TWiiTiiriiiiiiitiiiiiriTirri m v -y -i- -r 'T "" 11 1 1 -rvmiiiiiini Un , t TT-tir J Center stage awaits 1 MFL scores; UMC I sorority rush rain. High 75. Low 62. - HBlH w w SeCOnd round -s.ryrsr.rs She steriry-eyecl -pa,e4 -ball ssairs reilum heaaia0,0,his i to 4 Copynpht 1986 The Da7y Tar Hee Volume 94, Issue 55 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Monday, September 8, 1986 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 WwX. ? i ; XV 11 o4 1 , si XT 1 i , i nk v .VJ si . r r -' lV3V v s sr "n? y?fx r ft Av kVS w J?Ti i Oi v V f CvX' UNC's Harris Barton (67) opens a py charge a setep9 reporter claims From Associated Press reports MOSCOW American reporter Nicholas Daniloff was charged with espionage Sunday in a legal proceed ing at Lefortovo prison, said Jeff Trimble, a correspondent for Dani loff s magazine. U.S. News & World Report. A Soviet news commentator on the national television news program Vremya later announced that the charge had been filed. Trimble said Daniloff telephoned from prison Sunday night and said he had been charged at 2 p.m., but that he had no indication when a trial would take place. Daniloff said he was told a pre trial investigation into his case could take up to six months, and that agents of the KGB secret police could Budget request alarms By JO FLEISCHER Assistant University Editor Chancellor Christopher C. Ford ham III said Saturday he was "profoundly concerned" over a request of the State Budget Office asking the University to prepare its next budget with a 3 percent decrease. The cut could increase tuition and reduce the University's quality if it becomes a reality, Fordham said in an interview Sunday. , In a prepared statement, Fordham said that the University is complying with the request, but "it seems profoundly inappropriate to think of the University's budget as though it contains millions of dollars of expendable items." Fordham was referring to a State tady urges better By TERESA KRIEGSMAN Staff Writer UNC's intellectual climate and student development opportunities need to be improved, according to Donald Boulton, vice chancellor and dean of student affairs. Boulton's comments were based on information in the Division of Student Affairs' self-study, which was completed in June. The two-and-a-half-year study used surveys from students, faculty and division staff to review and evaluate the role of the Division of Student Affairs. Boulton said the study was designed to focus on the division's weaknesses. "The self-study says to us, 'here's where you're weak,' " he said. "But it also says that if you want to strengthen something, you can take your resources from here and put them there." " Academic emphasis needed The study cited the campus's To be lane for William Humes as the Heels extend their probe three months beyond that if extraordinary circum stances arise, Trimble said. Earlier Sunday, Foreign Ministry spokesman Gennady Gerasimov said on CBS-TV's "Face the Nation" that charges would be filed soon. "If you think he is innocent," he said, "we can learn pretty soon because there is going to be a trial." Gera simov spoke from Moscow via satellite. Daniloff, 52, a Moscow corres pondent for the weekly news mag azine since 1981, was arrested Aug. 30 moments after a Soviet acquain tance gave him a packet later found to contain secret maps and photo graphs. His wife, Ruth, maintains that he was framed. In Santa Barbara, Calif., where Budget Office directive asking all state affiliates funded by the N.C. General Assembly's General Fund to find 3 percent of their budget that can be eliminated. The request asks affiliates to prepare both a 100 percent continuation budget request and a budget with a 3 percent reduction. On Thursday, Marvin Dorman, deputy budget officer in the State Budget Office, called the request a way for the governor to identify "marginal programs" at the state's institutions and agencies. Fordham said the request does not take into account "a host of new and additional responsibilities" the Uni versity has taken on in recent years. "We took serious cuts before and after the recent recession, and it is intellectual climate as an area need ing improvement. The report revealed that "both Student Affairs and faculty respondents (were con cerned) about students' emphasis on athletics, partying and drinking as opposed to academic and intellectual pursuits." The respondents didn't blame students for this attitude, but did say the Universiy's image con tributed to the lack of academic seriousness. Boulton said he didn't think UNC was an athletics- or party-dominated school, but he added, that the University's image needed to be more balanced. "Our students are among the best you can find anywhere in the coun try," he said. "If our students did what the public thinks they do, they'd all flunk out and they'd 'all be in jail." According to the study, residence halls also fail to foster an intellectual climate. Many student respondents said they were dissatisfied with the vanquished and DTH Larry Childress run roughshod over the Bulldogs President Reagan is on vacation. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the U.S. government had not been formally notified of the charges against Daniloff. "This could have serious implica tions for U.S.-Soviet relations if this continues," Speakes said. "Daniloff is innocent." The spokesman reiterated that "there will be no trade" of any accused Soviet spy for Daniloff. A Soviet U.N. employee, Gennady Zakharov, was arrested Aug. 23 in New York and charged with spying. Mrs. Daniloff has claimed her husband was arrested in retaliation. U.S. officials in Washington have said that the Reagan administration See DANILOFF page 2 Fordham very difficult to find 'fat' anywhere in the budget," Fordham said. "In fact we are seriously underfunded in certain important aspects of the University's work." It is important not to weaken the University through budget cuts because it could result in higher tuition rates and lower quality, Fordam said. "We must maintain tuition levels which assure access to the promising students ... in the state, and we wouldn't want that burden shifted to the student (by raising tuition levels)," he said. But, Fordham said, "I do have the confidence and the conviction ... that the General Assembly will not permit such an unwise reduction in the University's budget." atmosphere for stuadeet development noise level and study environment in the residence halls. The study recommended that a group of faculty, division staff members and students be formed to discuss methods to promote aca demic seriousness and a committee should be appointed to work on ways to increase the intellectual climate in residence halls. Boulton said renovating the old residence halls and providing air conditioning and computer hook ups in each resident's room , would also improve the intellectual climate on campus. He added that improv ing the intellectual environment was his first priority. Studentfaculty interaction r, v' needed Faculty respondents also said academic seriousness could be pro moted through greater interaction between students and faculty members. But the faculty added that out-of-class interaction was not yet not surrender, that is victory. Josef Pilsudski UNC fflronmidl attack shines as Tlie Citadel fall By SCOTT FOWLER Sports Editor According to Citadel quarterback Kip Allen, North Carolina's perfor mance in the Tar Heels' 45-14 season-opening rout of his team was nothing short of bionic. "They were better than we were bigger, stronger, faster," Allen said. And no one would argue with him on that point, as UNC rolled up 613 total yards with its own version of army football (Fenner left, Fenner right) and thoroughly crumbled Division I-AA Citadel before 48,250 fans who also wit nessed the return of Mark Maye and the UNC ground game. The Bulldogs kept it close for the first 2V2 quarters, even pulling within 21-14 with seven minutes to go in the third quarter. But the Tar Heels then scored 24 unanswered points in the final 22 minutes to erase any doubt of David defeating Goliath on this cloudy, humid opening day. Maye came in late in the second and fourth quarters to complete four passes in four attempts for 77 yards and a touchdown. They were his first passes at Kenan Stadium since the Larry Speaks Christopher C. Fordham III supported by the university's pay and promotion system. Boulton said the reward system for faculty should be more balanced between teaching, research, and service to students. The study also found that "stu dents look to faculty for help with problems more frequently than they look to Student Affairs personnel." Although faculty members often refer students to the division, many faculty members lack knowledge of the wide range of programs and services provided. To remedy this problem, the study suggested using division handbooks, flyers and brochures to inform faculty of division programs. The division also should work to develop faculty and student confidence in the Student Affairs staff. "If staff (members) do their jobs well ... they can establish a repu-, tation of excellence that in itself will go a long way toward marketing the division," the study reported. m" , t2Sfr -h Hit V- : 4V i 1 i Zw "gi " " ' 111 " w ,wi A v Fenner's rush to glory 6 Virginia game in 1984. "And my arm feels fine," he exulted afterwards. The Tar Heels rushed for 401 yards and held Citadel to 33 in a game custom-made for statistics padding. Derrick Fenner ran through and around the Bulldog defense for 216 yards and two touchdowns. "We don't have defen sive linemen as big as (Fenner)," Citadel coach Tom Moore said of the 6-4, 220-pound sophomore. On the other hand, UNC has no offensive linemen nearly as small as Fenner. The Tar Heel line, which outweighed the Bulldog defensive line by nearly 40 pounds a man, tore open gaping holes that even the new Mikeman could have stumbled through while generally giving quar terback Jonathan Hall enough time to eat a small snack before throwing the ball. Given the UNC behemoths, Cit adel coach Moore was about as pleased as anyone could be with a 31 -point loss. "I thought we played very well," he said. "I was tickled Lebanon, blamed in attack on temple From Associated Press reports ISTANBUL, Turkey Pre mier Turgut Uzal said Sunday that two terrorists who killed 21 worshipers and wounded four at Istanbul's main synagogue may have been linked to Lebanon, not Libya. Conflicting claims of responsi bility were made on the behalf of Palestinian, Shiite Moslem and Arab unity groups, but police could say only that the attackers were Arabs. After locking the synagogue's main door and firing on the Jewish congregation with subma chine guns, the gunmen killed themselves with hand grenades. Ozal told reporters Sunday, "It seems this attack doesn't have anything to do with Libya but with Lebanon." He refused to elaborate. A Libyan spokesman said Sunday that Libya harbored no hostility against Jews and that it disapproved of attacks on such innocent people. The task of identifying gunmen and victims continued Sunday. Jak Veissid, an adviser to Chief Rabbi David Asseo, told a news conference that police had iden tified all but three of the victims, including two rabbis who were conducting a Sabbath service. Veissid said a single funeral service for the victims was ten tatively set for Wednesday at the synagogue. Officials said all the Student development opportuni ties in the campus environment also are targeted for improvement. "We want to foster a concept of the University as a learning com munity in which each person has a chance to participate . . (in an) out-of-classroom experience . . . and a chance to improve their own skills," Boulton said. Student involvement needed Student development is fostered through organizations that students are involved in and through services that students use. Many of these organizations and programs are connected with the Division of Student Affairs. But because the students' and division's decision-making roles in these organizations and programs are unclear, problems may occur when students try to participate in them. ' See SELF-STUDY page 2 45- 4 9 to death. Our kids did a great job with intensity, which I think helped them dig down deep when they had to." Often the Bulldogs also were digging themselves out of the turf, especially in the game's latter stages when UNC's depth took its toll. "We were out there in the heat, and there was no way to breathe at all," said Citadel defensive tackle J.S. Thompson. Fenner wasn't having too much trouble inhaling, as he set a single game record for an opening day by a UNC back. Kelvin Bryant had held the previous record, running for 21 1 yards in the lid-lifter against East Carolina in 1981. "I had an okay day, " Fenner said, keeping his cool until reminded of his first-ever touchdown for UNC. "It was very exciting. I saw the end zone, I said this is going to be my first score, and I'm gonna get it." Fenner's first score came on a 15 yard run and climaxed a 91 -yard drive and gave UNC an early 7-0 lead. After the first of Derrick See FOOTBALL page 2 victims were men and most were elderly. The youngest was 33. All were Turkish except for one Italian and one Iranian. "We are feeling shock, sorrow and sadness after this situation," Veissid said. "But we (Jews) are a very, very secure community in Turkey. This act will not change anything in our situation." Of Turkey's 48 million people, 98 percent are Moslem and only 22,000 are Jews. Twisted metal lay on the lectern next to scorched velvet-covered chairs used by rabbis. The clock stood at 9:17 a.m., the time of the first explosion. The prayer service Saturday had been the synagogue's first since reopening after two months of renovation. Anonymous callers to news organizations in Cyprus, Lebanon and Ankara variously claimed responsibility on behalf of the Palestine Revenge Organ ization, the Islamic Resistance, the International Fighting Front and the North Arab Unity Organization. The Islamic Resistance is a code name used by the Shiite Moslem group Hezbollah, or Party of God, believed to be loyal to Iran. Istanbul's deputy police chief, Menmet Agar, told the Asso ciated Press that investigators were certain only that the two gunmen were Arabs and were in their 20s. Donald Boulton V

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