n Low cloud turnout expected Partly cloudy. High 72. Copyright 1987 The Daily Tar Heel Volume 95, Issue 83 proeedniDre revealed. By LYDIAN BERNHARDT Staff Writer The athletic department's failure to follow proper bidding procedure on repairs made to Kenan Stadium two years ago was an accident that will not happen again, according to Farris Womack, vice chancellor of business and finance. "This was definitely a deviation from procedure, but it was just a misunderstanding," Womack said. The department did not request bids properly in 1985 and 1986, when about 30,000 fiberglass lower-deck ?omnr students report 11 firantadimleinilt C GL A calls By CHARLA PRICE Staff Writer Four students have reported receiv ing calls from someone claiming to be a member of the Carolina Gay and Lesbian Association, according to Mark Donahue, CGLA co-chairman. The caller, who identifed himself on all four occasions as Mark Donahue, told the students they were on the CGLA mailing list and they needed to drop by the CGLA office to remove their names from the list. The caller also asked the students if they wanted to be visited by a CGLA representative, or would like to receive any CGLA literature. "The calls are very strange," Donahue said. "They sound very credible and polite. No profanity was used." Donahue said the CGLA became Rides to poll sites offered to students From staff reports the candidates and the voting The Student Government's precincts, executive branch is making life a Byrd noted that the Student little easier for students who plan Government voter registration to vote in today's elections. drive this fall registered about Charlene Byrd, a Student 1,300 people, mostly students. Government executive assistant, That number makes up a large said carpools have been organized part of this fall's 1 ,500 newly to shuttle students back and forth registered voters, between the Student Union and Byrd said the large number of the General Administration Build- new voters is an encouraging sign ing on South Road. that student participation in this Voting booths will operate in all year's election will be significant, precincts from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 When asked how important the p.m. Also, booths will be set up student voice is in local elections, in the Pit, Byrd said, to provide freshman Rich Brents replied, "It's students with information about important enough for me to vote." Chapel HillCarrboro Polling Sites Chapel Hill Precinct Voting site Battle Park Chapel Hill Community Center Brookwood Condominium, Camelot, Shepherd Lane, Town Terrace, Village Green Coker Hills. Church of Reconciliation Elliott Woods Cole's Store Union Grove Methodist Church Colonial Heights YMCA Bolinwood, Elkin Hills, Sharon Heights, Umstead, Village West Condominiums Country Club Fetzer Gym Avery, Craige, Ehringhaus, Hinton James, Morrison, Teague residence halls East Franklin Lutheran Church Brookside, Chapel Hill, Colonial Arms, Northampton Plaza, Northampton Terrace, Oak Terrace, Towne House, University, Village, Westall; Alderman, Kenan, Mclver, Old East, Old West, Spencer residence halls; Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Upsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha and Tau Epsilon Phi fraternities; Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Delta, Phi Mu, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Sigma Sigma, Zeta Tau Alpha sororities Eastside Ephesus Road School Booker Creek, Castillian-Villa, Foxcroft, Kings Arm, Oxford Condominium, Pinegate Circle See PRECINCTS page 4 Bmrapoirtamit dates to clip and save-page4 ft rr$ seats were torn out and replaced with aluminum ones. According to Womack, the correct procedure requires advertising pro jects in several papers after plans are drawn. Contractors then bid on the project. When bids are received, they are reviewed by the UNC and con struction offices, and the lowest bid is accepted. UNC formally awards the bid. The major violations occurred, Womack said, because UNC's athletic department, rather than the University, handled the project. Also, aware of the incidents when one of the students called the CGLA office to say he didn't want to be called again. "The CGLA is not responsible for the calls," Donahue said. "And I feel that the point of these phone calls is to further promote anti-gay feelings on campus." Donahue said that he had no idea of how many of the calls had been made, but that the CGLA hopes the problem will come to an end. "I'm not sure what kind of action the University can take," Donahue said. "But I told the students that they might call Southern Bell to get information on handling obscene or harassing calls." James Cansler, vice chancellor of Student Affairs, said the University has no formal policy that would Give me a laundry list and I'll set it to music. Rossini la! to Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Tuesday, November 3, 1987 he said the state construction office was not notified to review the project at all. "The athletic department wasn't trying to circumvent procedure," he said. "They just made an honest mistake." According to North Carolina general statutes that regulate public building contracts, every department charged with preparing or specifying a contract for construction on a state building must open projects up to See BIDDING page 6 prevent the calls, although there are state statutes to cover obscene and sexually harassing telephone calls. "There is nothing in the Honor Code stating this behavior as an expressed violation," Cansler said. "But there might possibly be an indirect offense under the Honor Code." Cansler said the Honor Code regulations prevent lying and present ing false information with regard to University academics and personnel, but he was unsure of how the regulations could be applied to these telephone calls because he had not studied them. Doug Thomas, student attorney general, said the situation is an interesting jurisdictional question, and that he is not sure if it is covered under the Honor Code. Crime rate Increases in Chaoe! Hill. By HUNTER LAMBETH Staff Writer Fewer violent crimes have occurred in Chapel Hill during the first three months of the 1987-88 fiscal year, while serious crimes have increased by 17 percent, according to Jane Cousins, police planner for the Chapel Hill Police Department. The number of local violent crimes has followed a national downward trend. During July, August and September, assaults decreased 11 percent, rape was down 75 percent and auto theft fell off 45 percent. No murders were committed this fiscal year, so the local homicide rate has remained stable at zero. These figures are compared to the first quarter of the 1986 fiscal year. Violent crimes in 1986 had decreased Commitment The Peace Corps can be a rewarding experience, By KIMBERLY EDENS Assistant University Editor One day about five years ago, Robert Titus noticed a photograph on the desk of one of his friends. In it, the friend was dancing with an African woman, surrounded by other natives. Titus asked where the picture came from, and his friend said, "Oh. That's from when I was in the Peace Corps." That reply led Titus to a three-year stint in Kenya as a Peace Corps volunteer, and to his present search for other qualified volunteers. Titus, now a Peace Corps recruiter, will be in UNC's Student Union today through Thursday, answering ques tions and conducting informational interviews with interested students. "We're not looking for fanatics or extremists or people who are going to 'save the world,' " Titus said. "We're looking for people who do have an altruistic bent, and at the same time are looking to develop themselves, and who see the Peace Corps as an integral part of that development." Each volunteer's medical, dental and subsistence costs are paid for by Lenooog a neiparag to the homeless - page ? Chapel Hill, North Carolina Raking it in I "T lti v rP Mum Vv, tutfiw i i LJ if i UNC grounds maintenance crews worked all day Monday raking fallen leaves. This crew by a total of 19 percent, compared to 1985. But the serious crime rate is up this quarter. Burglaries have increased 59 per cent since last year. There were 185 burglaries reported during the first quarter this fiscal year. The number of reported burglaries in the same quarter last year was up 22 percent from the previous fiscal year. The total crime rate of the fiscal 1986-1987 year had increased by 16 percent compared to the previous year. Crime reports indicate a steady increase in serious crimes over the past three years. Robberies, another serious crime, have increased over the past three months. Police investigated 392 the Peace Corps, and each receives a monthly subsistence allowance roughly equivalent to $300. Also, upon completion of the program each volunteer receives a "readjustment allowance" of $175 for each month served. President John Kennedy created the Peace Corps in 1961 with three objectives, Titus said. The first was to supply a pool of skilled manpower for the people and governments of the Third World. The second was to give Americans an idea of the people, customs and culture of the Third World. The third was to expose the people of the Third World to Amer ican customs and culture. The program has been successful, Titus said, citing South Korea as an example. A few years ago, the South Korean government asked the Peace Corps for English-teaching volun teers. Today, he said, South Koreans are teaching English all over . the world. "Our ultimate objective is to work ourselves out of a job," he said. "If I am an English teacher, and one out of 200 , students, or one of their children, becomes an English teacher, hand w robberies this quarter, which was a 16 percent increase. Cousins said it is hard to find a crime pattern that persists through the fiscal quarters. "There are more burglaries reported in January because that's when many students return to school and find their residences have been burglarized," Cousins said. "The increase is more a gradual thing than it is sudden," she said. "For example, burglaries were up 35 percent in the third quarter of fiscal 86-87." Cousins said the increase might be directly related to local urbanization. "Towns are getting closer together," she said. "With the new 1-40 access, for example, more people are coming through town and some of them may then IVe done my job. Someone has replaced me." In 1987, more than 25 years after its inception, the Peace Corps has 5,200 volunteers in 64 countries. Congress has recently mandated that the number of volunteers be raised to 10,000 by 1992. The program is also very compe titive, Titus said. Of more than 25,000 applicants each year, he said one out of every 10 is accepted. The entire application process takes six to nine months, Titus said. During the first step, potential applicants find out as much as possible about the Peace Corps. The application should not be submitted unless the applicant is willing to make the Peace Corps his or her primary focus for the next three years, Titus said. "The day you submit your appli cation is the day some village some where in the world starts planning on your arrival," he said. "The day you're nominated is the day that community starts counting on your arrival. To submit your application in a flippant manner is tantamount to saying, 'I don't care what I do to these Get Good Citizen of the Week Award Co vote NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 v :''... v DTHCharlotte Cannon completely filled a truck with leaves cleared from part of the lawn at Cobb Residence Hall. be contributing to our crime rate." More people were arrested for driving while impaired during July, August and September. Police made about 80 DWI arrests during that period, which is a 14 percent increase compared to the same quarter in the fiscal 1986-87 year. DWIs during that period were down 14 percent from the previous year. CHPD officials do not know whether this increase in serious crimes will persist. Cousins said the police department is working to ensure that this trend does not continue. "Our detectives have been working really hard," Cousins said. "They have been clearing cases by arrest at an increase of 29 percent since last year. The national average is 21 percent." volunteer says villagers.' " Three weeks ago at West Virginia University, Titus said he interviewed a civil engineering major with a 4.0 grade point average. Although the student's academic qualifications were excellent, Titus said he knew immediately that the student was not right for the Peace Corps. "I knew the man was not interested in the Peace Corps," he said. "He was just looking for a job." After the applications are submit ted, recruiters spend about two hours interviewing each applicant, asking questions about commitment, moti vation, competence, emotional state and expectations. The recruiter will then decide whether the applicant is ready to be nominated. If the applicant is qual ified, the application is sent to the evaluation unit, and after considering references and medical and legal forms, as well as the application, the unit decides whether the applicant should be allowed to continue. Finally, each application is ranked by competitiveness, Titus said. Only See PEACE CORPS page 2 .