hj? Hut hi nf iltti Election Board applications Available at Union desk Partly sunny High near 90 3-NC CO 123190 NC COLLECTION UILSON LIBRARY "UNC CAMPUS ocr. MILL NON-PROm ORG U. S. POSTAGL p a I n 'versity community since 1893 Volume 97, Issue 46 PERMIT No. 250 27514 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1 1 63 Beattlh n rob o dh iced By AMY WAJDA Assistant University Editor University police removed three officers from active duty last week pending completion of an investigation of theft of University property. One of the employees, Michael P. Curtis, 41, a police dispatcher, and his wife Nancy, 43, were found dead of shotgun wounds the evening of Sept. 6 in a wooded area behind their mobile home at the Crawford Trailer Park on N.C. Highway 54. Orange County Sheriffs Department Sgt. Royce Tripp said that two shot guns were found at the scene and that the couple's will and testament was found on a tabletop in their home. No note referring to the deaths was found in the couple's home, he said. In a telephone interview Sunday, Tripp said he could not say that the deaths were suicides until the medical examiner's report had been released. "I can't conclude this until I have some supporting evidence." A neighbor questioned after the bodies were found said she heard two shots the morning of Sept. 6, Tripp said. University Police Chief Charles Mauer confirmed Sunday that Curtis had been suspended earlier that day because of the investigation. A statement issued by University police Sept. 7 said that the department and the State Bureau of Investigation were investigating the theft of about $4,000 of University property, and that no charges had been filed. Mauer and Robert Sherman, UNC director of public safety, would not comment further on the investigation when contacted Sunday. Veimable By NANCY WYKLE Staff Writer Venable Hall will reopen today for classes after hours of cleanup efforts following a chemical fire in the base ment, UNC officials said Friday. The fire, which started Sept. 5 around 12:20 p.m., was contained to a room used for the storage and packaging of hazardous and radioactive chemicals. Insurance agents investigated the Running with it ? r" ri i CW 'v i v 1 : I v - I x$jgte2 f fr'y,f ' w&rVaal thy c". ;- vf h't. ' ';X fc, )--. III v 1 . , - , , - - - X V' 1 '- - : : i v --iyy i'" -liWf jSyA'Q:-.:-:?-. . i'.- ' : - S:. iS':':: y-iyyyiyyyWyiKMSyy y-yyyMyyyyXyyX-??i!iffSW;:i : UNC freshman wide receiver Bucky Brooks bursts past a VMI defender Saturday afternoon en route F irate m ofty imetiase cay betfetre tfiire codle DirasiDxedt By MIKE SUTTON Staff Writer The Zeta Psi fraternity house, which suffered substantial damage in a fire Thursday morning, had been scheduled for inspection by fire marshals within the next two to three weeks, a fire department official said Friday. Chapel Hill Fire Marshal Joe Robertson said the house had not been inspected since September 1988, when several violations were noted and corrected. "We didn't have enough smoke detectors and fire extinguishers (in September 1988)," said Zeta Psi President Spence Whitman. The fire code requires fire extinguishers on every floor and smoke detectors in every hall. Whitman said that extra smoke detectors and extinguishers had been installed and that he had consulted with fire marshals two weeks ago to ensure the building met fire code specifications this year. Robertson said that the fire de partment always gave fraternities and sororities several weeks to settle in and clean up their houses and that the violations were routine. "There were violations, just like any building you go into in the town," he said. "There's not many build ings that the assistant fire marshal and I go into that don't have viola tions. You're not human if you don't have safety violations. "It's up to us to find them and correct them. That's the secret." Robertson said the fire was caused by a short circuit in an extension cord connected to a refrigerator in cieaimup amount of damage the fire caused to equipment Friday, said Brenda Morri son, administrative assistant in the Office of Health and Safety. Although some computers were damaged by smoke, the damage was much less than expected, Morrison said. In a statement issued Sunday, James T. Mergner, associate director of utili ties operations for UNC, estimated We can't all and the fraternity custodian's first-floor room. "That ignited the carpet, the bed and the structure, apparently in that order." The fire spread quickly, he said. Whitman said electricity and build ing code inspectors gave the house a clean bill of health about a week and a half ago. Dollar estimates for the damage are not yet available, he said. The second and third floors and the roof are par tially collapsed, and building inspec tors ordered the house boarded up Thursday. Whitman said that the fraternity had $150,000 in fire insurance, but that fund-raisers and alumni donations might be needed to supplement that and cover construction costs. Although several contractors have been consulted, no timetable has been established for reopening the house. Lauch Walton, a representative from the national chapter of Zeta Psi, stopped by the house Thursday and helped set up a $2,000 scholarship fund for the nine members who lived there. The fund will help them purchase new course books and pay for living arrangements. Zeta Psi alumni began calling to offer donations within hours after the fire was extinguished, Whitman said. Most of the displaced Zeta Psi members are staying with friends, Whitman said. UNC housing director Wayne Kuncl said one student had made an inquiry about buying a one-semester housing contract. "It's rough," said Deborah Alston, cook at the Zeta Psi house for six years. "They're going to have to hollow the whole thing out; start from the bottom to the top." Zeta Psi member William Thoma- complete damage to the building and cleanup costs to be $250,000. Cleanup costs and damage to sensi tive scientific equipment were the great est loss caused by the fire, said Bobby Wilson, acting director of the Health and Safety Office. The main problems now are the odor and soot, Wilson said. The chemistry department is being cautious in its DTHDavid Surowiecki - m i y . - J to a49-7trounding of the Keydets. See page 1 0 for complete sports coverage. some of us don't. son, who lives off campus, said, "There's a skylight for half of the top floor." Another member, Bradley King, said at least half the house was destroyed. "Everybody lost everything, pretty much. I saw guys wearing shirts last night (Thursday) that reeked of smoke. Some guys on the far side of the house saved some stuff, but everything was pretty much destroyed." Whitman, who lived on the third floor and escaped with the clothes on his back and a few small personal pos sessions he carried out, said, "I lost everything: my stereo, TV, all my course books, some personal money, couches, tables, clothes." "It was kind of a panicky scene. It was 5:45 (a.m.) and still dark outside. The electricity had blown, so it was dark inside as well. Everyone was banging into each other." Whitman said he woke to hear the custodian screaming and the fire alarms going off. He grabbed a fire extin guisher and ran down the hall, banging it on the heavy wooden bedroom doors in an attempt to wake everyone up. "It was really, really hot. I remember the heat (but) the darkness was the worst part." Whitman said he ran out side and around to a side porch. "I jumped over a wrought-iron rail ing onto the fire-escape, and went back in there through a window. I opened the door leading to the hallway where the fire was. The fire rushed down the hallway at me and I had to back out. I think the fire got through the ceiling by then. "Once it got up to the second floor it's entirely a wooden-frame room there the fire tore it all apart. It was scary." byildliing decision to reopen the building to stu dents, he said. "They don't want anyone to be both ered by any lingering odors." Glaxo Inc. laboratories, directly above the room where the fire was, received most of the damage, said Eugene Irene, vice chairman of the chemistry department. Damage esti mates from Glaxo were not available. Summer sexual assault figures show 'discrepancies in reports By JESSICA LANNiNG Assistant City Editor Chapel Hill Police Department offi cials are reporting an increase in sexual assaults this summer, but statistics from other groups indicate this summer's assault numbers are normal. From May 1989toJuly 1989, Chapel Hill police received reports of 75 as saults, five of which were sexual as saults on females, said Jane Cousins, Chapel Hill police planner. Last sum mer, the police reported 62 assaults with three assaults on females. "It has been an unfortunately busy summer for sexual assaults," Cousins said. In two of the cases the attacker entered the victim's home but did not sexually assault the woman. "This is where the man is standing in the victim's room, she wakes up, screams, and the attacker leaves," Cousins said. The police include those cases in their reports on the assumption that sexual assault was the suspect's intention. The assailants have all been strang ers; many of them have entered the victim's homes through unlocked doors or windows; and many attacks have occurred in apartment complexes, she said. . When the attacks were frequent this summer, the police assigned extra pa trols and used media and newsletters to alert people living near where an attack occurred, Cousins said. Kristina Groover, coordinator of community education for the Orange County Rape Crisis Center, said the center's statistics did not indicate an increase in sexual assaults this sum mer. "We have a fairly uniform number of cases," she said. From April to August, the center reports 53 assaults for 1988 and 52 for 1989 with these numbers including rapes, sexual as saults and child sexual abuse. That 's all there u Thursday's Zeta Psi fire left this Xyyyyyyy. :;.Wiv., i 4 I , : I -pfr ' f I I - y Vl If to reopen today The building was opened to faculty and staff at noon Friday, but classes could not be held because they might have interfered with the cleanup, he said. One room was open for classes Fri day, said Laurel Evers, a sophomore from Wilmington. The building smelled like formal dehyde when her Chemistry 1 1 class met Friday in Venable, she said. Al " We have a fairly uniform number of cases." Kristina Groover Groover said the center worked as a "clearing house," compiling statistics from several sources for the county. These numbers don't reflect the num ber of clients that come to the center. "Our reporting tends to be more uniform," she said. "Many communi ties show a rise of cases during the summer." The numbers may be more uniform because many students leave Chapel Hill in May, Groover said. "The UNC campus is a high-risk setting and people of college age are high risk, particularly new students." There has been a steady upward trend over the past years in the number of sexual assaults that are reported, but Groover said she didn't know whether it was because there were more assaults or because more people were aware there was help available. "There's more education. It's some thing that victims can come forward with and get help for." When there are frequent attacks on a neighborhood or other patterns, the x center gets actively involved, Groover said. "We certainly work cooperatively with the police when they're trying to pinpoint a suspect." Groover said the center urged pre vention and education and encouraged people to sponsor programs to educate others. Sgt. Ned Comar of the University police said that there were only three assaults this summer, but that they were not sexual assaults. is to it. Eeyore voire DTHDavid Surowiecki firefighter covered with ashes though the building carried a strange odor, there seemed to be no other side effects, she said. "If they let us in, they must have done pretty thorough testing because the people here know what they're doing. I think it's safe." The cause of the fire still has not been determined, officials said. No one. was injured in the fire. "That's about normal. We don't have a lot of assaults on this campus." Comar said these numbers were surprising considering the number of people who live in Chapel Hill and the number of people who commute to Chapel Hill. "With all this potential you would think we would have more assaults than we do. We don't know why." Comar cited only two reported rapes on campus over the last two years, but that does not include blind reports, he said. "Some of these things that really are rapes aren't reported." Campus police report 5 1 non-sexual assaults over the last two years, and Comar said students should be warned that assault can result in a criminal record that may endanger a student's future. "Whether you're tipsy or you're sober, you've got to learn to keep your hands to yourself and take a lot of oral abuse." Bnside No trades for grades New state law makes paying for better grades illegal 3 Guarding your goods University groups work to prevent on-campus theft ....4 Masterful Maniacs Rising fame doesn't trouble band's live performance 5 State and national 3 City and university 4 Arts 5 Comics .7 Sports Monday 10 r "" , ;-' ' . - ... - - i