T jpi'""'iiigir,'tmiiii f " mmmm jt I i I if St. Puddles Day 30 percent chance of rain, highs in the low 50s tod.iy Staff meeting today Mandatory meeting of all DTH staff members at 5 p.m. today In 202 Union. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 90, Issue 11 0 1 Wednesday, March 17, 1982 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NwsSportiArt 982-0245 Business Advertising 662-1163 .FSAC proposals diraw mixed reaictioB Tt IT mm it By DEAN FOUST Staff Writer The proposal approved by the Food Service Ad visory Committee Monday to undergo major renova tions in the food service program has drawn varied reactions from UNC students and administrators. Among changes recommended in the FSAC report" were major renovations to the cafeterias on campus. In the proposal, the FSAC recommended closing Chase cafeteria in May for 15 months for renova tions that would move the dining area to the first . floor, simplifying access to the kitchen, which has always been on the first floor. Lenoir Hall would undergo first floor renovations in May 1983 for 13 months also. According to the FSAC proposal, the Pine Room would be closed for renovations in May 1984 and would reopen in January as a fast-food operation. It would assume the duties of the Fast Break and the space used by Fast Break would return to the Carolina Union. In the proposal, control of residence hall snack bars and the Pit Stop would be transferred to the food ser vice, along with all vending operations and all video games (except those in the Union). The FSAC said that the transfer of these concessions would bring the high profits and would provide a true food service at UNC. The committee also recommended establishing a room and board plan for an area on South Cam pus probably Morrison Residence Hall when Chase reopens, and then creating a comparable pro gram on North Campus. The room and board plan would be contigent on a financial "break-even" point. The changes would be financed by obtaining a short-term loan during ren"""' and paying the loan interest from the transferred snack bar and ven ding operations. Additional funding would come from a mandatory student fee for food service. Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Donald Boulton said Tuesday that with the present situation dramatic changes would be necessary for food service to continue at UNC. "We are so close to being down and under that it may happen in two months," he said. "We've been drifting that way for 10 years. There isn't a company that can come in here and make a profit under present circumstances." Even with the nationwide connections and in fluence the University has, it still would not be able to manage a food service, Boulton said. , Boulton said that the FSAC proposals did not finalize the situation. He said the proposals were not perfect, but would give students a plan to work with. Boulton said he would be meeting with student groups in the next week to hear their criticism of the proposals. ' - Bob Mann, a student member of the FSAC, said that despite reactions" from student leaders, he thought there had been room ' for student input throughout the process of drafting the proposals. "From my perspective, the potential for student input has been there all the way," he said. "Whether students have been involved has been their choice.. "We're not there to tell the chancellor what to do," he said. "We're there to analyze, to the best of our ability, a set of concrete proposals of how the food service should be operated in the future. The members of the board represent many groups from See REACTION on page 5 Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Donald Boulton tt - oV, x --v Vat Ax.A - . . A? -tiArAA A-Av-f :iniV-CiH'' l vr.-- J -r- ,5 NAat A AA-r : . 1 ? v -vv . i viAAtv:v . r 5? J AVw 4 a: a -t - irr.r- a,a -;;;,A.;A-AAvr vc.ss A UNC water ski club member demonstrates his skill at Orange Lake ... Chapel Hill's only organized ski group is now busy preparing for a new season Students build water stii program, overcoming preliminary problems By LORRIE DOUGLAS DTH Staff Writer The only organized group of water skiers in the Chapel Hill area is the UNC Water Ski Club. The members, ranging from beginners to experts, meet weekly to set up a schedule of times between boat drivers and water skiers for the cur rent week. UNC has had a recognized organiza tion for those who enjoy slicing the sur face of the water in the wake of a boat only since the fall of 1979. Pete Hitchens, the founder of the club, transferred from the University of Ten nessee which had a water-ski club. He and others wrote to companies asking for a promotional boat, searched for a ski ing site and began advertising to bring in ' interested students. v Hitchens, who graduated in December 1980 became president for the first year as a junior but retired. "I knew I couldn't run it forever," he said, refer ring to the club, "so I wanted to be there when the new president took over." The current president is Coburn Powell, a senior from Whiteville. Mastercraft, a boat company famous in tournament competition, supplied the club with a boat for $8,000 paid by the University. The money serves as a secu rity deposit, and is refundable should the deal be terminated at any time. In the deal, Mastercraft has agreed to provide the club with a new boat each year in ex change for the one used the previous year. Then came the problem of finding a nearby skiing site. The initial site was Quaker Creek in Haw River, North Carolina, about 35 miles from Chapel Hill. But Quaker Creek was short-lived as a skiing site because there was neither a gas pump nor a boatipjn which to store the boat. Since the boat could not be stored in the water, it had to be towed ' each time the members wanted to ski. Hauling the boat proved to be too big a problem, "especially to the one guy with" a trailer hitch," Powell said. See SKIING on page 2 In SCAU survey - . Apartment f emits Hated. By STEVE GRIFFIN Staff Writer Among UNC students renting apart ments in the Chapel Hill and Carrboro areas, many have had complaints con cerning , the insulation of their apart ments, management's attitude toward te nants, or pest control within the complex. These conclusions were derived from questionnaires distributed, by and re turned to the Student Consumer Action Union (SCAU) during the past two months. The survey required that each complex's tenants assign numbers one through five to rate specific features of their unit. A rating of one was excep tional and five was poor. SCAU acting chairman Gary Karesh said a computer was used in mailing the surveys by using the names of students listed as apartment dwellersr . "The computer randomly selected the names of. students from each complex and printed out their addresses," Karesh said. "We got between 35 percent and 40 percent of these back." He added that full interpretations of the survey will appear in "The Southern Part of Heaven?" which is expected to be ready for distribution this week. Copies will be available at no cost to students in the Carolina Union and in the Housing office in Carr Building. There will be 8,000 copies printed. See related story on page 4 At Kingswood Apartments tenants re ported a severe lack of storage space and anxiety about the security of their apart ments while they are away. Over half of the responding tenants gave below aver age and poor marks for these categories. Additionally, a significant number were not happy with the building's insulation. "There's no closet space at all and the threat of a break-in is certainly something we have to think about," said Sandy Heard, a sophomore from Greensboro. "This place is always exciting. Bursting pipes, electrical fires, frequent break-ins, noisy neighbors, stolen car stereos and other indignities keep boredom away," wrote one Kingswbod tenant. . Many residents of Towne House Apartments who responded gave below- average and poor grades to their complex in several categories. Pest control, repair effectiveness and laundry facilities all were aspects of Towne House that resi dents found highly unfavorable. A number of Towne House tenants wrote that they had encountered dif ficulty in trying to have repairs made by the management. "It is a lot of trouble to have anything repaired. They're slow about everything," said Kay Hall, a sophomore from Hope Mills. "A window we haye was cracked See APARTMENTS on page 4 CGC members adapt to new jobs Editor's note: This is the third in a five-part series on the Campus Governing Council. By ALISON DAVIS Staff Writer Members of the Campus Governing Council Finance Commit tee have had only a month to learn the committee's functions be fore they begin their biggest job of the year the budget process. Beginning Thursday, March 25, the committee will review the budget requests of 33 campus organizations that have asked for funds from Student Activities Fees. After studying a qualitative review of each organization, the committee will decide if it will recommend CGC funding for the group. In some cases, the committee may recommend funding for only some of the programs sponsored by an organization. But the Finance Committee's duties extend beyond the budget process. If a campus organization requests additional funds dur ing the year, or if a group not funded during the budget period asks for money, the committee must review its request. "Every cent they (CGC-funded organizations) are going to spend eventually comes through me at least," said Finance Com mittee Chairperson Charlie Madison. Madison, a sophomore political science major from States ville, said he oversees the allocation of funds and tells the CGC what is happening with allocated money. "I'm the closest thing to a (line of) communication between the Student Body Treasurer and the CGC," he said. Madison also fills a teaching role, explaining things to the Finance Committee that "the treasury laws are not specific about. "Rochelle (acting Student Body Treasurer Rochelle Hicker) teaches me and I teach everybody else." Committee members Dan Bryson (District 1 8), Kim Cottle (Dis trict 14), Dana Simel (District 22) and Mark Martin (District 15) said they looked forward to learning from the Finance Committee. "You learn a whole lot quickly (about where Student Activities Fees go)," Bryson said. Returning CGC members Lori Dostsal (District 5) and Chip Medlin (District 13) will be able to help the Finance Committee during the budget sessions because they are already familiar with the process, Madison said. ' Dostal and committee member Vince Steele (District 12) said the Finance Committee will have to be careful about what pro grams it funds. "It's important to look at each .organization fairly," Steele said. "It's going to be tight," Dostal said. "Last year it was tight already and this year it's going to be worse." Madison said the failure of the bill to increase Student Ac tivities Fees would affect the number of programs funded. "It's a matter of us (the CGC) and all the other organizations biting the bullet really hard," he said. . Tommorrow: A look at the Rules and Judiciary committee. University demands Food Service changes Third of three parts By CHIP WILSON Staff Writer From the flurry of financial options proposed to foster a refurbished food service at UNC, a firm plan has emerged for the student-financed refurbishment of Chase Cafeteria and Lenoir Hall. The proposal stemmed from an ultimatum delivered through two University administrators: The food service should either grow or shrink but it cannot continue operating the way it is. Such were the words constantly repeated Monday at a meeting of the Food Service Advisory Committee, a panel composed of faculty, administration and student representatives. James Cansler, associate vice chancellor for student affairs, and Charles Antle, an associate vice chancellor for business and finance, presented com mittee members with their proposal on University food service. Panel members were asked to suggest changes. The final version of the committee's proposal suggested a mandatory board plan should be contingent on the food service's release of the dollar amount required to break even at each facility. Another change to the Cansler An tle plan is the recommendation that the faculty and staff members be required to sustain part of the costs of im provements. 1 Speed was the key factor for the panel members to consider. "We either have to fish or cut bait," Cansler told them. The proposal passed with little difficulty, with only one FSAC member, Nick Dido, a business administra tion professor voting against the package. But greater dissension surfaced immediately after wards in a meeting of several student groups. The dis cussion centered on the ways UNC-CH students would have to pay for the $4 million in renovations if the plan is adopted; The areas in which students' pocketbooks may, be hit include: ' ' Scholarship funds. The proposal to transfer snack bars currently operated by Student Stores to the food service would mean profits that had been going for stu dent financial aid would go toward financing the reno vations. Student Stores earns $57,500 annually from residence hall snack bars and the Pit Stop, according to Student Stores manager Thomas Shetley. Monday's proposal stemmed from an ultimatum delivered through two Univer sity administrators: The food service should either grow or shrink it can't continue the way it is. A mandatory meal plan in selected residence halls. Once Chase Cafeteria is renovated in August 1983, according to the plans a selected area on South Cam pus, either a group of floors or an entire dormitory would be required to purchase a meal plan. Once the up per portion of Lenoir Hall is converted into a cafeteria, students living in a selected area on North Campus would also be required to buy a meal plan. A fee to be charged to each student. This would range between $10 and $15 per student, annually, and would go toward payment of a long-term financing of the renovated food facilities. Cansler contended that students would ultimately benefit from an expanded food service, despite the addi tional cost. ' "If we take the larger picture, we will see expanded work opportunities for more students," Cansler said. He added that students also could save money because food prices would be lower in a financially solvent food ser vice. A In their report for the FSAC, Cansler and Antle also answered potential student opposition to paying for a facility that will be open to non-students. Their 'sug gestion "might be to offer students a discount while non-students pay a published price for purchases, or of fer a surcharge where students pay a published price and non-students pay an established percentage more," they wrote. Although University officials said the plan was far from final, it was presented Tuesday to Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III and his Administrative Council, composed of his vice-chancellors and several school deans. A Daily Tar Heel reporter was not allowed to attend the meeting, but was told the Council would not take official action on the food service proposal until it could .review the report. Regardless of the degree of input University admini strators allow for students, none of their statements indi cates they will let the food service dwindle. Growth is their stated goal, and they have also clearly pointed out who will pay for it. . "Unless we find someone who is willing to pay $3 mil lion to build a cafeteria in his name," Antle said, "the students will have to provide the base of financial sup port for the improvements." News Briefs Brezhnev proposes arms reductions MOSCOW (AP) President Leonid I. Brezhnev announced a freeze on deploy ing medium-range nuclear missiles in the European part of the Soviet Union Tues day but warned of "retaliatory, steps if the United States and its NATO allies sta tion new rockets in Europe. . Brezhnev also said that unless the international situation worsens the Soviet Union plans to "reduce a certain number of its medium-range missiles oa its own initiative" west of the Urals, considered the European part of the Soviet Union. But President Reagan said the proposal "simply isn't good enough, because it doesn't go far enough," and challenged Brezhnev to "join in real arms reduction." Reagan told the Oklahoma Legislature that Brezhnev's proposal would lock in a lopsided Soviet advantage in intermediate-range missiles that can hit Western Europe. "Our proposal is that we not deploy any intermediate missiles in exchange for Soviet agreement to dismantle what they have," he said. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, however, dismissed Brezhnev's missile freeze, which concerns rockets in the European part of the Soviet Union, or west of the Ural Mountains. "Thatcher told the House of Commons the decision ignored two facts: "Firsdy, it freezes the total superiority of the Soviet Union in these particular theater nuclear weapons. Secondly, it ignores the fact that the SS-20 missiles can just as well be targeted on this country and the rest of Europe from beyond the Urals as they can this side of them." f Factory production increases WASHINGTON (AP) American factories and mines stepped up production by 1 .6 percent last month, breaking a string of six monthly declines stretching back to the start of the recession, new government figures indicated Tuesday. Economists inside and outside the government welcomed the new Federal Reserve Board report but said it was hardly enough evidence to declare the recession had ended. They pointed out that January's industrial production figures had been held down by terrible weather in some parts of the nation and that February's numbers probably look unrealistically good by comparison.