r"v: n of earth: biceatcDimg me I Beat Dook Parade today at 3 p.m. ty aviators O O 4 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Copyright 1987 The Daily Tar Heel Volume 95, Issue 100 Thursday, November 19, 1987 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 Business Advertising 962-1163 I've got sunshine on a cloudy day Mostly cloudy. High 55. 0 DOSTKQ aciil Eh tataalt slime By LYNNE McCLINTOCK Staff Writer Minority recruiting efforts at UNC need to continue and improve, students and faculty said this week in response to the recently released Board of Governors' report showing a decline in the University's minority enrollment. UI anticipate (that) with some sincere recruitment efforts, enrollment will go up," said Kenneth Perry, president of the Black Student Movement. But the University needs to concentrate on attracting quality black students, not just on filling a quota, he said. Perry said UNC needs a program of scholarship incentives for minority stu dents. The BSM plans to submit a proposal to Chancellor Christopher Fordham suggesting scholarships for qualified minority students, he said. But Student Body President Brian Bailey said minority recruitment is not the answer to UNC's declining enrollment. The campus needs to be integrated, he said. "The friendliest campus to minority students is where they are accepted," Bailey said. "We've got to start with getting everything well integrated." Edith Wiggins, vice chancellor of student affairs, said some universities offer minor ity students special scholarships. But at UNC, most minorities receive financial aid through the student aid office, rather than through specially tailored scholarships, she said. "UNC is in competition for talented black students," Wiggins said. Retaining minority students is another problem, she said. Although minority students leave school for the same reasons as white students, it's important to keep all the minority students because fewer of them enter school, she said. "Once students get here, all of us can make sure our environment is truly receptive to a diverse student body," Wiggins said. As more minority students graduate from UNC with good experiences, she said, more will want to come and experience UNC for themselves. See ENROLLMENT page 3 UNC System Black Enrollment UNC-CH Enrollment Percent Year Black Total black 1980 1,650 21,205 7.78 1986 1,735 22,625 7.67 1987 1,703 22,775 7.48 Total Enrollment of the 11 Predominantly White Schools 1980 7,481 101,099 7.40 1986 9,434 . 111,903 8.43 1987 9,369 114,054 8.21 Source: University of North Carolina Fall Headcount Enrollment by Institutions and Race. 1972. 1980-1987. Released by the UNC-system Board of Governors. Pretrial Itoeairme tneld ie rape cae By ANDREA SHAW Staff Writer A district court judge will determine today whether there is probable cause to set a trial date for two UNC students accused of second-degree rape of a female student at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house. The case will go to trial if the judge rules that evidence indicates the alleged crime was committed and that the men charged did it. The hearing is continuing after a five hour hearing Wednesday, when Bradley Douglas Bowers, 20, and Frederick Har rison, 20, both of 207 W. Cameron Ave., listened to testimony about the Aug. 20 incident. . The plaintiff, a 20-year-old junior, testified she was drunk at the time of the rape. She said she was walking from West Cameron Avenue toward Whitehead Res idence Hall on South Columbia Street when three men on the steps of the Sigma Phi Epsilon house called out to her. "I was walking and they started making jokes, saying I was walking like through a land mine," the victim said. She walked over to the house and later went inside with one of the men, whom she said was Frederick Harrison. She said she felt sick and went directly to the See HEARING page 2 I mmfViKjf u i m n l 1 1 1 i iiui.ii ....... .I..I.H. I...JI..., , , i i.jumiiuiil jiy.imumw ,i iihMIii i .mi.. -i. i ' i "w J " - if v-?t ( , rs o M -i? ? fjS? - it J W VI f : L3 -" C ' "J A- f N ii. fJ? " -, u . . t'it ' Paint party DTHGretchen Hock Carolina Fever members Jennifer Miller the upcoming Beat Dook rally and and Caroline Garden paint banners for Saturday's football game. Aid cuts may force stadeets to FeiWok college Invoices By HELEN JONES Staff Writer State educational officials agree that financial aid programs have a future, but most are reluctant to predict an optimistic one. The proposed 8.5 percent cut in federal financial aid, which Congress will vote on at the end of this week, may affect several important sources of aid, according to Ann Berlam, director of the Division of Federal Assistance in the N.C. State Depart ment of Public Instruction. Berlam said programs whose fund ing level is set by Congress each year could be cut to help reduce the federal deficit. Such programs include Pell Grants, work-study and National Direct Student Loans. v The Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL) program should be secure, Berlam said, because a law must be changed to alter the amount of money appropriated for GSLs. MI don't think Congress would ever totally end these programs," Berlam $tudent Aid said. The financial aid issue raises questions about who has the respon sibility to pay for a student's college education, what impact part-time jobs have on the college experience and how heavy debts affect students after graduation. Among students and officials interviewed, opinions varied on who is responsible for paying for a college education. Senior Bryan Hassel, member of Students for Educational Access, said parents shouldn't be expected to pay for everything. Society as a whole benefits from education, so the government should help pay for those who need financial help to attend school, he said. Glen Martin, coordinator of train ing for UNC's Student Development and Counseling Center, agreed. The government has a responsibility to provide funds, he said, especially to middle-class children who often must pay for their own college educations. "The things they do after gradua tion benefit a lot of people," Martin said. But Edward Bergman, professor of the Department of City and Regional Planning, expressed a different opin ion. He said upper- and middle income families should receive loans rather than grants from the federal government. The government has more of a responsibility to low-income families, he said. Spending more aid on middle-income families is an unaffor dable luxury, he said. Many agreed that students who work part-time, 10-20 hours a week, benefit from the experience because their jobs give them valuable expe rience and teach them to organize their time more efficiently. However, Martin said working more than 20 hours a week increases stress and interferes with academic performance. Sometimes students who work long hours are denied the benefits of extra-curricular activities. But junior history major Cleo Manuel, who works part-time at the Student Stores, said she likes the independence her job gives her. "I think it makes me take things more seriously because I'm not wasting my parents' money," Manuel said. "I'd be wasting mine." Michael Hunt, a UNC history professor, said he has noticed a definite increase in the number of students working this year. And many are putting in long hours, he said. "I can't see how someone can carry classes, have some kind of recre ational life and work 20 hours a week," Hunt said. Another concern is the increasing number of students who are forced to borrow large amounts of money, possibly producing a generation of heavily indebted students. Frederic Schroeder, dean of stu dents, said students should be better informed about payback schedules for student loans. Often students' first jobs pay less than they anticipate, Schroeder said, so they get a real shock when they realize how much of their paychecks must be used to pay off their loans. M artin, a counselor who earned his doctorate in 1982 and will not complete his loan payments until 1992, said he and most of his friends owe substantial amounts of money. He also raised an interesting point about his responsibilities to his children. "How am I supposed to save money for them when I'm still paying for my loans?" Middle-income families are hit hardest by the need to borrow heavily, according to Lee Monroe, Gov. Jim Martin's senior education adviser. New regulations make it much harder to qualify for need-based aid, Monroe said. Another important issue in finan cial aid is the long-term effect of educational budget cuts. Monroe said the cuts in federal aid could have detrimental long-term effects. "The cuts tend to weaken the internal defenses of our country,"he said. Most people think in terms of external defense, Monroe said, but he said education is important to maintain a country's resistance to outside threats. "A well-educated population will be committed to the values and goals of the country," he said. Also, some officials say the cuts have already reduced enrollment of minorities and students from low income families. "If you believe in a society with equal opportunity, that ought to bother you," said Economics Depart ment Chairman Stanley Black. See STUDENT AID page 7 1 ? J sum ,- i y . i I "J" if ' " 1 I - - - Activist works to solve the plight off the homeless DTHGretchen Hock Mitch Snyder speaks to students in Hamilton Hall By LYNNE McCLINTOCK Staff Writer Political activist Mitch Snyder asked the audience in Hamilton Hall Wednesday night to imagine a large fire in New York City that would drive 50,000 people from their homes. The community would band together to make sure all the homeless had food and a safe place to stay the night, he said. The mayor would declare a state of emergency, and the victims would not be homeless for very long. Today, at least 60,000 people are living on the streets in New York City, Snyder said. "What difference does it make how they got out there?" r He said those people have just as much need to be housed as those in the fire scenario. AH people have a responsibility to become legitimately involved in efforts to house the homeless, Snyder told the 200-member audience. "The question that all of us face is: 'What does it take for each of us to do our share in the creation of a better world?' " Snyder said. Students cannot put off answering that question, he said, because as soon as they realize the difference between right and wrong they have an obligation to act. Snyder, who spoke as part of Human Rights Week 7, takes his obligation to act seriously. He gave up a lucrative position as a management consultant on Madison Avenue to live in shelters for the homeless in Washington, D.C. A member of the Community for Creative Nonviolence (CCN V), Snyder was in the 1 1th day of a fast to protest the building of a wall around the subway stations in Washing ton, D.C. The Gate of Shame would bar homeless people from the station. "We must be proximate to the people that are suffering," he said. Most people don't really see the homeless, Snyder said. "If they did, they would have to question who are these people and where did they come from." He said people must act as if the person sitting out on the street in the cold is their See SNYDER page 4 Few minorities work in academic positions at UNC9 report says By SMITHSON MILLS Staff Writer If you are a minority employee for UNC, the odds are good that you have a low-paying service or main tenance job. According to a report published in December 1986 by UNC's Department of Institutional Research, minorities fill more than 80 percent of the 833 full-time service maintenance positions at UNC. Vice Chancellor for Health Affairs Garland Hershey, who oversees about half of the academic positions at UNC, acknowledges that minority academic hiring at UNC is extremely low. The University maintains contacts with minority institutions and often recruits for positions from institu tions with large minority faculties, Hershey said in a recent interview. "We have recently given more attention to encouraging minorities in our own graduate and professional schools to pursue academic careers generally and at UNC specifically," he sa! " UNC employs 1,555 minorities in full-time positions. Forty-three per cent 668 of them are employed in service maintenance positions. About 8 percent, or 121, are employed as instructional faculty. In fiscal year 1987, the University had 108 minority faculty out of 1,687 tenured or tenure-track employees for a 6.4 percent minority total, accord ing to the September 1987 Faculty Review prepared by UNC's Affirma-; tive Action Office. All tenure or tenure-track positions are held by professors, associate professors or assistant professors. Black Student Movement Presi-; dent Kenneth Perry said the low. minority faculty numbers were no surprise to him and were a reflection See REPORT page 6 Pray for the dead, and fight like hell for the living. Mother Jones V