University of South Carolina Libraries
> USC Symphony Orchestra's "Six Characters in Search >. Audience can do the Ho- George Felton proves him- ?? production of Berlioz's "Re- of an Author" tackles the key Pokey when the self to be a top recruiter, | 1 | auess oeoole iust love to rend nrtiri^ hv n ^ ^ ^ - J+\, , 11ur * A ^ _ i i. ^ ^ 7 communist, homosexual nitwits. f|l| mance of massive scale, ity of the theater, page 4 comes to the Koger, page page 4 5 David Bowden, columnist, page 34 iCAMKCOrk' Volume 83, No. 83 University of South Carolina Friday, April 19, 1991 KttlEFIiYi JhthenewsII ;i!fWorld^.:3 Iraq hands over list of nuclear locations VIENNA, Austria ? Iraq has hiinHf/f flVPT to thp InlArnitinnol <>w .V.w? w ? ? HIV AlllVlllUUUIlUi Atomic Energy Agency a U.N.-requested list of the type | and whereabouts of its nuclear | cache, an agency spokesman said Thursday. The International Atomic Energy Agency, which is responsible for monitoring the peaceful use of nuclear energy, had repeatedly sought word from Iraq on the whereabouts of enriched uranium last seen by agency inspectors at nuclear reactors destroyed in the Persian Gulf War. ' Two weeks ago, the United , Nations gave the request some teeth by passing a resolution requiring Iraq to declare the type and whereabouts of all material that could be used to develop nuclear, chemical and other wea pons of mass destruction. vJi&tii Bush, Congress call end to railroad strike Pickets came down and rail- ' roads worked to get trains rolling again this morning after Congress and President Bush put a J stop to a coast-to-coast rail strike that stranded commuters and < freight for a day. 1 "We're happy that the thing is 1 resolved and we can get our people back to work," Paul Thompson, vice president of the United 1 Transportation Union, said in Kansas City upon learning the president had signed a back-towork measure. The walkout by unions representing 235,000 rail workers was the nation's first coast-to-coast rail strike in nearly a decade. African 'killer' bees ' cause of quarantine HIDALGO, Texas ? State inspectors have quarantined a 2-mile chunk of Texas after a swarm of Africanized honey bees was trapped and killed in the lower Rio Grande Valley. It was the second confirmed sighting of the so-called "killer bees" in the United States. The first reported swarm was trapped Oct. 15 in Hidalgo. The bees, a defensive hybrid responsible for deaths in Latin America, were brought from Africa to Brazil by a scientist and escaped from a laboratory in 1957. Reduction in military continues to hit state The military's downsizing hit list for South Carolina likely will not end with Myrtle Beach Air Force Base and a Navy engineering center in North Charleston. The Navel Electronic Systems Engineering Center in North Charleston and the Myrtle Beach base were listed this past week among 43 bases nationwide targeted for closure. Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, S.C., will also suffer personnel loses from the downsizing of the military, officials say. Shaw will lose 81 military personnel and gain three civilian employees, McMahon said. The base currently has about 5,500 military personnel and about 550 civilian employees. Compiled from wire reports " " ^ . Igife' - 'mm HRUM ' mr |p: r Jp| ** '% - , ^ lIlP^ John Warren, member of the C? Foundation and chairman of the views a proposal during Thursds Senate By GORDON MANTLER Staff Writer Twelve of 24 Judicial Board were unanimously approved by th Senate Wednesday. The board members were chos Institutional Affairs Committee c Government, but need confirmati< Senate. "It is crucial you work as a group," Vice President Shine Brool senate before the confirmation pi gan. "It is your constitutional duty, cial Board has an extreme power ir can remove a student from the uni together." T*1 T 1 1 n A 1 -K mc juuiciai Doaiu is an anenu of university discipline. The group Kent Stal to take o> of journa From Staff Reports Judy VanSlyke Turk, director ol the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at Kent State University in Ohio, has beer named dean of the USC College oi Journalism. Turk will take office July 1. She will succeed Joseph Shoquist, whc is retiring. "Judy Turk is one of the rising young leaders in the field of jour nalism education," USC Provos Arthur Smith said. "Her accomplishments in teach inrr Ofclim nrtrl "*5? icacaicii, anu vice to the profession of journal ism made her the number on( choice for the position," he said. Before joining Kent State ir 1988, Turk was associate professoi of public relations and assistant di rector of the journalism school a the University of Oklahoma foi three years. She entered higher education ir 1979 as an assistant professor o public relations at New York'; Former ] By SHARON FOSTER Staff Writer Former KGB Stanislav Levche to a group of about 200 people 1 night about his life with the KGB, current Soviet economic and problems. He was not the typical James B KGB agent ? no iron teeth, squ monotone voice. Instead, he v rimmed glasses, a black suit and 1 of humor. Levchenko gave a very open le the problems that are plaguing Union. Ik JMIHIE Renee Meyer/The Gamecock irolina Research and Development > foundation's study committee, reiy's meeting. selects Ji It Is crucial you woi members tional duty. The Jui ie student they can remove a s en by the >f Student an by the a board of peers to students university for discioline. screening A few senators question cs told the Board selection process, ocess be- "I'm getting a little irrita The Judi- land Smith said. "Some of ui i that they and I feel some of this is ju versity all by us." Many senators were upset itive form unprepared to review the judi serves as icants adequately. There had te director /eras dean lism school Syracuse University, where she { taught until joining the faculty of ; Louisiana State University in 1984. 5 While teaching, she was a traini ing consultant with the New York P Qtota T\ar\ortman* ^f T ??J L wJLaiAs iiiiviu ui L?aUUI allU served as a public relations consuli tant with the Community Founda) tion of Central New York. In addition to teaching, Turk I worked as communications officer for Continental Illinois National t Bank and Trust Company of Chicago, from 1974-78; as a staff writer with the Department of University Relations at Northwestern University in Illinois, from j 1972-74; and as a reporter and editor with the Associated Press, Chii cago Bureau, from 1970-72. r She earned her doctorate in public administration from Syrat cuse University in 1985, her masr ter's degree in journalism from Northern Illinois University in l 1977 and her bachelor's degree in f 5 See DEAN page 2 KGB agen Because of the seriousnt Levchenko loosened the ci :nko spoke about the stereotypical view Wednesday about KGB spies. , and about "People watch James Boi political 1??^ the KGB in the i spies don't yell," Levchen lond movie trust those espionage films." are jaw or In his former lifestyle, L /ore black top spy for the KGB. In 197 lad a sense the United States and was I by the Soviet government, : cture about death. He was instrumenta the Soviet Spy Trials and in the pros Soviet spies in the U.S. President's Ho /+*rv/\ /\/\/\ n $yu,uuu tor rei By TIGE WATTS novations Assistant News Editor 'This i The Carolina Research and Development Founda- jiunc*s ^r01 tion approved Thursday the use of $15,000 from the from the; presidential discretionary account for renovations on President the President's House. Foundatic Lyles Glenn, chief executive assistant to President ?y tc' John Palms, told members of the foundation that funds, G1 Palms would only use $15,000 from the account for by formei "We w renovations. we w "Currently, there is $55,000 to $58,000 left in the keep any( discretionary fund. Dr. Palms only wants to use tioning tl $15,000 from that fund for renovation," Glenn said. way t0 as The discretionary fund was allocated $65,000 at the P^an t0 d( start of the year. *"? for a stud ' The use for these funds is necessary. There is great ajso work needed on the house. For example, there is some Carolina'! _ n j- i . J . . _ . _ waiipaper needing replacement ana even some siruc- Founds ture damage," he said. quest was Glenn also said Palms plans to use another $15,000 "There from the Educational Department. The total cost of re- ^ck reqU idicial Board rk as a screening group, it is your constitu- 1 dicial Board has an extreme power in that tudent from the university all together. S.G. Vice President Shine Brooks : referred to the issued informing senators of Wednesday's confirmation process, ed the Judicial "We have to take somebody's word for it," Sen. Yasir Niazi said. "We voted on their ted," Sen. Har- confidence last week." The chairman of In> are new at this stitutional Affairs was approved by the Sest being pushed nate in this past week's session. The exact demographics of the Judicial since they were Board also became an issue, including numicial board appl- bers of whites to blacks, greeks to nonbeen no memo greeks, and women to men. John Garner/The Gamecock i im ipp^ >iNBMgi Mk| B ^ JU BHf . jflH BSr^ iB 5# * xflliP^ I t talks about So> 'ss of the topic, Levchenko, 50, was born in Moscow, and rowd by talking never really knew what he wanted to be Americans have when he grew up. "I wanted to be a teacher and other things, nd and think we but I never thought I would become a spy," movies, and that Levcheko said. ko said. "Don't After he received two degrees in Far Eastern Languages from Moscow University and .evchenko was a working in Japan for many years, Levchenko 9, he defected to said he was "doomed to end up in the Soviet tried in abstentia Intelligencia." and sentenced to Levchenko talked primarily about the situ1 in the Walker ations that lead up to the current state of the ecution of other Soviet Union. He began talking about the President of use needs lovations will run close to $90,000. s almost a last resort. We have tried to get m every source possible. We have got some accounts of the President, private funds from Palms, and now R&D and Educational >n lunds, Ulenn said. ling the board how Palms would use his enn said there is a great shift from practices President James Holderman. ant to keep an open communication and not )ne in the dark. We don't want anyone quesle use of discretionary funds and the only sure this is by telling the foundation what we )," Glenn said. undation also approved the use of $24,000 y on college and university needs. The study examine the great demands put upon South s higher education. ition director Chris Vlahoplus said this renot unusual. was a request similar to this a few years esting around $22,000," Vlahoplus said. members The debate on this issue angered many senators including Sen. Natalie Catoe. 'This is ridiculous and a waste of time," she said. "We should look at individuals and not groups." But achieving the right representation for the entire student body is an important element of the Judicial Board. "From the applicants we received, we picked the best, most diverse group," said Beth Reid, Chairman of Institutional Affairs. The 12 members approved were Cheryl Allen, Richard Bachmann, Elizabeth Bangston, Catheryn Berry, Laura Sawyer, Jennifer Broome, Jennifer Hager, Cardell Shortt, Wendy Goodwin, Robert Figueroa, Rejeev Swami and Thomas Oppold Jr. I Day of praise Student Government President Manish Shrivastava presents USC Provost Arthur Smith with 3Pj2 the Richard A. Rempel award BhH from S.G. Thursday. Shundelle Dogan, James Dickson Jr., Courtney Crook and Candace Corely (l-r) are S recognized as Who's Who M Among Students in American , Universities and Colleges at the ^ ^ USC Awards Day ceremony H i nursaay on i ne norsesrioe. /iet issues the Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin, and the impact of the American media. "The American press has painted a very precise picture of what's going on in the Soviet Union," Levchenko said. Levchenko said the only problem is people have a false impression of the situation. PeoDle think democracy has already been es tablished, and that the free-market capitalist society has already been established. "These thoughts are based upon an ignorance of what's going on in the Soviet Union," Levchenko said. "Actually, there's an See KGB page 2