2The Daily Tar Heel Friday. February 20, 1987 Mairtiitt to. revise radidal. elections By LAURIE DUNCAN Staff Wntet In an clTort lo improve the state's judicial system. (lov. Jim Martin said Monday he would create a task force to design a judicial election system based on merit instead of political party affiliation. Martins press secretary said. With a merit-based system, judi cial candidates would be chosen for elections based on their qualifica tions, experience on the bench and knowledge of the law. press secretary I i m Pittman said. "There are l(X) different ways to (select judges on merit), he said. "The task force would explore some of these possibilities." Martin has asked l.l. Gov. Bob Jordan and House Speaker Listen Ramsex. D-Madison. lo put together a bipartisan committee of lawyers and non-lawyers to study different election systems. Pittman said. TUNC mot affected by By NICKI WEISENSEE Staff Writer N.C. State University's decision Feb. 1 to divest beginning May 31 from companies doing business in South Africa xvill probably not affect I'NC's decision to divest. UNC Fndoxvment Board members said. Bobo Tanner, chairman of the I'NC Board of trustees and an Fndoxvment Board member, said he is still against divestment. "I think xvc can help the people of South Africa by having the (U.S.) companies there hire them." Tanner said. "If xve pull out. then we have no sax -so whatsoever about what goes on there." Tanner said the Endowment Board had talked about funding scholarships for blacks in South Africa as an alternate way of aiding them, but nothing ever came of it. UNC has approximately $4.5 million, or 4 percent of its endow ment, invested in U.S. corporations in South Africa. The Fndoxvment Board, sche duled to meet Feb. 20, postponed Elections Board lax with By MARK FOLK Staff Writer 1 he Elections Board has not begun enforcing its policy of lining candidates for not removing cam paign posters on time. Elections Board Chairman Steve Eisk said Tuesday. Although candidates can be fined one dollar for each poster still on campus 96 hours after the Feb. 3 or Feb. 1 1 elections, no fines have been made. Eisk said. 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(See Placement Office for additional information.) Jordan, a Democrat, launched a similar effort last week when he introduced a bill in the N.C. General Assembly to create his own task force to study the subject. Judges are now elected m partisan elections. "The governor suggested that the system could be better, but he's not criticizing the present system." Pittman said. Jim Wallace, an attorney for the N.C. Board of Elections in Raleigh, said the present system allowed for some local influence in the initial selection of judicial candidates. He said it would be unfair to make xoters accept candidates whom they did not have a say in choosing. But Jim Fxum, chief justice of the N.C. Supreme Court, said the judicial election system deserved careful study and government offi cials and lawyers should consider the its meeting until May 15. UNC Chancellor Christopher Fordham. a member of the Endow ment Board, said he didn't know what the Board would decide to do. but nothing has changed their minds so far. "We'll have to wail and see." Fordham said. "Maybe the more people closer to home that decide to divest, the more it will affect UNC" Rex. Leon Sullivan of Philadel phia, the author of the Sullivan Principles, a code for racial equality in hiring, recently called for all U.S. companies in South Africa to with draw Irom that country by May 31. 1 he U.S. companies in South Africa which agree to follow the Sullivan Principles report annually to Sullivan. Jim Hacknex. chairman of the NCSU Board of Trustees and an Endowment Board member, said NCSU used Sullivan's judgments to guide them in investment decisions in the past and decided respond to candidates for leaving their posters up too long, it's something that has to be done." he said. "They're simply taking up too much space." Exen though the Elections Board hasn't followed a set procedure for collecting the posters. Eisk estimated that 35 to 40 posters have been lound. The number will probably increase once Lisk's staff starts looking for the posters, he said. Elections Board workers haven't looked for posters yet because they haven't had enough time to do so. earnings, stability, diversity, and challenge, and an early shot at management. c Anixter Bros, is the leading supplier of power, voice, data and video products to Fortune 500 industrials, universities, -.. hospitals, cable television and a wide range of commercial construction, and communications companies. Working together, our 2,500 people generate annual sales of over $700 million. Anixter is in the middle of today's infor mation age and positioned to meet the challenges of tomorrow's global communications networks. possibilities of change. "I think, generally speaking, the judges (in North Carolina) favor some kind of merit-based system. F.xum said. N.C. Attorney General Lacy Thornburg said most states use some sort of merit-based system to choose judges, but said he didn't necessarily support such a system in North Carolina. Dick Richardson, chairman of political science at UNC, said, "Merit-based selection (of judges) would let people who are more closely attached to the system make the selection of candidates instead of. letting political parties choose them. But the political battle of nomi nating judicial candidates would move from the people of the state to the committees of legislators and N.C. State Bar members; who would be responsible for nominating them, Richardson said. State's' - divestment his call for withdrawal. "This action by the Board was the second (action taken by the Board), Hacknex said. We first considered the question of divestment in fall l.)X5. At that time, we decided to invest only in U.S. companies in South Africa which adhered to the. Sullivan Principles. In fall 1985. we began an orderly process of divest ment from (U.S.) companies which did not follow these principles. By the end of 1986 we had completed this transaction." Hacknex said the NCSU Student Government passed a resolution in Nov. 1986 calling for the BOT and the Endowment Board to divest in all companies. After an attorney investigated the legal aspects of divestment, the Endowment Board met and made its decision to divest. Hackney said he feels dixestment will not help the black South Afri cans. He refused to divulge the amount of money affected by dixestment. UNC Student Bodv President campaign poster policy Eisk said. Candidates from the first election should haxe taken their posters down bv 7 p.m. on Saturday. Feb. 7. But the candidates whose posters are still up have' not been penalized yet. Eisk said. "1 he staff just hasn't had enough time to get out and search Tor posters yet." he said. "The only posters that we have now are the ones that have either been brought to us or have been foond by some of us in classrooms." Changing to a merit-based system would be difficult to do because it requires constitutional change, he said. The measure may be approved eventually, but the General Assem bly probably wouldn't approve it this session, he said. Richardson said judges should not be chosen on the basis of the value system of a particular political party. "It's not appropriate," he said. "Judges should be chosen by their objectivity and knowledge." Partisan elections are ineffective because the law restricts candidates from discussing issues that might come up in court, and.. voters lose interest in the candidates. Richard son said. Martin wants to have judicial candidates for the court of appeals elected district-wide instead of statewide, Pittman said.. Brian Bailey said, "I think (divest ment is) a positive move for State. 1 hope the UNC Endowment Board and Board of Trustees will look at (their decision) and follow suit." Bob Eubanks. vice chairman of the Board of Trustees and an Endowment Board member, said. T think it's a horrible decision (to divest). I've taken the position all along that it's an impractical use of endowment money to fight political and social problems. The money belongs to the University and should be invested (in the interests of) the people who contributed, the people of North Carolina. And the people of North Carolina have not asked us to divest; the students and faculty haxv." Eubanks said he doesn't agree with Sullivan, N.C. State, or Duke Unixersity. which divested last year. "As a concerned human being, 1 don't think divestment is a positive move to end apartheid. 1 think it will hurt the blacks; not help them," he said. Rob Friedman, the Rules and Judiciary Committee chairman, said he wasn't sure whether the Elections Board had a legal right to fine candidates for leaving posters up past the deadline. V "I think that something needs to be done to make candidates take their posters down, but I'm not sure if fining them is the right thing." Friedman said. J aye Sitton. who ran for student body president, said she thinks that all of her posters are down, but she isn't Mire because she and her supporters put up about 2.500 of them. "Since xve put up so many posters, we're not sure xvhere some of them are." Sitton said. "I just hope we find them before the Flections Board docs" r Li) U ?UW If you're a math, engineering or physical sciences major, you could be earning $1,000 a month during your junior and senior years. That's $25,000 by graduation. This excellent opportunity is part of the Navy Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate Program. It's one of the most prestigious ways of entering the nuclear field - and rewarding, too. You get a $3,000 bonus upon entrance into the program, and $3,000 more when you complete your Naval studies. You also receive a year of paid graduate level training that's the most comprehensive in the world. And you'll acquire expertise1 -with state-of-the-art nuclear reactor and propulsion plant technology. Senator criticizes Reagan's stand on Iran controversy from Associated Press reports WASHINGTON The former chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee said Ihursday he believes President Reagan gave advance approval to an Israeli arms shipment to Iran in August 1985. and "ought to stick with" that story he report edly once told investigators but later retracted. Sen. David Durenberger, R Minn., also said embattled White House Chief of Staff Donald Regan was "just making prob lems" with some of his actions in the unfolding han-Contra controversy. Meanwhile, members of the presidential review board dealing with the affair conducted a hospital-room interview with former National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane. . Inside the White House, spo kesman Martin Fitzwater announced that Reagan stands ready to veto any legislation halting aid to the Contra rebels fighting the Nicaraguan government. Avalanche victims discovered BRECKENRIDGE, Colo. Refugee criticizes apartheid health care By PAUL CORY Staff Writer Health care in South Africa is inextricably bound up with the country's system of apartheid. Makekolo Mahlangu, a South Afri can refugee and registered nurse, told 25 people in Berryhill Hall Thursday afternoon. Mahlangu s speech. "Health Care and Apartheid: A Report," was sponsored by the International Health Forum, and the Southern Africa Medical Aid Project. "Everything has to be within the apartheid system," Mahlangu said. "You cannot look at South Africa and say you are apolitical." Fxen the Red Cross in South Alrica is segregated, she said. Mahlangu said the link between apartheid and health care showed in the pattern of diseases. Whites catch diseases that are more prevalent in "developed" countries, specifically cardiovascular diseases, while blacks catch diseases that are" more' preval ' ent in "underdeveloped" countries, she said. A study of South African gold miners from 1965 to 1975 found that 12 percent of the black miners contracted cancer of the esophagus, while only I percent of the white miners did, ihe said. South African blacks suffer from a lack of trained medical personnel, poor medical facilities, cramped living conditions, poverty, and a lack of tood. Mahlangu said. Blacks comprise 73 percent of the population but are forced to live on 13 percent of the land. Mahlangu said. She also said that whites took ' A Luuu v?nn JUbd As a Navy officer, you'l 1 get responsibil ity and recognition early on. Your high-level experience and credentials will help make you a leader in one of the world's fastest growing industries. In addition to the professional advan tages, nuclear-trained officers get an unbeatable benefits package, travel opportunities, planned promotions, and a solid salary that can reach as much as , $44,000 after five years Find out more about the Navy Nuclear Propulsion Officer Candidate Program, and make your education start paying o(T today. Call Navy Management Programs; Call toll free in N.C. 1-800-662-72317419 or outside N.C. 1-800-528-8713, Mon.-Fri., 9:00 a.m. - 7:00 p.m. News in Bnaf More than 250 mountaineers used long poles to probe the deep snow of an avalanche to recover two more bodies Thursday and continued searching for at least one more missing skier, author ities said. A helicopter dropped explo sives to release loose snow that could have caused more ava lanches on Peak 7, a steep slope north of the Breckenridge ski area, before the searchers, aided by dogs, headed out Thursday. Baby M controversy continues HACKENSACK, N.J. A woman fighting in court to keep the baby she bore under contract testified Thursday that one day she will tell the child the surrogate agreement was a mistake. Whitehead agreed to be arti ficially inseminated with sperm from William Stern and to bear a child for him and his wife, Elizabeth, for $10,000. But Whitehead changed her mind when the girl was born March 27 and fled to Florida with the baby. the best land, and gave the blacks the worst. "Malnutrition (among blacks) is rife in South Africa," Mahlangu said. Mahlangu said that doctors and nurses are taught that blacks suffer from malnutrition because they do not know w hat foods to eat, she said. But a black woman who brought her emaciated child into a clinic where Mahlangu worked told her, "It's not that 1 do not know what to feed him, 1 cannot afford to." The infant mortality rate for blacks is 100 per 1000 'births, but much less for whites, Mahlangu said. "Diarrhea is still killing black children in South Africa," Mahlangu said. "TB (tuberculosis), which is really being eradicated (elsewhere), is rife in South Africa, especially among blacks." Hospitals are segregated into separate maternity wards for whites and blacks, she said. When the black maternity ward is overflowing, law prevents the hospital staff from moving them into empty beds in the xvhite maternity ward, she said. ; Death during childbirth is preval ent among blacks, she said. Mahlangu said the South African government encourages family plan ning among blacks to control the population. The only available contraceptive for black women is Depo Provra, which is banned in the United States. Mahlangu said. When hired by the goxernment. some black women are given injections of the contraceptive without their knowledge, she said.