Forecast : F BHigh^O : Low 42 James Flowers ; Page 5 NEWS BRIEFS NATIONWIDE WASHINGTON (AP)?The dollar hit another record low against the Japanese yen Monday as currency markets brushed aside a massive rescue effort mounted by the Clinton administration. Currency traders estimated that the Federal Reserve, acting on orders from the administration, sold Japanese yen and German marks to purchase dollars in a sum estimated at $1.5 billion to $2 billion, possibly a record for Fed dollar purchases. Hnwovor tVio arJmirnqfrflfirm's infprvpntirvn in currency markets did little more than halt a steep decline in the dollar. In late New York trading, the U.S. currency was still below its levels of last Friday against both the yen and the mark. I Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin confirmed that the United States was buying dollars in a statement issued early Monday morning in which he repeated past assurances that the administration was intent on defending the U.S. currency. WASHINGTON (AP) ? The cleanup of radioactive waste left over from decades of nuclear weapons production will'take longer than the Cold War itself and cost between $230 billion and $350 billion, the government estimated Monday. The largest environmental cleanup ever undertaken still is expected to leave hundreds of acres contaminated with buried debris and cordoned off from the public. Many of the other areas would be suitable only for limited uses. The staggering cost estimate announced Monday by the Energy Department envisions a middleof-the road approach to cleaning up the legacy from nuclear research, production and testing during the decades of the Cold War. "The future use of the land and facilities will largely determine if the cost is higher or lower," said Thomas Grumbly, assistant secretary for environmental management He said in many cases its not te/?Vini/vallv nnaaihle tn return ell nnrts nf a fflpilitv bVVlllllVUiy ^WWWlMiV W A WVAAAA ww v. ? to pristine conditions. TODAY Today is Tuesday, April 4, the 94th day of 1995. There are 271 days left in the year. Today's highlight in history: On April 4,1968, civil rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was shot to death in Memphis, Tenn. He was 39. On this date: In 1818, Congress decided the flag of the United States would consist of 13 red and white stripes and 20 stars, with a new star to be added for every new state of the Union. In 1841, President William Henry Harrison succumbed to pneumonia one month after his inaugural, becoming the first U.S. chief executive to die in office. In 1850, the city of Los Angeles was incorporated. In 1887, Susanna Medora Salter became the first woman elected mayor of an American community ? Argonia, Kan. In 1902, British financier Cecil Rhodes left $10 millign in his will to provide scholarships for Americans at Oxford University. In 1945,50 years ago, U.S. forces liberated the Mfl?i Heath camn OhrHmf in Germanv. In 1945, U.S. troops on Okinawa encountered the first significant resistance from Japanese forces. In 1949,12 nations, including the United States, signed the North Atlantic Treaty. In 1974, Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves tied Babe Ruth's home run record by hitting his 714th round-tripper in Cincinnati. In 1975, more than 130 people, most of them children, were killed when a U.S. Air Force transport plane evacuating Vietnamese orphans crashed shortly after take-off from Saigon. Ten years ago: Gary Dotson, who served six years of a prison sentence for rape, was freed on bail from the Joliet Correctional Center in Illinois after his accuser, Cathleen Crowell Webb, testified that the attack had never occurred. NOTEBOOK Affirmative action forum today State Reps. Gilda Cobb-Hunter, Jim Hodges and Hunter Limbaugh will be the featured speakers today at a panel on affirmative action. The forum, sponsored by Young Democrats, will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Russell House Ballroom. International Week continues The College of Journalism and Mass Communications is sponsoring "The Media In Eastern Europe" at 4 p.m. today. International students from Eastern Europe will discuss the role of the media and the expansion of the communications industry in Eastern Europe. The event will be in Russell House 304. Journalism Professor Kent Sidel will moderate. Clarification In Thursday's edition of The Gamecock, the paper "Direct Action of Endotoxin on Cardiac Muscle" > mentioned in the article "Stroman named USC Woman of the Year" was written by Rebecca Starr, Alan Lader, George Phillips, Courtney Stroman and Francis Abel. S i * ?0a Hill: Generc JENNIF1R HUSTON Staff Writer University of Oklahoma Professor Anita Hill sp students and Columbia residents on gender and r Monday night in the Russell House Ballroom. Hill, a member of the baby boom generation, beg ing Generation X. Through her research, she has Generation Xers are known as cynics, know-it-al tive and selfish. "I couldn't distinguish any difference betwes boomers and Generation X." She said if s Generation X's turn to face issues! ual and racial harassment. "It is time to start thinking about what the n tion will do," she said. USC student Aileen Jencius said, "I think she i day hero." Hill talked of sexual harassment in other cor used a case of sexual slavery in Thailand as an exa five females between 12 and 16 died in a brothel 1 Wit T T Mon( DORA DEVERA and NANCY SALOMONSKY Staff Writers USC can boast one of the best honors programs in the SEC and in the state. About 6 percent of Carolina's undergraduates are enrolled in the S.C. Honors College, said Peter Sederberg, the college's dean. The average requirements for students admitted into the Honors College are at least a 1,200 on the SAT and finishing in the top 10 percent of their graduating class. Honors housing is located in the Horseshoe area. "The Horseshoe is about 60 percent Honors College and 40 percent nonhonors," Sederberg said. Honors College offices are located on the Horseshoe, and next school year there will be an honors lounge, Sederberg said. "Any qualified student in any major can participate in the S.C. Honors College,'' he said. To graduate from the Honors College, * i i x '- i ! ? _ n a nn a J a??i i % Students: 5% Requirements:! .170 SAT *28 *T ACT Housing: 3.5 GPA IQ; intensive Quiet floors or two dorms % Students: 6% Undergrad Requirements:! ,300 SAT Top 10% Senior class Housing: Homes Hall ? 300bed facility % Students: 4.5% Undergrad Requirements: 1,200 SAT* 3.86 GPA Housing: No honors housing % Students: 6% Undergrad Requirements: 1,200 SAT Top 10% senior class Housing: Horseshoe (60% Honors) ?****" " 1 ^^ sB^KsssastmaexsmmmKaaaam^m siuaents musi maintain a o.u vxr/\ ana have a 3.3 by their senior year. Honors students must earn 45 honors credits including a three-to-15-hour senior thesis. "Seventy percent of the students complete the requirement," Sederberg said. "This is an official university honor, which means that it will be written in transcripts, on the diploma and in the graduation program." USC offers between 85 and 90 honors classes per semester. Some classes are already existing university courses, but others are created specifically for honors students, such as "Infotech: Surfing the Net"; "Echoes in the Blues," a look into the roots This installment of Measuring Up honors programs at seven SEC ant Carolina schools. I I v* Serving USC since 1908 ition X mil! they were chained to their beds. -1_- X- TTO/1 "Sixtv-two nereent of sons are K)K.e 10 Uk^/ -J I acial issues tect their mother from their fath< This was one statistic Hill gav an by defin- tic violence. She related sexual ha i found that by telling of a case that happened i Is, competi- name she didn't disclose. The nev gram had been having sexual rel sn the baby program. One student who went to the 3uc as sex- to be institutionalized becaui for sex, Hill explained. ext eenera* After her speech, Hill was ask s a modern- ever &?into Politics"For some reason, I don't like intries. She Jencius said, "I thought it was mple where here because she is one of the few fire because to voice issues all women have." hwith he the minds < waited in li the Horses! <1* p vestigative IIS ors Droeran ^ ^ SEC and ii of blues music; and "Literature and AIDS." cia The Honors College also offers a speciality degree called Baccalaureus Artium P et Scientiae (Bachelor of Arts and Sciences). These students must fulfill the minimum general education requirements for a de- ho gree in humanities and social sciences, and see the College of Science and Mathematics, a I These students also must complete 69 honors hours and a nine- to- 15-hour the- so sis. Students, who apply for the Baccalau- tei reus program after they have been at USC Sa for four semesters, create their own spe- or ciality degrees. "This is veiy difficult, and only three or po four people do it per year," Sederberg said, gr cit on At Florida, freshmen can get into the a 1 honors program with a minimum 1,280 ta: SAT score (before SAT changes) and a 3.6 ck GPA, said Keith Legg, director of university honors programs. do "Our honors system is an honors program, not an honors college," Legg said. C "We purposely try to keep a low profile be l south | I MINI % Students: 6% Requirements: 1,200 SAT 29 ACT 3.5 GPA Housing: No information available ^masal % Students: 15% Freshmen Requirements: 1,280 SAT 3.6 GPA Housing: 2 residence halls % Students: 6.7% Freshmen Requirements: Top 50 students in entering class Housing: No honors housing ir itt wmrc 8RII WwEBk w UfiMflMMA HD? CRIMES SAFETY cause we don't feel that you should ghettoize the best students on campus." gr This year, 600 freshmen joined the hon- or ors program. Their average SAT score was sa 1,350, and the average GPA was a 4.0 with AP classes included, Legg said. fa There are two residence halls for stu- l; dents in the honors program. ce "Mostly freshmen live in those halls," sa Legg said. "After that, they move away or off campus or something." eli UFs program offers 75 honors classes, ni "To graduate with high honors or highest honors, you have to do a thesis or a spe- ge : Midnight munchl< a j A guide to late-night delivc ; around Columbia. ' Pa9e 4 n?i? VW : Barking up the w Bulldogs take two of thr? ^ i baseball team in weeker ; Page 7 v st face gem I Ft ~ I > : 5 * injured while trying to prosrshe said. e when she spoke of domesrassment to college students n 1989 at a university whose v director of a graduate probations with the students in iyfflHHj director for emotional help 3e the director had used her ed if she thought she would politics," she said. HBH i really good. It is important 1^ ^ women in a public field able Anita Hill spaa )using sigrvups fresh in Df Carolina students who ( me for honors housing on I hoe, The Gamecock's inteam looks into the hon- j is at various schools in the 1 South Carolina. * i 1 project," Legg said. Freshmen are invited to join Georgia's 1 nors program if they have a minimum >re of 1,200 SAT on the SAT, with at least >50 on the verbal, and a 3.86 GPA. If incoming freshmen have a higher SAT ire, usually a 1,400, they can be admiti to the program with a 3.5 GPA, said ndra Whitney, assistant director of hon3 Drocrams. About 4.5 percent of the undergraduate pulation at UGA is in the honors proam. However, Georgia doesn't have spell honors housing facilities on campus. To graduate with a general honors deee, students must take at least nine hon3 classes and maintain a 3.3 GPA. To earn ligh honors degree, students must mainin a 3.5 GPA and take at least 12 honors isses, Whitney said. Theses or projects are optional; they are ne in conjunction with specific majors. About 6 percent of Clemson's underaduate students are enrolled in the hons program, director Stephen Wainscott id. Students entering the program in the 11 semester must have scored at least a 300 on their SAT and be in the top 10 pernt of their high school class, Wainscott id. At Clemson, there are two honors lev3: the general, or junior, level and the seor departmental honors experience. Students in the junior program attend sneral courses with other Clemson students and complete honors-level coursework. They are required to attend seminars regularly each semester. Senior honors students take hon ors-level, undergraduate courses and write and defend a thesis in their senior year. Honors students living on campus have been moved from their traditional residence hall, Clemson House, to Homes Hall. Wainscott said the new facility allows 300 honors students to live together, versus the 200-student capacity of Clemson House. Only students in good standing are allowed to live in honors dormitories, Wainscott said. Only students majoring in the arts and sciences are allowed to participate in the Fulbright Scholars program at Arkansas, said Mary Tannehill, administrative secretary for honors studies. This year, there were about 650 students in the program. Admission into the Fulbright program requires students to have at least a 28 ACT score or at least an 1,170 on the SAT. A 3.5 high school GPA also is required. / Fulbright students are required to take 60 hours in the honors core curriculum, research and write an independent research project, and defend the project before a committee. At Arkansas, honors students have the option of living in two honors dorms, where housing reservations are made HONORS page 2 * i Index 98 : News 1 jry services j i Viewpoints....3 Etc 4 'rong tree : Com,cs 6 ie from USC ; id series. : Sports 7 Classifieds....8 ier issues JAMES PONCE The Gamecock ks Monday night in tho ballroom. Faculty pass service amendment ERIN GALLOWAY News Editor More than 300 faculty members gathered at the law school Monday to debate and vote Dn several proposed amendments to the faculty manual. Of nine amendments to one resolution regarding tenure, two amendments dealing with the service issue were passed. The faculty manual's guidelines for tenure now equally emphasize teaching, research and service. Tor many faculty members service is a major academic function, interrelated with both teaching and scholarship," amendment three now reads. The second amendment passed, amendment four, now reads, The University is committed to achievement in all three areas of its mission. Collectively, the faculty profile of the University and of any academic unit should reflect a record of high quality teaching, research and service....It will be unusual and exceptional to award promotion and tenure merely on the basis of strong performance in only one of these areas." Many faculty spoke in favor of the amendment. "In some units, service forms a part of a tri angle, which is interactive," library and information sciences Professor Linda Walling said. She emphasized that service is an active part of being a professor and that tenure recommendations should be based on all three aspects, not teaching and research alone. Amendment four, proposed by the College of Journalism and Mass Communications, also met with debate. "Service is an integral part of this university," journalism Professor Kent Si del said. Journalism Professor Jerry Jewler, who helped write the amendment, said, "The first FACULTY page 2 USC student arrested in robberies ANNE PAGE Staff Writer Three men have been arrested by USCPD in connection with several recent robberies on campus, said Ernest Ellis, associate director of law enforcement and safety. Robert Johnson III of Columbia, a USC freshman, was arrested March 23, Ellis said. Johnson was charged with one count of attempted strong-arm robbery and two counts of strong-arm robbery, according to a media release. He was released March 27 on a $20,000 surety bond, according to the report. Hassan Warren, a 19-year-old Allen University student, was arrested March 24 and charged with one count of attempted strongarm robbery, two counts of strong-arm robbery and three counts of petit larceny. Warren was released March 28 on a $35,000 surety bond, according to the media release. Johnson and Warren have been connected to two robberies that occurred near Thomas Cooper Library, and an attempted robbery March 21 near LaBorde, according to the release. Warren also is charged with three book thefts in the library that occurred in February and March. Ujama Reese, also an Allen University student, was arrested March 27, Ellis said. Reese is charged with an attempted robbery near LaBorde, a burglary March 20 at Bates and breaking into a car March 18 in the Bates parking lot, according to the media release. According to the Richland County DetenARRESTS page 2