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Partly cloudy Monday with a
high in the low 50s. Turning
colder Monday night, low in
the 20s, high Tuesday in the
30s.
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Olympics
The U.S. hockey beat Russia
and Finland this weekend to
win the Olympic gold. See
story on page 4.
2
Volume 87, Issue No. 1p3?
Monday, February 25, 1SC0, Chapel HIH, North Carolina
NraSporWAr m-C2i
BusinMaAdwrtbtog
A last oodb
TO
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.Kelly vetoes CGC
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Inspired Tar Heels
UNO's basketball team won it big for their departing
seniors Mike O'Koren, John Virgil, Dave Colescott,
Jeff Wolf, and Rich Yonakor in Saturday
afternoon's game against Duke. The great 96-71 win
was the last game in Carmicheal's Blue Heaven for
the seniors. Now it's on to the ACC tournament in
Greensboro Coliseum where the Tar Heels will face
the Wake Forest Demon Deacons in the first round.
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.mil to cancel vote
By LYNN CASEY
Staff Writer
A UNC student body president's first veto in two
years was stamped on a Campus Governing Council
bill Friday by Student Body President J.B. Kelly.
Kelly vetoed a CGC bill calling for a constitutional
referendum to delete a clause in an amendment
which could give the Graduate and Professional
Student Federation 15 percent of the student
activities fees paid by the graduate and professional
students.
The amendment giving a percentage of fees to the
federation was passed Feb. 5 by a required two-thirds
vote, 2,105-956. The CGC passed its counter
proposal to the amendment the same day citing what
it believed were irregularities in voting procedure.
Kelly s veto of the bill will be presented to the CGC
at its next meeting scheduled for March 1 1 . The CGC
could override the veto.
"I vetoed the bill because I don't think it is in the
legislative realm to determine the validity of an
election," Kelly said.
Kelly explained it was the responsibility of the
Student Supreme Court to determine the validity or
the nonvalidity of elections.
CGC member; Jimmy Everhart, Dianne
Hubbard, David Wright and Anne Middleton said
Sunday they did not plan to override the veto.
Hubbard, Wright and Middleton said they had
voted in favor of the bill because off-campus
undergraduate students were not allowed to vote at
three newly established ballot boxes in Rosenau
Hall, Kenan Laboratories and Hamilton Hall. Only
graduate students were allowed to vote at these
polling sites.
Middleton said she regretted her vote now because
she believed the Student Supreme Court should
decide whether or not election irregularities have
occurred.
A complaint protesting discrimination against off
campus undergraduates at the additional polling
sites has been filed with the court. Two CGC
members, Wright and Kathi Lamb, are plaintiffs in
the complaint.
The court will decide Tuesday whether to hold a
hearing on the complaints against the Feb. 5
referendum.
"Taking the complaint to the Student Supreme
Court is better than the way we handled it," Hubbard
said.
Kelly said he disliked vetoes and would rather have
avoided using his veto power during his term.
Zeta
case
IFC investigation begins
Heel seniors soar in Carmichael finale
By REID TUVIM
Staff Writer
As expected, the Carolina lockerroom was
a boisterous place after the Tar Heels
thoroughly humiliated arch-rival Duke 96
71 Saturday in Carmichael Auditorium.
After all, it was the last home game for
seniors Dave Colescott, Mike O'Koren,
John Virgil, Jeff Wolf and Rich Yonakor;
the Heels needed a win to ensure at least a
second-place finish in the Atlantic Coast
Conference for the 14th consecutive season;
and UNC was one victory short of 20,
something the Tar Heels had reached for the
past nine years.
But the noise in the dressing room came
from dozens of reporters clammering for
interviews, not from players yelling and
jumping up and down. The Tar Heels,
especially the seniors, were strangely quiet.
The cheering and the arm-waving came
out on the court during the thrashing of the
Blue Devils. In the sanctity of the
lockerroom, the players were reflecting on
what had transpired: The seniors were done.
If you can't get emotional for this, you
can't get emotional for anything," said
O'Koren, chosen player of the game for his
18-point, 12-re bound performance.
"(Playing at Carolina) is one of the
greatest experiences of my life," said center
Wolf, who had eight points and eight
rebounds against Duke's Mike Gminski.
"It's too bad it's got to end so quick."
"I just wanted to go out with a big
victory," said the 6-foot-6 Virgil, who tossed
in 16 points. It's a great feeling sad, too.
"I wanted to forget about the past," Virgil
said. "I haven't had the greatest career."
Virgil found himself sitting on the bench at
the beginning of the season, freshman James
Worthy beating him out for the starting spot.
"We made a lot of people unhappy in
Durham today, and that made it very
delightful," said Yonakor, pretending to be a
guard by bombing in 18-footers on his way
to 12 points and with a whirling, behind-the-back
pass for a layup to Jimmy Black on a
fast break.
"I really tried to do something special to
get the fans going," Yonakor said. "I think
that typifies my four-year career here. I've
been the guy that goes out there and plays the
best and hustles. That (pass) was for my
mother."
The parents of all five seniors had front
row seats along the sideline.
"We grew together the past four years, so
I'm very, very happy today," said Colescott,
who scored all of his seven points in the final
minutes after Carolina went to the Four
Corners.
"This was a great win for our seniors,"
Carolina head coach Dean Smith said. "1
thought each played well. We're happy to tie
for second (in the ACC standings), happy to
win our 20th game, but this day belonged to
jaw: seniors, . . .
"Wolf, Yonakor and O'Koren did a great
job on the boards," Smith said. And Virgil's
scoring early was essential. He played one of
. his most aggressive games of his career."
Looking at the first 10 minutes of the
game, no one would ever dream of a 25-point
blowout. Duke led 20-18 when Yonakor
threw in one of his bombs while Al Wood
drew a foul from the Blue Devils' Tom
Emma. Wood's one-and-one put Carolina
up for good at 22-20. The halftime score was
54-34.
The Devils cut the deficit to 17 a few times
in the second half, but the game was over at
the half.
"Playing here today was like Custer going
into Sitting Bull's place," Duke head coach
Bill Foster said. "They played extremely well
and we didn't."
The most glaring deficiency for the Blue
Devils was the play of the 6-1 1 Gminski, who
See HEELS on page 5
By KERRI DEROCHI
Staff Writer
A third investigation into the Zeta Psi Christmas
party incident was begun Wednesday by the UNC
Interfraternity Council as the result of a formal
complaint give to the council by a group of students.
IFC President John Blumberg refused to name
those students.
Charges that the Zeta Psi Fraternity harassed and
abused the Duke chapter of the Alpha Omicron Pi
sorority at a Dec. 2 Christmas party have also led to
two other investigations one by the honor court
and one by an administrative review committee of
the Office of Student Affairs.
Nineteen members of the Duke sorority who
attended the party have charged that fraternity
brothers exposed themselves, threw drinks on the
women and pulled at their clothes. They also said
feces were thrown in one woman's lap and that
another woman was pushed down the stairs.
Though the honor court was said to have begun its
inquiry in January, no confirmation of this action
has been received. All honor court cases are
confidential.
A review board headed by UNC Professor
Frederick Mueller submitted a report on the incident
Friday to Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Donald
A. Boulton. Boulton said that if everything works
out he hopes to make a decision by Wednesday.
The strongest sanction the committee could
recommend to him is withdrawing University
recognition of the fraternity and forcing it to close its
doors. The lightest sanction would be some sort of
probation.
Blumberg negated reports made by past IFC
president Tim Lucido that said the council would
either await the actions taken by the other
investigations or take other actions on its own-
Instead, Blumberg said that the council operated
separately from the others and, according to the IFC
constitution, could not take any action until a formal
complaint had been issued to it.
Once the council received the complaint, it was
turned over to Dan Fitz, IFC vice president for
judicial affairs. He will review the information and
then decide if the council should hold an
investigation. If the IFC decides to investigate,
Blumberg said, a trial would be held with a seven
member panel acting as judge and jury. However,
Blumberg stressed that the decision to investigate is
left mainly to the sorority.
"If they don't want to give us any information,
thereby deciding the vice chancellor's actions arc
enough, we cannot hold a trial or take any other
action," Blumberg said.
He added that if the fraternity was investigated
and found guilty of violating the constitution
through disorderly conduct, several sanctions could
be taken by the council as punishment. These
provisions, as stated in the IFC constitution, include
the following:
censure or an official reprimand of the fraternity
suitable financial restitution by the fraternity
requiring the fraternity to carry out community
projects
requiring the fraternity to write a formal apology
to the wronged party
the execution of an appropriate project for the
fraternity as planned by other fraternities
periodic reports made to the IFC in regard to the
progress of the fraternity's means of arbitration
social probation
general probation
"Because of the week period that must pass
between the organization of the panel and the trial,
the trial, if held, will probably be held within the
week after spring break," Blumberg said.
Ex- Yippie sees move
to war
d end
By DAVID TEAGUE
Staff Writer
Women should be included in the draft
as a move toward excluding sexism in
America, political activist Jerry Rubin
told a crowd of 400 people in Hamilton
Hall Sunday night as a part of the
Sftfolina Symposium.
"I don't support the draft, but if there
has to be a draft, women as well as men
should be included," Rubin said. He also
said that if the government is going to
draft 18, 19 and 20-year-old citizens, then
it should draft people over 40 as well.
Though Rubin does not support the
draft, he believes the current controversy
over the issue will serve to activate those
students who have been apathetic in the
past.
Rubin, a popular figure on the college
lecture circuit was a leading activist
during the Vietnam War. But since that
time Americans have refused to speak out
against government actions that affect
their lives, Rubin said.
"This generation is going to have to
decide whether this world is going to
survive," Rubin said. "We have an energy
crisis and we're turning to poison. Instead
of eliminating cancer on earth we're
turning to nuclear power.
"In the 1980s we'll see the middle class
in the streets. How America treats the
world will also, be an issue. We've
alienated the world by mistreating it."
Rubin was a source of irritation during
the Nixon and Johnson administrations
because he criticized the former
presidents foreign policies.
"In the 1960s we believed that the
government cared about this country's
needs," he said. "We believed that our
ot sexism
politicians were fair. It got to the point
where college students felt it was up to
them to save America."
In October 1967 the outspoken critic
led a non-violent assault on the"
Pentagon, in an attempt to shut down
what Rubin called the symbol of war.
More than 100,000 people gathered at the
t Washington Monument and several
hundred were arrested at the Pentagon.
The following year Rubin was part of
the Chicago Seven, which stormed the
Democratic National Convention in
Chicago. The group was arrested and
charged with conspiracy and inciting to
riot. Rubin called the indictment "The
Academy Award of Protest."
"The government used every means it
had to try and stop the movement," he
said. "The bullets that were fired at Kent
State (University) were fired at the next
generation."
Following the political activism in the
1960s and apathy in the 1970s, Rubin said
the 1980s will have to be a period of
change if the United States if to survive:
"I could talk for more than five hours
about the 1960s, and about a minute and
a half on the 1970s," he said. "But the
1970s may prove to be more significant
because no one group was mobilized, but
many groups exerted power."
Rubin and fellow activist Abbie
Hoffman founded the Yippics(the Youth
International Party) in the late 1960s,
integrating the concept of "absurd
politics" into the counter culture.
But following his surge of activism
Rubin dropped out of the mainstream for
most of the last decade, preferring to
assume a lower profile. Recently, he has
directed his attention toward anti-nuclear
movements and is health activist. Last
IS
DTHMrden Dowdy
Jerry Rubin
summer he and 600 other protesters were
arrested for storming a nuclear power
plant on Long Island. It was his first
political arrest in 10 years.
. Rubin and his wife, Mimi Leonard,
have co-authored a book called. War
Between the Sheets which will be
published this fall. The book deals with
male-female relations and sexual
consciousness within the general public.
Lynda Johnson Robb and Ann
Douglas will discuss the status of women
in America tonight at 8 p.m. in Hamilton
Hall 100, as part of the Carolina
Symposium.
Robb, daughter of the late President
Lyndon B. Johnson, was appointed last
spring to the President's Advisory
Committee on Women by Jimmy Carter.
She replaces Elizabeth Koontz, whq was
originally scheduled to speak.
Ann Douglas is the author of 77
Feminization of American Culture. She
is scheduled to speak this afternoon on
"The Home Career Dilemma," at 3 p.m.
in Room 213 of the Carolina Union.
Proposed bus fare
increase requires
Council's approval
By PETE KUEHNE
Staff Writer
Bus pass prices may increase by as much as 64 percent if the
Chapel Hill Town Council approves the rate jumps requested by
the town's Transportation Department.
The proposed increases would raise the price of a 12-month
bus pass from $48 to $79, Bill Callahan, assistant transportation
director said.
Rates would be slightly lower for University students, because
the University helps pay for the bus system, John Temple, vice
chancellor for business and finance.said.
The cost of a 9-month pass would increase from $40 to $65.
The proposed price increase also would raise the cost of a
single ride from 30 to 35 cents.
The town's Transportation Board will consider the proposed
increases Tuesday. Any recommended rate increase would have
to be approvd by the Town Council and would become effective
July I.
Callahan said the proposed rate increase will help pay for the
rising cost of fuel, tires, parts, and increases in drivers' salaries.
The price raise also is part of the town's five-year plan to shift
one third of the bus service costs to the riders themselves, he said.
Currently, revenues from passes and fees only cover 25 percent of
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...transportation expenses continue to rise
Unc W4j inal the probkm could be whcd would be to
increase the single fare rate and leave the price of a pav
unaltered," he said.
Saunders said Student Government will work with trie
the cost of the bus service. But if the proposed increase is passed. University administration to find another solution
28 percent of the costs will be paid for by riders, he said.
Wc have tried to maintain a conservative position on the cost
of the bus system for a long time," Terry Lathrop,
Transportation Board chairman, said.
But he said,We didn't raise the price of bus passes enough last
year."
Last year, the council approved an increase from $40 to $48 for
the yearlong bus pass. The Transportation Department
originally had requested an increase to $54.
"Part of the reason for the increase is that we haven't kept pace
w ith rising costs," Callahan said. "We're not making up just for
"I disagree with the prevent propoval, and I look forward to
working with the administration, he said.
Because of recent rate increases. Student Body President J. H.
Kelly said he thought that the transit system was becoming less of
a bargain. But even with the proposed increases the price of a bus
pass still will be lower than the combined costs of a campus
parking permit and operating costs of a car, Icmpkr said.
"The total cost of driving a car will come out to about three to
four times the cost of a bus pass," he said. "A bus pass will still
look attractive."
Callahan said, "We feel that it (the bus pass) is still a god
last year. We're making up for the past three or four years, ur bargain, although people will need to decide whether or nut to
attempting to. buy one. I he demand lor our services is not sensitive to price.
Student Body President-elect Bob Saunders said he will look Tcmpk said that in the past, proposed increases have met only
for a different solution to the problem of rising costs. with limited success.