i campus i i t Cola. (near Wal-mart) H 755-2359 (24 hour) ! '1-30-90 ! rnaMi rrri nai rfc the Bus! cks on the Go... /J 1?' p fare, cups, od. A Tech 9/29 $30 mson 11/17 $20 for more info call 256-7764 733 Santee Ave.