Wc, . so p.,c., comq fi step masteirs Genesis show ail UNC stvslovo chance of rain. High in the mid-60s. U ""' TlcltCh SSSw'sja: am art ffoomni-Page6 schedly led (almost) -Page4 oJsim- i- Low in the 40s. Copyright 1986 The Oaiy Tar Hee( Volume 94, Issue 98 Iran deal may tarnish U.S. image By PAUL CORY Staff Writer The revelation of the Reagan administration's covert arms ship ments to Iran may hurt the U.S. image abroad, but the president's popularity in the United States will not be greatly affected, several UNC professors agreed Monday. A secret shipment of U.S. wea pons and spare parts was sent to Iran last week in payment for the release of hostage David Jacobsen. Early this month, Jacobsen was released by his captors after being held hostage for 17 months by Islamic Jihad in Beirut. The professors agreed that the United States would lose some credibility because of the incident. "The whole thing seems very poorly handled," Robert Rupen, professor of political science, said. "I cannot see how we can come out of this looking any better." They also agreed that it will also be harder for the United States to convince its allies to take concerted action against countries that support terrorism. "This takes some of the urgency and righteousness away from American appeals for action against terrorism," James Leutze, professor of history, said. Rupen agreed: "The administra tion's actions weaken all of those calls for cooperative activity against terrorists." The current resistance to Reagan's calls for sanctions against countries supporting terrorism will probably strengthen because of this affair, he added. But the professors said the affair would probably not affect Reagan's popularity. "Currently, only an elite group of people is getting riled up," said Thad Beyle, UNC professor of political science. He added that most people do not see it as a great pressing problem. On a scale of zero to 10, the Iranian affair is a one, he said. Leutze agreed, but said, "The Democrats are going to ride him (Reagan) very hard. They are going to do everything they can to make him eat crow in public." However, he said the incident would probably not be the foreign policy disaster that the 1979 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Iran proved to be for President Jimmy Carter. Rupen said Reagan could be hurt by the issue. "Things may go against the president now. We could see his popularity and support begin to drop off," he said. "However, there is not much of a strong feeling that he should not have (traded arms for hostages)." Silent Sam on pedestal By JO FLEISCHER Assistant University Editor A shiny bronze, restored Silent Sam returned Monday to UNC and will be placed on his pedestal Wednesday at noon. Sam returned from Cincinnati in a less-than-regal style he was transported in an open U-Haul trailer. The 73-year-old memorial to UNC students who died in the Civil War was in Cincinnati since April for restorations and repairs by Elefthe rios and Mercene Karkadoulias, the bronze art specialists who did the restoration of the Union Square statues in Raleigh. Eleftherios Karkadoulias said Silent Sam attracted a lot of atten tion riding in the open air on his way home. "People were riding by taking pictures," he said. "People were excited about it when we stopped to eat, it brought crowds of people." The Karkadouliases cleaned the bronze statue, revealing a bright gold color under the dark tarnish, and coated it with a urethane solution. The statue will retain its gold color because the coating protects it from both the elements and vandalism, Eleftherios Karkadoulias said. The statue will need only simple maintenance every five to ten years to retain its original appearance, he 1 'SV Maki Mandela: "Those people who SS85SS--- i i r Houising uursedto seek counsel By SUZANNE JEFFRIES Staff Writer The Department of University Housing should consider student opinion before drawing up future proposals like guaranteed sopho more housing, the Student Con gress voted 10-3-5 in its meeting Monday night. Although housing officials recently decided against imple menting the proposal, some representatives felt it was impor tant that the congress go on record as opposing the proposal exempting sophomores from participating in the lottery process. The bill, authored by represen Student injured in wreck dies From staff reports UNC sophomore Jennifer Ney, who was critically injured in a Chatham county car wreck last week, died Sunday afternoon at Moses Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, according to a hospital spokeswoman. Ney, who had been in intensive care for more than five days, died about 6 p.m. from injuries sustained from the crash, the spokeswoman said. takes place Wednesday said. If the statue is vandalized with paint it can be scrubbed off easily, and the coating can be painted back on, he said. He added that it did not make Sam invulnerable. "There can't be any good results from vandalism," he said. The statue attracted a lot of attention Monday in front of More head Planetarium where it was kept while the pedestal was cleaned. As cars drove through the parking lot, occupants craned their necks to see the new statue, and students walking by stopped to comment on Sam's new incarnation. Brad Conger, a sophomore from Statesville, N.C., was surprised by what the restoration had revealed. "I think the remodeling has accen tuated the emotional depth of Silent Sam. To me this statue is a fine symbol of Southern defiance," he said. John Harrison, a freshman from Robinsville, N.C., said he was glad to finally see the statue he had heard so much about. Karkadoulias said that the legend that Silent Sam will fire his gun as a virgin walks by was not proven one way or the other during the statue's trip off-campus. "Who knows?" he asked. "1 didn't hear anything, though." Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Tuesday, November 11, 1986 it $ 'D-.roMvi o made peaceful change impossible tatives Rob Friedman (Dist. 16) and Brian Sipe (Dist. 14), was amended to acknowledge the Housing Department's recent withdrawal of the proposal and to strongly recommend that housing officials take into account student oppinion in any future proposals. Student Body President Bryan Hassel said passing the bill, even though the proposal was with drawn, was important. "This isn't a dead issue," he said, "t's important to say that we oppose this proposal." Hassel said linking the opposition to the proposal with strong encouragement to housing officials to consider Ney was 18. The car she drove Wednesday with UNC freshman passenger Sara Thomas ran a stop sign and was broadsided by another car. Thomas died shortly afterward from wreck related injuries. No charges were filed in the incident, and the driver and pas senger of the other car received only minor injuries, according to the Highway Patrol. Ney and Thomas, roommates in w--ylWIMMmUlM)IJJIL,il,,n The memorial to Confederate soldiers from UNC bides his time in the I think, therefore I am. Rene Descartes 4 Chapel Hill, North Carolina DTH Larry Childress make violent change unavoidable." student opinion more in the future would be effective. In other action, the congress voted to table a request for $1,850 from the Executive Branch of Student Government for Project Uplift, a minority recruitment and retention program sponsored by the University. Hassel said additional money was being requested because $6,600 has traditionally come from the Executive Branch. But this year the congress allocated only $4,750. Speaker Jaye Sitton (Dist. 11) said the congress needed more See CONGRESS page 2 Granville Towers East, were return ing from a visit to their hometown, Albemarle, when Ney ran the stop sign. Ney, 18, was a little sister at the Phi Kappa Sigma fraternity. She had been a lifeguard and was to complete her Water Safety Instructor certifi cation from the Red Cross, fraternity members said. A memorial service will be held on campus. Thursday. v i s MaM-MfflMflela em oi Mrastap outh AMcai By RACHEL STIFFLER Staff Writer Ending the harsh reality of racial oppression in South Africa is a cause worth fighting for, the daughter of a South African political prisoner told an audience of about 900 in Memorial Hall Monday night. In a speech sponsored by the Carolina Union Forum Committee and Campus Y's Human Rights Week, Maki Mandela described life under the white racist government of South Africa. Her father, Nelson Mandela, president of the banned African National Congress, has been in prison 24 years on treason charges for his role in the anti-apartheid movement. Mandela, a Fulbright scholar at the University of Massachusetts in sociology and women studies, said her earliest encounter with apartheid came during a bus ride with her mother when she was a young child. Her attempt to kiss a white infant in a stroller met with a slap from the baby's mother that pushed her to the floor. "It is a crime in South Africa to visit in white areas, to have white friends," Mandela said. "You can be thrown into prison, fined and detained." : Mandela, who was a social worker in the territory of Transkei after graduating from the University of Forthare, said all segments of South African society are segregated, including the hospitals and cemeter ies. "The racist white regime carries hate to the grave," she said. She described living conditions under the apartheid system in which 4.5 million whites give 24 million blacks no voting rights and bar them from public office. When Mandela was a child, her family lived in a two-room house that had no bathroom, no electricity and had a corrugated iron roof. Most families live in similar houses. The South African government provides no money for the housing, she said. Instead, it is funded by profit from beer halls set up by the National Beer Act of 1908. The beer halls do more than provide money for housing; they also degrade black African society, Man dela said. "The black workers spend their money in the beer halls. By the time they get to their families, there is no money left to spend," she said. - ,,,,:::: it . Morehead Planetarium parking lot NewsSportsArts 962-0245-BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 "They educate blacks just enough to fulfill the demands of the South African economy," she said. "The education of black Africans was never intended to produce respon sible individuals who could find work in any country. It is only to produce good servants for the white men." The books used in the schools promote the idea of white superiority and black inferiority, she said. And while education is free for white children, blacks must pay for tuition, books and a uniform. If the parents do not have the money for all three, the child cannot attend. She criticized the communist label often placed on her father because of his fight for better living condi tions for blacks. "His struggle does not make him a Communist," she said. "He is not a Communist and never will be a Communist. He is an African Nationalist." After her father was imprisoned when she was eight years old, Mandela was not able to see him for more than eight years, she said. Since then, she has been allowed brief visits with him two or three times a year. Until two years ago, she and her father talked only through a glass window. "But my father does not, and has not for one minute ever, regretted giving up his life, his child, his wife for the African people," she said. "He knows it has not been in vain." She said he was recently offered freedom in exchange for a public renunciation of the violent tactics used by the anti-apartheid suppor ters, but refused. Since the blacks resorted to violence only after many years of peaceful struggle against violence that was initiated by whites, a renouncement of violence would be selling out on the black South Africans, she said. She is confident that blacks will triumph over repression in the end, although the victory may come only after a bloodbath. "Those people who made peaceful change impossible make violent change unavoidable," she said. Later, she said sanctions against South Africa would not harm blacks. "In fact, the call for sanctions came first not from American students but from the oppressed of South Africa," she said. ". . . Foreign divestment will make no difference at all in the lives of the people." OTH Larry Childress after long journey from the North