Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 22, 1980, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 f. Tuesday. April 22, 1980 The Daily Tar Heel 3 Carrboro aldermen, discuss laud By BEVERLY SHEPARD ' SUIT Writer The Carrboro Board of Aldermen will hold a public hearing tonight to discuss the town's proposed land use plan, which includes a provision that could make it easier for developers to build apartments in Carrboro. Included in the plan is a proposal to increase the allowable density for residences, which could encourage the construction of multi-family units, Carrboro Planning Director Sonna Loewenthal said. If the plan is approved, builders would be able to put 14 housing units per acre of land in specified areas. Town ordinances currently allow only nine housing units per acre of land. This density increase could help the town deal with the student demand for off-campus housing. Loewenthal Title XX-funded UNC employees to shift By NORA WILKINSON Staff Writer Most of the University's 68 employees in eight Title XX programs which lost funding will be transferred to other projects or kept on until April 30, and at least one program may be able to continue- next year. General guidelines set by Vice Chancellor for Business and Finance John Temple's office provide that "people who could be used on other projects would be transferred to those projects on April 15," said William J. Clement, UNC director of contracts and grants, last week. "In order to transfer employees, funds had to be available and there had to be a legitimate need for them on other jobs," Clement said. Those employees who could not be transferred probably will be kept on until April 30 to give them ample time to find other jobs, he said. On March 24, UNC officials were Talk draws little attention Housing Advisory Board Chairperson Sharon Meginnis is puzzled as to why only four out of 1 1 board members and one out of all of the residents on South Campus showed up for a discussion Sunday on racial imbalance and racial distribution in University housing. .The meeting Sunday was to be the first of two discussions planned to solicit dorm residents' opinions on the subject. The second was planned for . the beginning of next year on North Campus. Based on estimated housing figures, the majority of black students live in dorms on South Campus. When housing department members assign a student to a dorm they have no knowledge of his race, housing administrative assistant Phyllis Graham said recently. The board members discussed other peinidlDinj Dim If Housing is the Everyone will be noused in Granville East this Summer. Meals will be served lunch. (You won't miss anything if you go to the beach on the weekend!) Sundeck, the Pool and the Socials are only some of the extras. Apply now for Housing and Meal Accommodations at Granville Towers said. Carrboro Town Attorney Michael Brough said that without the density increase the potential for more multi-family housing in town would be severely limited. Loewenthal also said with the increased use of land the costs of housing construction could be lowered. In a meeting last week, Emmett Pendergraph, a member of the town's planning board, said he thought the new town ordinance should contain a limitation on the amount of land the University can purchase at tax exempt status for student housing. Pendergraph said he objected the University's construction of the student apartments on the Couch Property in Chapel Hill. 1 believe the University can easily decide to build an off-campus complex and any exempt units, so that the entire town could be purchased," Pendergraph said. , notified that approximately $1.5 million in federal funding to Title XX social work programs would end on March 31. University officials objected to the six day notice of the finding cutoff and argued that their contract with the state allowed for a 30-day notice. The state maintained that the 30-day notice did not apply in the case of lost federal funds. Since the cutoff, Title XX administrators and University officials have been searching for alternate funding in order to provide their employees with the traditional 30-day notice. On April 1, UNC and state budget officials negotiated a job extension until April 14 usingdministrative funds from the Title XX program managed by the N.C. Department of Human Resources. That extension, added to the current one, gives most employees the 30-day notice that University officials deem necessary. "The University has been trying to make it as easy and fair as possible in ways to get the students' views. One member suggested taking a written survey. Meginnis said she had some speculations on the poor attendance at the meeting. It might have been the nice weather, the busy weekend or the apathy among the students, she said. The resident that did show up lived in James. Meginnis said the resident, believed that if any changes were to be made, they should be done on a major scale and not just with a few students. He also believed that the changes should be made with upperclassmen and not freshmen, because some students needed a sense of community their first year. LINDA BROWN sweM University Square 929-7143 me Chapel HW .11 PV oe19 contrast to their rather summary notice given by the Department of Human Resources," Clement said. The Institute for Social Services Planning, one ol six Title XX programs in the UNC School of Social Work, may be able to remain intact, said Morton Teicher, dean of the school. B SM criticizes 'Yack By KERRY DEROCHI SufT Writer In response to several pictures that appeared in the 1979 Yackety Yack, the Black Student Movement will file a formal complaint with 1979 Yack editor Chrisann Ohler, BSM chairperson Mark ' Cannady said Sunday. The complaint will request an apology from Ohler. Other letters of complaint will go to the Interfraternity Council, the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, the Chi Phi fraternity and the national Chi Phi fraternity, he said. "Freedom of speech is fine for a newspaper, but this is a yearbook which should present what is agreeable to all students. It did not do this so it did not fulfill its function as a yearbook," Cannady said. One picture in the Chi Phi fraternity section that the BSM referred to portrays a dramatization of the lynching of a black man by several Ku Klux Klan members. Another picture it objected to shows the national symbol of the Phi Gamma Open hearing The Health Services Director Search Committee will hold an open hearing 3 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in 217 of the Carolina Union. Anyone with suggestions about the selection of the new Student Health Services director should air them at the meeting. yoiuinjDeir 1? a is the from Sunday evening through Friday Indoor and Outdoor recreation, the for either or both Summer Sessions. A use plan Brough said such a prohibition on University ownership had not been considered and he also said he doubted such a provision could be included in the proposed plan. The proposed plan includes a new provision for the creation of neighborhood parks and bikeways. If approved the ordinance would require developers to reserve some land for recreational parks and greenways. Loewenthal said the plan will be presented to the town aldermen in the beginning of the summer for approval. Brough said the changes in the town's zoning ordinance called for in the proposed plan would not alter drastically any of the town's current zoning. "From my point of view, this ordinance does not change what we have," Brough said. "It just backs up what we're doing." projects The purpose of the program is to help improve the quality of public welfare service. "We're continuing to hope and work for alternate funding. However, we're not very optimistic about the period beyond May 1, excepting the one program (ISSP)," Teicher said. Delta Fraternity, a caricature of a black man called the "fiji man." The BSM also objected to the mention of a cook in a fraternity as "Lizzy" and a passage in the yearbook which referred to Hinton James as "The Jungle." "We're talking about concrete feelings and concrete heritage. The pictures hold very negative connotations for the black community and, therefore, it is very hard to justify them," Cannady said. Chrisann Ohler, editor of the 1979 Yack, said she believed the yearbook presented the campus as it was. She said that was the yearbook's responsibility. "The pictures were in no way an editorial support of that kind of action," Ohler said. "It was hoped that people would realize that there is a lot of prejudice on campus. "That section was not the editorial portion of the book. It's hard to believe that it is being construed as a part of the feeling of the staff," Ohler said. Cannady said the letters would include an invitation to the groups to discuss the issue Sunday. STUDENT COURT ACTIVITY JANUARY 1-31 NEW CASES CHARGE COURSE REFERRED COURT PLEA VERDICT SANCTION Plagiarized a paper English 2A ' Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester and two summer sessions. F tn course. Copied from another Statistics 23 Undergrad Ct. Guilty Guilty Suspension for one student's test . semester. F in course. Abuse of position of Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Indefinite Probation; trust; forgery loss of student identification card and voting privileges. Plagiarized a paper Religion 24 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Indefinite suspension. F in course. Petty theft Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Censure Cheated on final exam Chemistry 21 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester. F in course. Copied another student's Math 2 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Suspension for one test answers semester. F in course. Allowed another student to Music 41 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Not Guilty cheat on test Used unauthorized material Educ. 54 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Suspension for one on final exam semester. F in course. FEBRUARY 1-29 Plagiarized a paper English 1 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester. F in course. Damage to property and Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Probation for one petty theft semester. Forged a medical excuse Spanish 1 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Indefinite probation; loss of student identification card. Plagiarized a paper English 51 Undergrad. Ct.' Not Guilty Not Guilty Cheated on final exam Statistics 12 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Not Guilty Copied from another stu- French 2 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Suspension for one dent's test semester. F in course. Theft of property Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Not Guilty Physical abuse and hazing; Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guirty Recommendation of placing a person in fear of Expulsion, imminent physical injury or danger Damage and theft of property Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Censure Cheated on homework B.A. 180 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Probation for one sem- assignment ester and two summer sessions. F in course Copied from another stu- Statistics 11C Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one dent's final examination semester. F in course Plagiarized a paper History 168 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester. F in course. Damage and theft of property; Art 44 Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Censure cheating on class-assignment Not Guilty Not Guilty Cases pending 1 March 1980: 10 MARCH 1-31 Plagiarized a computer program Comp. 244 UHB Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester. Waiver of F in course Forged a grade change form AHO Guilty Guilty Probation for two semesters Used unauthorized material Math 3 Undergrad Ct. Guilty Guilty Indefinite probation on test Waiver of F in course Furnishing of false information Undergrad. Ct. Guilty Guilty Indefinite probation Cheated on test Psychology 10 Undergrad. Ct. Not Guilty Guilty Suspension for one semester. F in course Theft and forgery of checks AHO Guilty Guilty Suspension for on semester and two summer sessions APPEALS PRIOR ACTIONCOURT COURSE GROUNDS FOR APPEAL COURT ACTION Indefinite suspension and Religion 24 Severity of sanction UHB Sanction sustamtd an F in course for plagiariz ing a paperUndergrad. Ct. Recommendation of explusion Severity of sanction UHB Recommends- for physical abuse and hazing tion sustained and for placing another person in fear of imminent physical injury or dangerUndergrad. Ct. Indefinite suspension and Religion 24 Violation of basic rights Chancellor Violation of banc F in course for plagiarizing and seventy of sanction right dented a paperUHB Sanction suita.ned Recommendation of explusion Seventy of sanction Chancellor Imposed sanction of for physical abuse and hazing . mdef.nite susDrs&ion and for placing another person in fear of imminent physical injury or dangerUHB Indefinite probation and loss of Spanish 1 Seventy of sanction UHB Sanction sustained student ID card for forging a medical excuseUndergrad. Ct. Suspension for one sem- History 168 Insufficient eiderce and UHB Sustained verdct ester for plagiarizing seventy of sanction and sanct.on a paperUndergrad. Ct , Cases pending as of 1 April 1980: 10 Undergrad. Ct. Undergraduate Court. UHB University Hearings Beard. AHO Administrative Hearings Otncer Phi'IBeta Ilappa honors 129 Carolina students Phi Beta Kappa, the nation's highest scholastic honor society, initiated 129 students into the University chapter last week. The admission standard to Phi Beta Kappa is a 3.7 grade point average and 75 credit hours for juniors. Seniors must have a 3.6 GPA and 105 credit hours. Phi Beta Kappa limits admission to less than 10 percent of the graduating class. Students initiated were: Judith. Ann Ammer, Karen Lynn Barber, Pamela Anne Bath, Eric Wayne Beck, Jean Crowell Beckham. Helen Rose Bellar, Marc David Bishop, Dan Patrick Brady, Christine Fedynskyj Brewer, Timothy Robert Bridges, Jefferson Whitaker Brown, MartinTodd Brown, Henry David Bruton, Kim Allison Bullock. Bruce Staley Bosso, Eileen Patricia Clark, Leigh Ellen Clawson, Laura Ann Colby. John Cameron Coppala, Robert Wayne Cramer and Berryman Theaudore Cudd Jr. Other students initiated were Paul Douglas Deane, Bruce Archer Denning, Jennifer Elizabeth DiSalvo, Anne-Marie Downey, Thomas Delano Eatman Jr., Bennie Lea Eure, Michael Boyd Evans, Deborah Jo Farmer, William Floyd Eleet, David Nathan Friedman, Mark Allen Gallop, Gary Leslie Gaulden, Richard Wayne Gibson Jr., Peter Joseph Giordano, Deborah Ann Goldsmith and Larry Dean Good. Other new initiates include Margaret Robson Graver, Martha Harrison Greene, James Edward Grogan Jr., Steven Sydney Gubin, James Joseph Hardy, Ronald Paul Hargrave, Caroline Louise Hanner, Charles Sigman Hayek. Virginia Louise Hege, Eva Jeannete Heyward, Truman McGill Hobbs Jr., Linda Dianne Hubbard and Paul Arthur James. Others initiated were Bradley War Jacks, Linwood Lee Jones, Daryll Elbert Joyner, Richard Floyd Kamalich, Susan Ann KidwHI Bradley Stephen Kintner. RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH ORGANIZATION ABORTIONS $176.00 (ALL Inclusive) Pregnancy Tests - Birth Control -Problem Pregnancy Counseling For Further Information Call 832 0535 or 1-800-22 1-2568 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 Mark Henry Knelson, Susan Lee Kochel, Claudia C. Kondratkk, Mathew Allan Kupstas, Christopher Shaw Lambert. Laura Lea Lomax. John Leach MacNeill Jr., Michael Coleman Maness, Jana Lynn Mason, Robin Jeannette McCarter, Connie Marie McElroy and Mary Helen Meighan. Others initiated are Elizabeth Anne Mendenhall, Margaret Ann Miles, Michael Reid Miles, Michael Ray Miller, Stephen Phillip Miller, Mary Lambeth Moore, Michael Wray Moore, Lauren Stuart Muller, Albert Rogers Munn. Elinor Martin Munsch, Noreen Mary Murphy, John Stuart Norwood. John Joseph O'Connor HI, Conrad Eugerie Ostwalt Jr., Kaye Vernelle Palmer and Fredrick Bowen Payne Jr. ; a Others initiated include Debra Ann Phifer, William Burt Philips, Kathrvn Lynne Pittman. Nancy Katherine Plant, Martin Harold Poseyi Wayne Clinton Promislow, Edward John Rak Jr., Alice Barbara Rapoport, Stephen Hunter Reid, Henry Smith Richardson III. Karen Baty Russell, Lori Beth Russell. Elizabeth Scholl Samods, Ann Loraine Saravalli, Jane Christine Sattler, Barry Ferguson Saunders, Robin Anne Schocttlcr. James DeSchweinitz Shaffner and Iris Jo Sheehan. Also initiated were Marianne Shoaf, Melanie Ann Sill, John Anthony Sipp, Thomas Flake Skipper, Warren Michael Sobol, Elizabeth Anne Stephenson, Rebecca St. Pierre, Emily Ellison Stockard, Elizabeth Wendall Thomas, Kelly Susan Thomas. Stacy Neal Thomas Jr.. Susan Elizabeth Thorne. Rebecca Lynn Trcxler. Scott Craig Twery, Dean Anthony Warren. Catherine Jean Weaver, Bradley Kent Weisncr. Jennifer Weiss. Mark Eugene Welker. Ellen Marie Willard. Bryan Thomas Wright, Molly Dawn Yelton and Carol Lynne Zorct.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 22, 1980, edition 1
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