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>* Club 638 a definite "alter- V Good triumphs over evil in V Mayor Coble. Sparky > Defending national ?? native" night spot for Mario Van Peebles' "New Woods and other local champion Georgia falls to So when our lives are full, we tend to forget how many dancing and fun in Five Jack City," page 3 celebrities make predic- USC, 1-0, page 5 people are out there whose lives could use some filling, m Points, page 3 tions f?r the NCAA basket- Ipi ball finals, page 5 ?? Shelley Magee, columnist, page 3 KtAMKCOCKI Volume 83, No. 75 University of South Carolina Friday, March 29, 1991 liRiEiill | IN THE NEWS'l ^ v^W:Ofla >\ South Africa could join Olympics in '92 JOHANNESBURG, South Africa ? An International Olympic Committee delegation said Wednesday it would support South Africa's return to Olympic competition only if it abolishes apartheid and meets other tough conditions. / The decision fell short of South African sports officials' private predictions that readmission would be recommended now. It left open whether changes could be made fast enough for South Africa to compete in the 1992 summer Olympics. Church of England chooses new leader T AKinAKT A- A? ? vrcuigc v,aicy became the 103rd archbishop of Canterbury, spiritual head of the Church of England, Wednesday after his brother bishops judged him to be "both prudent and discreet." Carey becomes leader of the world's 70 million Anglicans, including 2.5 million Episcopalians in the United States. He will be enthroned in Canterbury Cathedral April 19. gfglNati<?IS8 North Dakota Senate passes abortion law BISMARCK, N.D. ? The North Dakota Senate on Wednesday approved what could become the nation's most restrictive state abortion law and sent it to Gov. George Sinner, who has hinted he will veto it. Senators voted 32-21 to endorse the bill, which bans abortion except in cases of rape, incest and endangerment of a woman's life. Sinner has three days to sign or veto the bill, or let it become law without his signature. He has said he thinks the bill "goes too far" by declaring life begins at conception. Experts offer hope for very overweight WASHINGTON ? A panel of experts Wednesday endorsed two operations that restrict or bypass the stomach as a means of helping severly obese people lose some of their flab. The panel, organized by the National Institute of Health, said the surgeries have helped extremely overweight people reduce their weight to a point where their health is no longer threatened by obesity-related diseases. Crowes bash sponsor, get kicked off tour Chris Robinson of the rock band The Black Crowes is a proud rock 'n' roller. He won't sing for Miller Beer or any other corporate sponsor. Thanks to his crusade to keep rock V roll pure, he won't be singing for any more audiences on ZZ Top's current world tour. After Monday night's show in Atlanta, the second of a threenight stand in their hometown, the Crowes were asked to leave the tour by ZZ Top's management company, Lone Wolf Productions. Appartently Robinson's onstage comments deriding corporate sponsorship earned his band the boot Compiled from wire reports ? A * ^ I ;CV< sss$ I v |a: ;\ P 8isr This sign, seen hanging outside Mooi the growing animosity by students to< not turning on their air conditioning. Students he over air con By GORDON MANTLER the Staff Writer the As an early spring heat settles i over Columbia, student demands ing for air conditioning have reached tesl the protest level. ner "A few of us are going to forj sleep out in the lobby to protest," the said Jimmy Honeycutt, a marketing junior and a Moore resident adviser. "It's been hot for some ^rc time now, and spring started se- I131 ven days ago." IS ( Even though the weather is balmy now, it may not remain ^ that way. "We go by the five-day fore- a cast through the The State news- co, paper and the Weather Bureau," said Brian Burgin, assistant to me the Director of Housing Services. th, "The temperature lows for the sys next few days will be in the 30s. "We want y'all to be comfortu..? :f . ? .L. -*- tiir auic, uui 11 we iuni un uic air conditioning now we'll have a campus full of sick people," Bur- ma gin said. g Still, many students are upset cor over the uncomfortable conditions in their rooms. "All I know is it's damn hot in my room," economics freshman vjc Scott Ravan said. s-? Honeycutt said hot and muggy rooms are not a comfortable environment for studying. dei "I don't feel that Housing Ser- We vices or the Area Office really ous have the students in mind," he hea said. "My question is whether pip Despite ris tanning as By The College Press Service It turns out what students want most c SDrine break is a tan. Despite numerous warnings about the fects of the sun on skin, a good tan is s for the majority of college students v warm and sunny places for spring break researcher claims. "People kill themselves to get a good I thur G. Miller, a psychology professor al versity in Ohio who has studied stereot factors in suntanning behaviors. The majority of 80 college students Mi rated achieving a good tan a top goal for For some, a tan outranked partying and "It's shocking that something like tl would be singled out," Miller said. Even more unsettling for Miller was s in the fall in which 400 students were si about a young woman with skin cancer. After the video, the majority of stude they tanned a great deal saw their own cancer as less than average, said the vid gerated the risks of tanning and found a ] deep tan to be attractive. However, Miller did find hope in the dents who said they didn't tan very mucl a person with a deep tan as attractive. "If you can get some people to denj tions (between beauty and tanning), yc ^T5s8 < i&l N5 V < / i I j^l ? Eric Glenn/The Gamecock re dorm Thursday, attests to ward Housing Services for mating up ditioning ir interest is of the students or interest of cost" n addition to possibly sleepin the lobby or halls as prot, Honeycutt has made a banwith "AIR NOW" printed in ;e red letters, and it hangs on outside of Moore. *ob Gross, an undeclared shman, said students should /e input into when the system ;ut on. "We're paying for the air conioning," he said. Burgin said the university has rentral plant heating and air iditioning system that cannot turned on and off at a morn's notice. He said it takes ee riavs In nvp.rtnrn thp tem. rhe heat has already been ned off. 'The decision has not been de yet," Burgin said. He could e no specific date for the air iditioning switch. A.ir conditioning is on in the wers Lobby, including the ea Office and Housing Series because of residence hall n-up. rhree of USC's newer resiice halls, Thornwell, Bates >st and The Roost, continuity have air conditioning and it because they are on a foure system. ;ks, stude i top spri other people to br< >ut of a good connect-i?n students. negative ef- "i have no inte till a priority do I'll have evei vho flock to graduate student one college Antonio. an," said Ar- Anderson agre< l Miami Uni- be seeking a tan ype and risk things have chang iller surveyed Sludents want; spring break. bu'dontfmdad [relaxing. sai?- ... . , , v. x She credits the (wnmng) atd[udes study he did "it's been in th< lown a video But Miami's 1 enough done to ei nts who said cially because ski risk of skin atcly after exposu eo had exag- "If people drof person with a beach" maybe atti fact that stu- Only a national 1 did not find launched against great effect on tan ' the connec- "If you pit beai >u should get win," he said. Holdermai ousted fedi Former professor Justiz denies accepting money By TIGE WATTS Assistant News Editor During his administration, former USC Presider James Holderman hired Manuel Justiz to the Colleg of Education from a position as director of the Nz tional Institute of Education, where he had been ac monished and then fired. Justiz was hired in 1985, months after then Secretary of Education William Bennett fired him be cause of "general dissatisfaction with hi performance." While he was director of the NIE, Justiz was ac monished for "wasteful management" in Novembc 1984 by Terrel Bell, who preceded Bennett as edua tion secretary. The Office of the Inspector Genen found Justiz used NIE telephones and travel funds fc personal reasons since he had taken the post in Febri ary 1983. The report also indicated Justiz used airline bone Justiz often had expensive dinner: with Holderman, as recently release< "gift list" records show, and he ha< been a long-time acquaintance of Hoi derman. Both Justiz and Holdermai worked together between 1974 ant 1976 at a private Indianapolis founds A! _ 11 I iL^ I Ml-- r- J ^ A I lion caneu ine Liny cnaowmeru inc. vouchers earned through government business trips i take his family to London. He also made person; long-distance telephone calls and frequently took pai trips to New Mexico. Federal regulations require all bonus miles to b used during future government travel. Many NIE workers claimed at one time or anothe that the agency was overstocked with high-paid off cials who served no function to the department. In fact, it was those NIE workers who asked for a investigation of Justiz. "I could take you through the agency on any give day and show you people making . . . $50,000 an more who have no function. They sit around with n projects to work on," a veteran NIE official, wh asked to keep their anonymity, said in an August 198 article written by Donald Lambro, a syndicate columnist. Justiz was also under fire because of the lack < rotation required for NIE employees. It is mandatoi for members to rotate every three years. After a go1 ernment investigation, it was discovered that Just kept employees at the institute who were going c past their 10th year. The whole controversy prompted a Senate invest gation to look into charges of cronyism and favoritisi in awarding governmental contracts. Soon after tl aits rank & ing goal fit sak the connection as well," he said. has already been broken for some WKplk J ntion of going out in the sun, or if I 7thing on," said Lori Anderson, a at the University of Texas at San is that the majority of students will X during spring break, but she thinks 9U ;ed somewhat. i tan that "gives a little bit of color," leep, dark tan as attractive, Anderson media with helping change students' 5 news a lot more," she explained. k,c:ii? a >. .u ?? i V1111C1 UUtail l UI111K lllCIC S> UCCI1 |H ncourage students to stay pale, espe- 8 n cancer does not show up immediipcd dead every five minutes on the tudes would change, he said. _ For wc 1 campaigning like the one that was pjrst yea smoking in the 1970s will have a Students' I ners, Miller speculated. Tuesday J< ity against health, beauty is going to graduate st n employed eral official Senate began to investigate, Justiz was fired. After Holderman hired Justiz as an endowed chair of the College of Education, excessive air travel records and expenditures popped up again. The (Greenville) News reported Justiz took nine trips charged to Holderman's office in a Feb. 3, 1987 article. Justiz often had expensive dinners with Holderman, 11 as recently released "gift list" records show, and he e had been a long-time acquaintance of Holderman. [" Both Justiz and Holderman worked together between 1974 and 1976 at a private Indianapolis foundation called the Lilly Endowment Inc. ii Holderman hired Justiz to a salary of $70,127 ? s not including salary supplements ? in 1985, claiming it was justiiiea Dy nis experience as in Lb director, the I- position from which he was fired. Critics say Justiz was named to the spot because of "ethnic politics." >r A Columbia official acquainted with the situation [. said the Reagan administration did not take the time to look into Justiz's credentials. 's "All they saw was some Cuban-American from New Mexico applying for a top position," he said. S Justiz graduated from Emporia State in 1970 with a i bachelor's degree in political science and a master's in j higher education and political science. He also rei ceived his doctoral from Southern Illinois University. PI According to a U.S. News and World Report report, j both colleges rank low in academic credentials. Emporia accepts 100 percent of all applicants while Southern Illinois accepts 87 percent. USC accepts 79 percent of its applicants. The magazine also submitted a report with four 0 possible rankings for all universities. Southern Illinois jj was in the last rank possible while Emporia State did <3 not even make the list Previous to being hired by Holderman, Justiz asked to be taken back by the University of New Mexico, a school where he was professor. The university declined, even with heavy lobbying by New Mexico x lawmakers for Justiz. l~ Justiz has also been connected with the release of Bernard Baus, the Puerto Rico businessman Holdern man helped free from drug charges. Justiz said he went to the Dominican Republic to help free the businessman and accepted no money j from Holderman from his services. o Holderman told investigators this week that he gave some of the $25,000 payment to Justiz for his 4 services. d Justiz said earlier that he was helping an innocent man. -,f Justiz now serves as Dean for the College of Edu .. .i IT.: T._.. -y uauun ai uic uiuvcisny ui icAas. "What I can't believe is Holderman hired a person 12 admonished by the federal government Now, he is at ,n Texas, a school that gets close to $3 billion in endowment, with degrees from Southern Illinois and Emi poria State," the Columbia official said, m Editor in Chief Kathy Blackwell contributed to this ie report. ^^Sfe. ih^*, ^ | ? f | * &$HK||1 jT?\^ 11! i ^ |m v v ... } lilt! HH , Eric Glenn/The Gamecock wen only r law student Lori Shealy was named the Women's Xssociation's Outstanding Woman of the Year on Durnalism junior Angie Addison and higher education udent Deborah Williams pass her a plaque.