Eirijir'-HnP'iJ'ir'nr" 6The Daily Tar HeelFriday, February 1 laiig ar 1 Prt year of editorial freedom Kerry DeRochi, Editor EDDIE WOOTEN, Marfctfrne Editor CHARLES ElLMAKFR, Associate Editor FRANK BRUNI, Associate Editor Kelly Simmons, University Editor Kyle Marshall, Stair and National Editor MICHAEL DESlSTI, Sports Editor Melissa Moore, News Editor Michael Toole, City Editor KAREN FISHER, Features Editor Jeff Grove, Am Editor CHARLES W. LeDFORD. Photosraphy Editor An American in Moscow By DA VID ROME Ode to an institution So long, Wilson. Last night, we bade you farewell goodbye to your cubby-hole carrels, your dusty stacks, your crystal chandeliers When you closed late on Thursday, part of our career here closed with you. The fraternities, sororities and strippers will always have the Under grad. But we preferred your lounges. After all, it wasn't too long ago when as freshmen we entered the stacks fearing death and clutching our roommates for support. We left a few hours later, flushed with excite ment, the 600-pound Poli Sci textbook in hand. The years have passed quickly, Wilson, and throughout them you've served us well. You watched over us carefully as we napped through our classes and read the latest magazines when we were supposed to be study ing the Manifesto. You didn't flinch when we snuck in those six packs of Tab or the peanut M&M's during exams. It was as though you had seen it all. But they decided to close you anyway, Wilson. It was time to lay you to rest. On Monday, the rooms which brought forth hurried term papers and lengthy honors theses will house "special" library collections. We'll be moved to the brick depot across the Pit. (The one they call the largest school building in North Carolina. We'll probably just get lost.) For the past few weeks we've watched painfully as your books have been shipped to that young upstart. We've read the paper to see which stack was the next to go. So long seventh floor-New; goodbye Dickens. But we won't forget you, Wilson. As with most good friends, goodbye hasn't been easy. Searching the stacks made us feel challenged; entering the Humanities room reminded us how much farther we have to go. So when the bell rang for the final time Thursday night it was the end of an era. We stood in the last checkout line as our knapsacks were rifled through for the final search: From now On, we'll peer at you from the ? windows of Davis. We'll miss you, Wilson. Goodbye. Breaking the bank President Reagan submitted his 1985 budget to Congress Wednesday, calling for $925 billion in government spending, about $180 billion more than the government will receive through taxes. It was just four years ago that Reagan had promised he would balance the federal budget within four years. And yet the record spending continues. Despite the large deficit, Reagan has refused to back down on increas ed military spending or to support tax increases to offset such expen- ditures. This attitude has Democrats ranhihg around the cduntry gleefulry extolling the vices of Reagan's spending habits. Even Martin Feldstein, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, said the deficits must be cut immediately or risk rising inflation, rising interest rates and a general slowdown in the. economy. As Reagan himself has said, "Only the threat of indefinitely prolonged budget deficits threatens the continuation of sustained non-inflationary growth and prosperity. It raises the specter of sharply higher interest rates, choked-of f investment, renewed recession and rising unemployment." To be sure, Reagan does not want the deficit spending any more than the Democrats, especially in this election year. To combat the deficit pro blem (and to even out the blame for the excess spending), Reagan has proposed that a bipartisan commission study ways of reducing the deficit by as much as $100 billion over the next three years. He has also approv ed some minor tax increases that would bring in an extra $33.7 billion in the next three years and has called for a revision of the tax codes to close "loopholes" through which billions are slipping every year. Reagan is proposing relatively minor cutbacks of about $26.3 billion in Medicare, civil service and military retirement, education and benefit pro grams for the poor. But the military budget again will receive a large in crease, about 9.3 percent in current dollars. In addition, Reagan plans a 3.5 percent pay raise for federal employees. So why, in an election year, has Reagan submitted such an expensive and deficit-ridden budget? Leverage. Now that Congress has the budget, it will surely debate extensively over it. If any serious budget-cutting is go ing to be done, as both camps insist it should, Reagan could neither ire the Democrats by drastically cutting social programs nor leave his posi tion weak by cutting military spending. Therefore, most taxes and spen ding habits remained virtually the same. x Of course, there is one problem with hoping for an even-handed budget-cutting exercise this year: elections. Few congressmen, senators or presidential candidates want to offend any sector of the electorate, and they will probably bend over backward to keep or gain potential votes. Yet as the deficits continue to grow and more of each year's budget goes toward servicing the national debt, fiscal responsibility by both the presi dent and congress is mandatory ."As Reagan has saidTa "fiSO bMon deficit is unacceptable, but proposing such a budget is a disservice to each and every U.S. citizen. ' . On my last day in the Soviet Union, late in December, I was approached on a main street in Leningrad by a young Russion in Western clothes, an obvious blackmarketeer, who asked me, "Are you an American?" I answered, "No; I'm from Moscow." I said that in part because I knew it would probably stop him from bother ing me, but I also felt that I had earned the right to associate myself with that city and its people. I had lived for (I am tempted to say "lived through") four months as a student in Moscow at the Pushkin Institute of the Russian Language. It was a special feeling being an American and yet liv ing, eating, playing, moving around and talking like a Muscovite. This article and the ones to come are not part of a KGB murder mystery on the order of Gorky Park or a love story like Dr. Zhivago but an attempt to describe some of the unique attitudes, lifestyles, concerns and in stitutions I found and experienced in Moscow. I want to avoid being narrow-minded and present more than just negative images of Moscow, but many of the negative aspects of Moscow life appearedxto me as institutional problems infrequently discussed within the Soviet Union. This was my third time in the Soviet Union, but my first extended stay, and over the course of those four months the novelty of some of these in stitutional differences between East and West wore off and left me frustrated and defensive about America. I lived in a student dormitory adjacent to the Pushkin Institute in a residential section of Moscow far from the center of town. I was with a group of about 25 Americans, but the institute's population consisted largely of students from "fraternal socialist countries" or the Third World. There were Poles, Vietnamese, Afghanis, Cubans, Syrians, Tunisians, and a minority of us from the "capitalist countries." I lived with four other Americans in two small rooms that could con ceivably be called a suite. There is no word in the Rus sian langauge for "privacy," and we were not assured of very much privacy in the dorm. Everyone asks if I was followed or bugged or ever in danger. I do not think I was ever followed or bugged, but it does not really matter whether I was. We were just careful not to talk too much in our dorm rooms and not to use the pay phones in our institute to call Russian friends. We were not necessarily afraid for ourselves but for the possible ramifications for our friends of being in volved with Americans during a time of heightened ten sions between the two countries. Their internal security system certainly cannot and would not want to follow every American student, but the chance and fear that they might is instilled in many of the Russians I met. I often felt like I was in a spy movie when I would go out into the cold dark streets at night and hurry into a The Daily Tar Heel Assistant New Editor: Tracy Adams Editorial Assistants: Bill Riedy and Gigi Sooner. Assistant Managing Editors: Joel Broadway, Amy Tanner and Heidi Zehnal News Desk: SaHie Krawcheck, Sheryl Thomas and Clinton Weaver . News: Dick Anderson, Diana Bosniack, Richard Boyce, Keith Bradsher, Amy Branen, Lisa Brantley, Hope Buffington, Tom Conlon, Kathie Collins, Kate Cooper, Teresa Cox, Lynn Davis, Dennis Dowdy, Chris Edwards, Kathy Farley, Steve Ferguson, Genie French, Heather Hay, Tracy Hilton, Andy Hodges, Jim Hoffman, Melissa Holland, Reggie Holley, Sue Kuhn, Thad Ogburn, Beth O'Kelley, Janet Olson, Beth Ownley, Cindy Parker, Ben Perkowski, Sarah Raper, Cindi Ross, Liz Saylor, Katherine Schultz, Sharon Sheridan, Deborah Simpkins, Sally Smith, Mark Stinneford, Vance Trefethen, Chuck Wallington, Melanie Wells, Lynda Wolf, Rebekah Wright, Jim Yardley and Jim Zook. Wayne Thompson, assistant state and na tional editor. Sports: Frank Kennedy, Michael Persinger and Kurt Rosenberg assistant sports editors. Glen na Burress, Kimball Crossley, Pete Fields, John Hackney, Lonnie McCullough, Robyn Nor wood, Julie Peters, Glenn Peterson, Lee Roberts, Mike Schoor, Scott Smith, Mike Waters, David Wells and Bob Young. Features: Clarice Bickford, Lauren Brown, Tom Camacho, Toni Carter, Charles Gibbs, Tom Grey, Marymelda Hall, Kathy Hopper, Charles Karnes, Jennifer Keller, Dianna Massie, Kathy Norcross, Amy Styers, Mike Truell, assistant features editor. Arts: Ed Brackett, J. Bonasia, Steve Carr, Louis Corrigan, Ivy Hilliard, Ned Irvine, Jo Ellen Meekins, Steve Murray, Arlaine Rockey, David Sotolongo and Sheryl Thomas, assistant arts editor. Photography: Larry Childress, Lori Heeman, Jeff Neuville, Susie Post and Lori Thomas. Zane Saunders, assistant photography editor. L Business: Anne Fulcher, business manager: Angela Booze and Tammy Martin, accounts receivable clerks; Dawn Welch, circulationdistribution manager; William Austin, assistant circulationdistribution manager; Patti Pittman and Julie Jones, classified advertising staff; Yvette Moxin, receptionist; Debbie McCurdy, secretary. Advertising: Paula Brewer, advertising manager; Mike Tabor, advertising coordinator; Laura Austin, Kevin Freidheim, Patricia Gorry, Terry Lee, Doug Robinson, Amy Schultz and Anneli Zeck, ad representatives. phone booth and try to affect a native accent in order to arrange a meeting with a friend next to a certain subway car in the middle of a certain subway platform. I look back now and try to account , for all the free time I spent in Moscow and realize what an impact the society had on my use of time. Classes were held six days a week from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. and the rest of the time we were free to explore the city. Like a typical Muscovite, I spent most of my free item acquiring and consuming food, keeping warm, riding the metro, and being with friends. It is unbelievable how much time it takes to get anything done in the Soviet Union. There is probably no conscious effort by the Soviet government to complicate procedures and life so much that the peo ple have less leisure time for "anti-Soviet thought and activities," but the system definitely creates that effect, and there is very little incentive to change things. Con trary to what the Western press may sometimes say, the Soviet system and economy definitely do work. They just work slowly and inefficiently. For example, at one point I wanted to use the main scholarly library, the Lenin Library. I knew that as a resident American student I was entitiled to read in the most prestigious reading room in the library, which is available to only the top Soviet scholars. It took six con secutive days of effort before I was actually able to see some books. I spent three days finding out the pro cedures for obtaining a library card and having the necessary photograph taken. I spent a fourth day having the card processed. On the fifth day I actually saw the library from the inside and ordered some books that were waiting for me on the sixth day. On the seventh day, the library was closed for the monthly "Sanitary Day." If I had wanted to photocopy any materials in the library, it probably would have required official permis sion from Yuri Vladimirovich Andropov. At least with the library, I did not have to wait in line. Consumer shortages and allocation problems do result frequently in long, slow lines. As a spoiled American, I was very impatient in these lines, and I avoided them as much as possible. I did not have to do much food shopp ing because I would eat in the institute's cafeteria or various cafeterias and restaurants in the city or occa sionally dip into my reserves of three jars of Skippy peanut butter. The Russians have developed a-unique system of waiting in lines. Very often a family or a few friends will shop together each waiting in a different line. Other wise, a person will stand in the check-out line of a pro duce store for a few seconds and say to the person in front or behind, "I'll be right back", and have his or her place held (usually by me) while he or she picks up something from a different line. On a few occasions, I would be holding about four other people's places in line. The only time this custom made me nervous was in line at a liquor store where drunk men would push and mumble their way up to the front of the line. While Muscovites often displayed great complacency in these lines, at other times, particularly during rush hour, they seemed very pushy. I wondered if this pushiness was iust a trait of Muscovite or characteristic of urban dwellers throughout in the world. Once, I managed to board a bus during rush hour on the way to a hotel. When I asked someone directions, it became ob vious that I was a foreigner. One elderly Russian man in the crowd of sardines started cursing that all the foreign tourists were to blame for crowding the buses. Others quickly came to my defense, but I was saddened by this short-sighted view of a problem. The buses are not over crowded because of foreign tourists. They are over crowded because the Soviet bureaucracy does not have enough buses operating at that time. The lack of self-criticism in Soviet society came to bother me more and more. They have all the answers and are always right. The common reaction by most .Muscovites to this kind of official dogma seems to be to withdraw in part from all these issues and the media and worry about the important things like getting enough to eat and taking care of friends and family. There is very little night life in Moscow, and television is not really worth watching. With so few distractions, the Russians are much more prone to spend hours sitting around talk ing with friends or family members. My most pleasant memories of Moscow include sitting around dinner tables in Russian apartments and talking and eating for several hours at a time. The Russians have also developed a remarkable love for literature. Everywhere you go, especially in the metro, people are reading, and they can all quote from the classics of Pushkin and others. Most people were very anxious to meet an American and talk with me, especially young people who liked to try out their high school English. While I was often frustrated by the rudeness and coldness of the masses in public, I was impressed by the warmth, friendliness, and hospitality of the people whom I met. They seemed to appreciate that I was making the effort to learn Russian and was not the type to launch immediately into a verbal political attack or discussion. Despite the fascination of day-to-day life in such a diverse and interesting culture, the hassles and frustra tions of Moscow really had an effect on my disposition and seemed to be written all over the faces of the Rus sians. After about two months of riding the metro every day and regularly being approached by blackmarketeers wanting to buy my Burlington, North Carolina-bought jeans or my U.S. dollars, I wondered what I was doing in such a strange place. There were frequent excitements like being in Moscow and Red Square on the 66th An niversary of the Great October Revolution, and like other Muscovites, I went to a lot of films and read some of the classics. However, a line from a play I saw mid way through the semester, The Inspector General by Gogol summed up much of what I was feeling at least by December: "I'm fed up with this kind of life." Editor's note: This column is the first in a series of columns on Soviet society. Next: Ideology and the Media. David Rome is a junior Russian major from Bloom field, Conn. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Pride and progressiveness To the editor: I was shocked and confused by the assertion in the editorial "Running on rhetoric" "has restored in many Americans pride in this country and faith in progress?? (DTH, Jan. 3). . Progress? The budget deficit is the largest ever, over nine million people are unemployed, thousands of acres of natural parks and wilderness areas have been opened up for logging and drilling for oil, registration for the draft was reinstated, Civil Rights legislation has been challenged, social programs have been cut back funding for education and the arts has been drastically reduced: This is not progress! Pride m America? Are we to be proud of 259 marines dying in Lebanon for no apparent gain, of supporting a right-wing military dictatorship in El Salvador whose death squads' atrocities recently graced the cover of Newsweek, of the CIA training peasants in Honduras to kill Nicaraguan peasants because Nicaragua will not let American corporations make a big enough profit, of spreading nuclear weapons across Europe and selling weapons all over the world, of continuing to support apartheid in South Africa, of our invasion of Grenada? I would like to be proud of my country, but right now it is all I can do to avoid being ashamed. Douglas White Carrboro THE WEEK IN REVIEW Reagan to go for another term By WA YNE THOMPSON President Reagan had even Vice Presi dent George Bush biting his nails when he went on nationwide television 10:55 p.m. EST Sunday to end the suspense about bis 1984 re-election plans. But Bush and the fund-raising organization for the president that had already raised $4 million had little to worry about. "Vice President Bush and I would like; to have your continued support and cooperation completing what we began three years ago," Reagan said after citing his aclrninistration's progress against in flation and high interest rates. "I am therefore announcing that I am a candidate and will seek re-election." . The Democrats were quick to react. House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. called Reagan a "divider, not a unier." "He has divided our country between rich and poor, between the hopeful and the hopeless, between the comfortable and the miserable," O'Neill said. "The American people will reject four more years of danger, four more years of pain." Congressional Democrats also were cool to the president's $925 billion fiscal 1985 budget and its call for $305 billion in military spending. "It's just about an update of the 1983 budget," said Rep. James R. Jones, D-Okla., chairman of the House Budget Committee. Despite dissatisfaction with the budget's red ink a $180 billion deficit Republication congressional leaders were enthusiastic. "It's a good budget. It's a realistic budget," said Senate Ma jority Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn. Legislators agreed, overall, that the budget has no surprises no large tax increases, which the president opposed, and no major cuts in domestic programs, which Congress would be unlikely to grant in the midst of presidential and congressional campaigns. Another dead in Beirut A daylong series of clashes between U.S.. Marines and Shiite Moslem militiamen Monday killed one Marine and reportedly took the lives of a 9-year-old girl and two civilians. Marine Corps representative Maj. Dennis Brooks answered charges that U.S. fire killed the civilians. "We have no way . of knowing what we hit, and what casualties there were," he said. "We are sorry about any civilian casualties, but the bottom line is that we are taking fire from the area and we have ' to.defend ourselves." The Marine who died was the 259th U.S. serviceman killed in Lebanon since the Marines were deployed in Beirut in September 1982. The Marine's death sparked a new round of calls from con gressional Democrats for a U.S. withdrawal from Lebanon. HM5 AdVaMC6M8N6S COAL STEAM 4 4 . AS BKIRKW NUCLEAR COAL 'Uniongate' The Campus Governing Council took no punitive action against CGC Speaker James Exum's use of student organiza tions' names to get priority use of Union rooms for campaign meetings. Exum, a candidate for student body president, had acknowledged holding "three or four" campaign meetings in the Union, reserving rooms in the name of the CGC or the Black Interdenomina tional Student Association. The council's Ethics Committee con ducted an investigation of Exum and concluded that he was unaware of violating official Union policy in reserv ing the rooms. The Union gives student organizations priority for rooms. Students may use the rooms for other purposes, including campaign meetings, if space is available, but cannot reserve a room more than a day in advance as Exum did. Exum, who jokingly labeled the inci dent "Uniongate," said the room mix up would not hurt his campaign. "I don't see how it could come out to ap pear anything other than a misunder standing," he said. Once Exum found out about the offi cial Union policy, he voluntarily stopped reserving rooms. Pam Kyff, chief reservationist for the Union, said the volume of business done at the Union Desk made "Uniongates" hard to prevent. Great Decisions U.S. policy in Central America needs a mix of diplomatic and military initia tives to work, said senior fellow and director of the Latin American Project at the Council of Foreign Relations. Speaking at the second lecture of the Great Decisions series, Susan K. Pur cell urged the U.S. to seek a political solution in Central America. "There can't be an economic solution while there's fighting going on," she said. "It's like pouring money in a sieve. "If we could get the right political cir cumstances, then the rest would come about." Purcell said U.S. debate of Central American policy had become too divided into anti-communist and non interventionist camps. "1 think you have to move gradually from a policy that is blatantly contain ment to more of a hands-off policy," she said. Although Purcell said the Reagan administration's anti-communist policies in the region had not worked, she added that the U.S. should not quickly aban don its Central American strategy. "If you're going to x move sud denly. . .you're going to destabilize much of the hemisphere," she said. President Carter's policy of allowing any form of government to arise in Latin America didn't escape Purcell's criticism. "The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan completely undid the Carter policy," she said. "Part of foreign policy doesn't in volve the most moral decision." Maybe not all over' Tar Heel point guard Kenny Smith's wrist became Chapel Hill's favorite gossip item as everywhere from Subway "to the Pit students wondered aloud what would happen to the Tar Heels' chances of an NCAA basketball championship in Seattle, Wa. The fears of the prophets of doom "It's all over," "There goes the ACC championship" were put to rest by Smith's able replacements, 6-3 sophomore Steve Hale and 6-4 junior Buzz Peterson in Wednesday's game against Clemson in Greensboro. Hale and Peterson pestered the Clem son guards with their defense and played well on offense. Peterson scored a career-high 19 points on nine-of-12 shooting, while Hale added six points and six assists for the Heels. Both Smiths couldn't have been more pleased with the 97-75 blowout. Smith's injury was diagnosed by team physician Joseph DeWalt as a fracture of the scaphoid bone in the left wrist. He will be sidelined for at least four weeks. The staff of WCHL spent most of Sunday night and Monday answering telephone calls about the freshman phenom from faraway places like Albuquerque, N.M., and San Francisco, Calif. Wayne Thompson, a senior broadcast journalism major from Roanoke, Va.,Js assistant stale and national editor for The Daily Tar Heel.