.. . "ay! , Esoieff it conceit for Bringing back'fhcss K-tel r?nusy Sunny. High 65. " " humaW .ITIghfe-Page2 'Hlghf maiTCS - Page 5 GreaKuSunion 1 fP 'Copyright 1987 The Daily Tar Heel Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 95, Issue 96 Friday, November 13, 1987 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 Business Advertising 962-1163 i Chapel Hill mae chaiged with assault off UN C sfadeot By KIMBERLY EDENS Assistant University Editor A Chapel Hill man was arrested Wednesday and charged in connec tion with the recent assault and robbery of a UNC sophomore, Chapel Hill police said Thursday. John Healy, 24, of 715-B N. Columbia St., was charged with attempted rape, a first-degree sexual offense, common law robbery and assault inflicting injury, according to police reports. In an unrelated incident, Healy was also charged with robbery with a weapon in the Jan. 6 robbery of Ken's Quickee Mart in University Square. Healy is being held on $250,000 secured bond in Orange County Jail. The victim was robbed of an undisclosed amount of money, according to the police reports. Capt. Ralph Pendergraph of Chapel Hill police said Healy has a lengthy prior arrest record, including charges of first-degree burglary, drug possession and assaulting a police officer. Pendergraph declined to describe the first-degree sexual offense, but said the victim was not raped. The alleged crime occurred between 3:30 a.m. and 4 a.m. Sunday in the basement of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house at 1 14 S. Colum bia St. A source who asked to remain unidentified said the victim was visiting friends in the house, when she went downstairs alone to use the bathroom and the man surprised her. After the attack, the source said the woman made her way upstairs and was found by two fraternity members, who took her home. The woman was admitted to the emergency room of N.C. Memorial Hospital Sunday morning, and released about seven hours later, according to hospital officials. One fraternity member, who asked not to be identified, said the victim came to the fraternity house fairly often. "I have no idea how he got into the house," the fraternity member said. "He could have just wandered in off the street it was Saturday night and the doors were open. Also, there weren't many people around at any one time. They came in and out." - x - , N .o,;, n, V,W - - . - 4 x - I -i , v .... r L$ W x & -r-v . - l W m v; .'- w-wr--' vSMsmwmmmmmm jmmz, JESSS3SXS& :-:vMK.vV'a. - .. - ... . -. iSr S. - .-: -AJ :.vo -.v. -. .Htgf. 3- - - - ,v.....,w....x .......w Time trick DTH Brian Whittier Mark Gonzales, a junior at Chapel Hill Senior High Morehead Building. Gonzales said he's been skating for School, practices his moves on the sundial in front of the about three years. Committee Makes ff e vMoinis eh dlrag By KRISTEN GARDNER Assistant University Editor Despite disagreement over setting different penalties for use or sale of different types of illegal drugs, a Board of Governors' commit tee came one step closer Thursday to forming a drug policy for all UNC-system campuses. The most recent revisions in the policy call for the expulsion or discharge of any student, faculty member or University employee caught selling drugs such as heroin, LSD and cocaine. The revision also would allow chancellors to suspend students or faculty members accused of selling or possessing illegal drugs before any judicial proceedings are held, if the chancellor decides the person is a threat to property or to the safety of others in the University community. Lloyd Hackley, UNC-system vice president for student services, said students who are disciplined as a result of a University judicial proceeding are still subject to prosecution by the state. When the drug policy receives final approval, all campuses in the UNC system will be required to write a policy on the use and sale of illegal drugs, using the board's policy as a guideline. "We're setting minimum penalties for maximum offenses," said David Whichard, poJmcy committee chairman. "Well leave administra tion of it up to the individual campuses." The committee will meet again in early December to approve the final draft of the policy. The policy will then be presented to the Board of Governors for approval at its January meeting. During the meeting, committee members argued about setting different penalties for the sale and possession of Schedule I or Schedule II drugs, such as heroin, LSD or cocaine, and for drugs classified as Schedules III through VI, such as marijuana, pentobar bital and codeine. The North Carolina Controlled Substances Act classifies illegal drugs in schedules, according to potential for abuse, whether the drug has an accepted medical use and whether abuse would produce psychological or physical dependency. Committee member Phillip Haire said setting different penalties diluted the policy's impact. "If we're going tc come down with a policy, we need to come down hard," he said. The policy calls for the expulsion or discharge of any student, faculty member or University employee who sells, manufactures, delivers or possesses Schedule I and II illegal See DRUG POLICY page 4 2 professorships established. in arts aed sciences program By JACKIE DOUGLAS Staff Writer Two new professorships, each worth $250,000, have been estab lished in the College of Arts and Sciences. The Eugene Falk Distinguished Professorship is a $250,000 endow ment set up by UNC alumni William and Mary Harrison of Durham. The Harrisons chose to honor Falk because of the inspiration he gave Mary Harrison, who completed requirements for her degree this year, when she was a student in his class. Falk is a Marcel Bataillon professor emeritus of comparative literature and professor of French. "We believe that people who are successful at making money have a responsibility to support those people who have committed themselves to humanitarian pursuits," William Harrison, president of Harvest Cor porate Services Inc. of Durham, said Thursday. "Professors like Gene Falk deserve to be recognized," he said. "Dr. Falk, through his research and teaching and through his historical ethical perspec tive, has helped make the Compar ative Literature Department the premier . department in the United States." William Harrison received his bachelor's and master's degrees in 1962 and 1964 respectively. He is on the Board of Visitors for the Line berger Cancer Research Center at UNC. Mary Harrison is a member of the UNC Board of Visitors. Both Harrisons were on the steer ing committee of the Foundations for Excellence Campaign, sponsored by the Arts and Sciences Foundations. The other professorship, the Pardue Professorship in Humanities, was established by David and Rebecca Pardue of Burlington. David Pardue, president of the Dacourt Group Inc. in Burlington, is a real estate syndicator and broker. He received a bachelor's degree from the School of Business Admin istration at UNC in 1969, and is a 1973 graduate of the Young Execu tives Institute in UNC's Graduate School of Business Administration. Pardue said Thursday that he and Harrison both feel strongly about a broad education in the humanities for all students, regardless of their chosen field of study. Pardue is also on the board of trustees of Elon College and the Tom Haggai and Associates Foundation. Income from the Harrison-Pardue endowment will supplement the salaries of distinguished scholars in the College of Arts and Sciences, and support their research. Harrison said he and Pardue are trying to ensure quality teaching for undergraduates in the humanities program. "A sound education and under standing of those curricula, which are collectively known as humanities, give us a better ethical and historical understanding, allowing us to better cope with investment banking prob lems we encounter every day," Har rison said. Administrators uarge students to get involved in campus issues By MANDY SPENCE Staff Writer University administrators cited student apathy as the biggest problem on campus Thursday night at "The Gathering W." About 30 students attended the question and answer session between students and administra tors, sponsored by Morrison Res idence Hall's government. The campus officials who spoke on the panel were Frederic Schroeder, dean of students; Wayne Kuncl, director of Univer sity Housing and Donald Boulton, vice chancellor and dean of Student Affairs. Student Body President Brian Bailey and Residence Hall Asso ciation President Kelly Clark were also members of the panel. "Why we have lost our vigor to involve ourselves, I do not know," Boulton said. "But it has happened." As examples of student apathy, panel members cited the small number of students at the forum and the failure to elect UNC senior Rob Friedman to town council in the Nov. 4 election. "The day we get over a thousand votes, they (council members) will be over here," Boulton said. "They respond to constituencies." Bailey said a student appointed by the student body president will serve as an ex officio member of the Chapel Hill Town Council. The student member will attend meet ings, make motions and participate in debate but will not be allowed to vote. "Nothing worth achieving comes easily," Schroeder said. "You accomplish nothing in your world if you sit back. You have to get out and fight for it." Schroeder said students could broaden their educational expe riences by participating in activities on campus and in the community. "Get out and get involved," Schroeder said. "By doing so you are going to learn about yourself and expand your talents much more so than by sitting in a class, dutifully taking notes." Students at the forum said they were concerned about the proposed site of the alumni center and the need for additional parking areas. Boulton said the protests against the alumni center site are similar to protests prior to the building of Carmichael Residence Hall and the Student Health Service building. "Someday, if this particular building wasn't built there, there will be a different building in that spot," he said. "Of all the buildings that could get there, this is the one I'd like to be there." The panel listed the limited amount of land available to develop parking areas and the expense of building such areas as reasons for the high cost of parking See FORUM page 3 ttate legislators ietroduice bills to combat AIDS threat By SHARON KEBSCHULL Staff Writer In response to the AIDS epidemic, legislators at the state level have introduced numerous bills to amend previous legislation and create new guidelines for everything from pre marital testing to AIDS education. In 1987, congressmen introduced 550 bills into state legislatures, said Mona Rowe, a senior research assis tant with the Intergovernmental Health Policy Project, a non-profit organization which tracks health policy legislation. About 90 of these proposals passed, she said. Some of the bills fixed loopholes Addressing AIDS Monday: Defining the virus Tuesday: Tracing its origin Wednesday: One man's story Thursday: Teaching the risks Friday: The politics of AIDS in previous laws while others con cerned notification and testing confidentiality provisions, she said. Two states, Louisiana and Texas, require proof that marriage license applicants have undergone HIV antibody tests, Rowe said. The Texas law does not go into effect until the HIV infection level rises to .83 percent of the population, 10 times the current level, she said. The Louisiana law requires people testing positive for HIV to show proof that the physician informed his or her partner, Rowe said. Hawaii, California and Virginia laws mandate the distribution of AIDS educational materials to cou ples applying for a marriage certi ficate, she said. . About 12 states also passed AIDS education laws, Rowe said. The laws differ in specifying what grade levels should receive AIDS education, but many laws require at least some form of AIDS awareness during elemen tary, junior and senior high school, she said. Most also require parental consent or involvement, she said. Several states emphasize sexual abstinence, Rowe said. "I would worry more about drug abuse," Rowe said. "I would imagine there is more involvement in drugs before sex." In the U.S. Congress, legislators introduced a number of AIDS related bills in the last few months, said Kay Holcombe, a legislative analyst for the Department of Health and Human Services. Several of the bills received com mittee action, but none have been passed. The main bills that are likely to go through include an appropri ations bill, which will increase fund ing for everything from research to education to prevention efforts, she said. Two bills addressing HIV-test confidentiality have also been intro duced, she said. Neither has been debated. An increase in federal legislation may spark more state legislation in areas of confidentiality and discrim ination, but it depends on whether states will need to amend current, laws, Rowe said. ; "This was the year of testing (laws)," Rowe said. "Next year I expect to see a flood in another area." In North Carolina, two AIDS related bills passed the 1987 legislative session. One requires a public school AIDS education plan, and the other expands the communicable diseases law. Introduced by Rep. Charles Cro mer, R-Davidson, the communicable diseases law gives authority to county public health officials, said Chris See AIDS page 5 Your parents are a thing of the past. Bertolt Brecht