o Sunny High 65 Forum on Date Rape 7:30 pjn., Howell Auditorium a Wednesdays Clear High in upper 60s Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 98, Issue 106 Tuesday, November 20, 1990 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NswiS portsArts BuliwnAdnrtisteg 962-0245 62-1163 Kf2. LU o a (? e Iraq to add troops to strength in gulf BAGHDAD Iraq said Monday it would pour 250,000 more troops into Kuwait, more than doubling its military strength in the occupied emirate, and giving Iraq a superiority in the Persian Gulf that "others cannot match." The Iraqi News Agency announced the troop buildup 1 1 days after President Bush said the United States would send an additional 200,000 soldiers to the gulf, bringing the American force to about 430,000. ; Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Rick Oborn said in Washington that the de partment would have no comment on the Iraqi troop buildup. Bush was in Paris for the signing of an arms reduc tion treaty by NATO and Warsaw Pact members. He used the gathering to try to win more support for a United Nations resolution authorizing an attack to drive Iraq from Kuwait. In Rotterdam, Netherlands, the U.S. Army began loading hundreds of jeeps, trucks and armored vehicles aboard the first of 20 to 30 ships sailing for the gulf from the world's largest port, a Dutch Army spokesman said. Walesa confident of presidential election GDANSK, Poland Lech Walesa, exuding confidence six days before the country's first popular presidential election, declared Monday that he was "born only for victory." The Solidarity chairman, ahead in the polls against his former ally Prime Minister Tadeusz Mazowiecki and four others, said his struggle has already been successful, because it has forced an acceleration of change in Poland. The 47-year-old electrician from Gdansk rose to international prominence more than a decade ago when he led the trade-union movement that sparked enormous political changes in Poland. The Solidarity movement also helped spark revolutions elsewhere in Eastern Europe that ended decades of Commu nist rule. But now the movement is splintered. Atlantis lands safely after secret mission CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Thick clouds and high winds at a California landing site raised concerns as NASA guided Atlantis' astronauts home Monday to end what has been billed as the last secret spying mission for the Pentagon. Landing was scheduled for 4:48 p.m. EST at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and the weather forecast there was about as dismal as it had been in Florida on launch day. Conditions at the desert base were expected to worsen Tuesday. If the weather appeared bad enough to endanger the safety of a landing, NASA could decide to keep the shuttle aloft for several more days. During the Defense Department mission, the crew released a satellite that reportedly is to spy on Iraq and sent a holiday message to American troops stationed in the Persian Gulf. "During the last few days, we aboard Atlantis have circled the Earth many times," said Air Force Col. Richard Covey, mission commander. "When ever we pass close to Saudi Arabia we cannot help but think of our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines deployed there for Desert Shield. From Associated Press reports Special exemption Lone Coke machine survives in Kenan Field House ..... 3 Speechy keen Southern talk confuses, delights non Southerners ........ 5 At home fn the Dome Garner athlete to become next N.C. recruit to shoot for UNC , ...7 Local .......2 Campus 3 State and National .4 Arts and Features 5 Sports 6 Classified 8 0 1 990 DTH Publishing Corp. All fights reserved. - It's so beautifully CojiistitotioiiialMy of warrant cuoestiomed. By CULLEN D. FERGUSON City Editor A warrant obtained by Chapel Hill and Carrboro police to search North Graham Street for drugs Friday night may have been unconstitutional, a Kenan Law Professor said Monday. The warrant gave police the author ity to close one block of the street and search property and people there. The raid occurred around 9 p.m. and netted 1 3 arrests. Police confiscated one ounce of crack cocaine, about $2000 in cash, crystal metamphetamine (ice) and drug paraphernalia. The State Bureau of In vestigation and a search dog from the Orange County Sheriff's Department also participated in the operation. The application for the warrant filed by the Chapel Hill and Carrboro police departments stated, " ... we believe that there are no 'innocent' people at this place at this time of day. Only drug sellers and drug buyers are on the de scribed premises." Daniel Pollitt, Kenan Law Professor at UNC, said he questioned the consti tutionality of the warrant, which per mitted police to search an entire block ttue By S0YIA ELLISON Staff Writer Student athletes have shown con siderable academic success in recent years, according to a report issued by the Faculty Committee on Athletics. "I think the athletes are doing real well," said Richard Hiskey, chairman of the Faculty Committee on Athletics. "I think the students who are here as athletes are good students and know how to manage their time well." The report follows the progress of Student Stores should control snack bars, committee advises By BRIAN G0LS0N Staff Writer Student government's ad hoc student snack bar committee voted 7-3 last Wednesday to recommend continuing the UNC Student Stores' ownership of the eight campus snack bars. The ad hoc committee was created after Ben Tuchi, vice chancellor for business and finance, requested that student government investigate the option of moving the eight snack bars, now run by Student Stores, to the food service contract to enhance food service companies' profitability on campus. The committee will recommend to Catching up pitir .; ! miF' Lewis Efird, a sophomore from Gastonia, and Bryan McClure, a junior from Wilmington, toss a football in arranged on the Amendment IV: The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. of North Graham Street as well as ev eryone who was gathered there. Pollitt said Fourth Amendment rights may have been violated. "If (the warrant application) stated that nobody is on that block unless they're there to buy or sell drugs, that is obviously false," he said. "There are two churches in the area and two res taurants. Some people are obviously going to be there for other reasons." Pollitt said the Fourth Amendment states that a warrant must be detailed in its description of the area to be searched, such as a floor in a building, or must name a particular person. To name a whole block and everyone congregated 170 to 180 freshmen student athletes each year since 1984 and evaluates progress according to sport, gender and other factors. These statistics are then compared to an equal number of non athlete freshmen students, Hiskey said. The number of student athletes ad mitted as exceptions to the school's admission's standards has decreased since last year. In 1989-90, student athletes made up 26.5 percent of all exceptional admissions; this year that percentage has dropped to 15.9. Tuchi that Student Stores stay in control of the snack bars on campus, and Tuchi will make the final decision based on the recommendation. Grant Vinik, student body vice president and chairman of the snack bar committee, said, "Tuchi wanted students to resolve this matter realizing two competing student interests were in volved: first, currently and historically, Student Stores has provided a large sum of money to the Office of Student Aid that students have an interest in seeing continue, and second, the viability of the food service contract to continue providing high quality food service." -.' St..,. .,ir"M ' V silks' ':i&MtM''m' n i I plate, you know someone's fingers there is too broad, he said. "If my information is correct, the whole (search) violated the Fourth Amendment," Pollitt said. Capt. Ralph Pendergraph of the Chapel Hill police refused comment on legal questions involving the warrant, but he said the operation was not without precedent. "This is about the third or fourth time this kind of warrant has been enforced in North Carolina," Pendergraph said. Attempts to appeal verdicts in simi lar cases, based on allegations of con stitutional infringements, have been See RAID, page 9 acsLdlemiic ucce The average Scholastic Aptitude Test score for entering freshmen non-athletes in fall 1990 was 527 on the verbal section and 584 on the math for a combined total of 1111. The average verbal score for entering freshman athletes was 473 and the average math score was 548 for a total average score of 1021. "I think by and large the athletes and the nonrathletes do about equally well," Hiskey said. "Non-athletes usually have a little better GPA, but their graduation The committee consists of six stu dents, three staff members and one fac ulty member. The students on the committee came from either the food service advisory committee or the Stu dent Stores advisory committee. 'This is to my knowledge, the first time a group of representatives from both constituencies has come together and reached a decision (on the fate of the snack bars)," Vinik said. The committee was worried that UNC's track record of food service losses since 1 969 would discourage food See ADH0C, page 9 fy 3 DTHS. Exum Big Fraternity Court under clear skies on an unusually warm November evening Monday. 9 ill tf I llll ' 2 "Lit 1 it Speaking out J.T. Garrett from the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs speaks tostudents and employees Monday night. See story, page 2. rate is about the same." The freshman class of 1984 had a graduation rate of 72.2 percent, com pared with 70.7 percent of recruited student athletes for that year. The graduation rate for student ath letes in the 1 985 freshman class was 76 percent, only one percentage point lower than that of the overall class, but the rate for student athletes in the freshman class of 1986 was 1 1 percent lower. John Blanchard, director of the Ath letic Academic Support Program, said Area residents attack Soxit By PETER F. WALLSTEN City Editor Odum Village residents and mem bers of the community lashed out at University administrators' plans for the realignment of Manning Drive, during a Chapel Hill Town Council public hearing Monday night. "When I came to Chapel Hill, I was impressed with the care the University had been taking to protect the needs of its students," said Linda Dunbar, who has lived at Odum Village for 18 months with her son. "The security we came to enjoy is being threatened." As part of UNC's Land Use Plan, administrators want Manning Drive h Loop Local NAACP to reorganize after rise in discrimination By MATTHEW EISLEY Assistant University Editor Local citizens may revive a long dormant Southern Orange County NAACP chapter in Chapel Hill, orga nizers said Sunday. A recent rise in alleged racial and gender discrimination at the University has spurred interest in reactivating the local chapter, said James Brittain, a Chapel Hill community activist. The southern chapter was formed more than a decade ago when a county chapter split into northern and southern branches to better serve different areas of the county, said Carolyn Coleman, a past state director of the National As sociation for the Advancement of Col ored People. The southern chapter dissolved about 1981 when membership fell off, Coleman said. Brittain said the northern chapter had not been active in the southern part of the county since then. He made his remarks Sunday night at an NAACP rally at the Hargraves Community Center. The rally was or ganized to support UNC employees who have filed grievances against the University. The Daily Tar Heel offices will close Tuesday, Nov, 20 at 5 pm. and re open Monday, Nov 26 at 8:30 a.m. Happy Thanksgiving!!! have been all over DTHJonathan Grubbs imtMrovaiii! the lower graduation rate in 1986 may have been caused by red-shirting, when student athletes are ineligible to play during their first year on a team. The University football team was one of 12 institutions in 1990 to earn honorable mention from the College Footbal 1 Associat i on because more than 70 percent of the recruited players graduated in a five-year period. Since 1986, freshmen male student See ATHLETES, page 9 proposal rerouted to decrease the flow of traffic near UNC Hospitals. The proposed South Loop would destroy six build ings in Odum Village, making the area useless for housing purposes. Ben Tuchi, vice chancellor for business and finance; Donald Boulton, vice chancellor for student affairs; and Gordon Rutherford, director of facilities planning and design, all represented the University at the public hearing. The University maintains that be cause of the new buildings planned in the Mason Farm Road area, increases See HOUSING, page 4 "The whole issue here is what is happening to the masses of black people in this country, and in Chapel Hill and Carrboro," Brittain said. "There needs to be some vehicle here to combat these ills." Many of the 70 to 75 people at the rally expressed interest in reorganizing the chapter. NAACP state President Kelly Alexander, the rally's featured speaker, said he was impressed by the citizens level of interest. "It's halfway there tonight," he said. An active Chapel Hill chapter could help local citizens combat racism in the community, he said. "It gives you a support network. There is strength in being part of a large organization." The national organization requires local chapters to have at least 50 members paying annual dues of $ 1 0, he said. Brittain said a five-member com mittee had been organized to solicit members. Dorothy Shanklin, president of the Northern Orange County NAACP, could not be reached for comment See NAACP, page 9 it. Julia Child :