®ltd Satlu ®ar Hppl J? Volume 102, Issue 3 101 Years of Editorial Freedom Serving the students and the University community since 1593 \M ■LUO I^ IN THE NEWS Top stories from the state, nation and world Bosnia f Croatia Plan Union As Peace Talks Relocated WASHINGTON The Clinton ad ministration announced Thursday Bosnian peace talks would be shifted here with the aim of creating a two-republic country one Serb and the other a Croat-Muslim mixture. In Zagreb, Croatian President Franjo Tudjman appeared haggard and serious in a Croatian TV broadcast Thursday of his speech to leaders of his governing party. “The international community thinks and is persuading us that the Croatian people in Bosnia-Herzegovina should live together in a community with the Mus lims,’’Tudjman said. “The outcome of this could be federation ofMuslims and Croats within Bosnia-Herzegovina and confed erationof(thetwogroups) with... Croatia.’’ Death of 10 Double Agents Linked to Top CIA Official WASHINGTON U.S. officials sus pect that Aldrich Ames, the CIA officer charged this week with spying for Mos cow, passed information that led to the deaths of at least 10 Soviets working for U.S. intelligence, a congressional official said today. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the CIA informed Con gress shortly after the arrest Monday of Ames and his wife, Rosario Ames, that they had linked him to the 10 deaths. The official cautionc i that while the CIA said it had reason to believe Ames’ alleged disclosures to the Russians had led directly to the deaths of the 10U.S.agents, it had not been made clear to Congress that the link could be proved. Yeltsin Gives First Speech Before Russian Parliament MOSCOW President Boris Yeltsin stood by his economic reforms in his first address to Russia’s new parliament Thurs day, but said the new freedoms should be tempered with “more justice, more safety, more confidence.” The president’s appeal for compromise acknowledged the popular discontent that gave extreme nationalists and Commu nists nearly half the seats in the parliament elected two months ago. “Anew detachment of the government fiomthepeopleandtheirneedshas emerged and is becoming even deeper,” Yeltsin told the two houses of parliament, which met together for the first time. “Poverty, in equality and unemployment must be our focus. They cause die most concern.” Deputy Defense Secretary Nominee to Be Announced WASHINGTON—President Clinton will nominate John Deutch, a defense offi cial and military technology expert, as deputy secretary of defense, the White House said Thursday. If confirmed by the Senate, Deutch would serve as the Pentagon’s No. 2 civil ian official, filling the vacancy created when William Perry became secretary of defense. Deutch, 55, was bom in Brussels, Bel gium, and became a U.S. citizen in 1946. He has more than three decades of experi ence in national security policy. In his present position Deutch is in charge of defense acquisition and technology. In his career, Deutch has served as di rector of energy research and undersecretary in the Department of En ergy and has been a member of several government commissions and councils. Burma Signs Peace Treaty To End Ongoing Civil War RANGOON, Burma Rebels of the Kachin ethnic minority signed an agree ment with the government Thursday, for mally ending 32 years of armed rebellion. The accord marked a major break through for the repressive Burmese junta’s quest for stability and legitimacy. Details of the agreement, negotiated last year, were not immediately available, but Kachin leaders previously said it was limited to a military cease-fire. Junta leader Khin Nyunt was present at the signing in Myitkyina, the capital of Kachin state, 615 miles north of Rangoon. The Kachin’s leader, Brang Seng, who is recovering from a stroke, was absent. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Weather TODAY: Mostly sunny; high upper 50s. SATURDAY: Mostly sunny, breezy; high 45-50. SUNDAY: Fair and cold; high in 40s. Judge Sets Rules for Sokolowski Murder Trial BY SARAH MCBRIDE STAFF WRITER HILLSBOROUGH ln the pre-trial hearing Thursday for what could be the county’s most gruesome murder trial, David Allen Sokolowski’s lawyer entered not guilty pleas for the three charges filed against his client. The prosecution contends that Sokolowski murdered his live-in girlfriend, Pamela Owens Ellwood, on or about Feb. 17, 1992, and his friend Rubel Gray Hill around March 4 of that year. A third charge is for the attempted mur der by strangulation of Thomas Edward Thurber on May 27,1992. A neighbor of Sokolowski’s alerted po iwmw i 4 .. k. %B>ie* .fajUfifißni aßr Wp* / JR Jm H Hk jBHBIPV JK Hk ■■■■ MH adflw. aHhNk aw' idiSk-Sii Jsm '■ y. ' v \ f; l&f i jfik* m ki i %m m K 'W : fi| M' I DTO/KATE CANNON Carolina Athletic Association Co-president-elect Jen Rasmussen, Jerry Bayles of Western Carolina University and UNC’s Bill McLean discuss issues at a mock board of trustees meeting as part of the National Student Leadership Summit. Students Govern at Mock University BY MATTHEW HEM BY STAFF WRITER Students probably wonder what their boards of trustees do at their meetings. The National Student Leader Education Sum mit on Thursday gave them some idea. The education summit, which is part of Student Leadership Week that began Sun day, includes a simulation of university administration processes. The summit shows students through role-play how a university system’s admin istration works. The event is sponsored by the Student Bicentennial Committee. “It gives students a sense of where pub lichighereducationisgoing,” said Heather O’Neill, co-chairwoman of the summit. It shows students how universities work and gives insight about how they interact with the state, O’Neill said. The relation ship between a public university and the state adds many different dimensions, she said. During the summit, a simulated univer sity, its administration and representatives Finance Committee to Hear Budget Requests of 31 Campus Groups BY HOLLY RAMER STAFF WRUER The Student Congress Finance Com mittee will debate the financial fate of 31 student groups this weekend during its annual budget hearings. The groups, who are asking for a por tion of the $190,000 to be allotted, will present their cases to the committee today, Saturday and Sunday. The requests range from $lB5 to more than $20,000. The Finance Committee can vote to report favorably, unfavorably or without prejudice for each appropriation request. The full congress then considers these recommendations when it makes the final decision. Congress Speaker Wendy Sarratt said the criteria for funding groups were out lined in the Student Government Code. He who has never envied the vegetable has missed the human drama. E.M. Cioran Cfca|Ml Hill, North Carofiu FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25,1994 lice March 9 of the first two incidents after seeing a dog wandering around Sokolowski’s property with a human hand in his mouth. Police later found human remains being burned in the yard and body parts inside the house. In court, Sokolowski’s court-appointed lawyer, William Sheffield, made the fol lowing motions for the first two cases: ■ A motion to reduce the charges to second-degree murder. Superior Court Judge Gordon Battle said the March 16, 1992, grand jury indictment was sufficient to merit the charge of first-degree murder. ■ A motion to suppress physical evi dence. Sheffield said police did not have a search warrant the first time they entered Sokolowski’s house, which would invali of various groups meet to discuss its future. A deceased trustee, Ms. Eleanor Waldroff Chatham, has left an estate worth S2OO million, and the will gives the univer sity 30 days to decide what to do with the large sum. The only other restrictions placed on the university are that the be quest must be divided between short-term projects and long-term endowment sup port. O’Neill said the simulation was “the cutting edge in the way conferences are held.” She said the summit’s co-chairmen Nicole Perez andKevin Moran, who wrote the simulation, came up with the idea and then realized Joseph Lowman had devel oped a similar program. Lowman is a clini cal psychologist and a dean in the College of Arts and Sciences. Students will produce a document that will be sent to public research universities, the White House and the Department of Education, Perez said. She said the document could show ad ministrators the students’ perspective. Perez said. “We look to see how many students are served by the group’s programing, the uniqueness of the programing and make sure that the programs are not overlapped by another group,” Sarratt said. Sarratt said die actual appropriations varied from year to year because Student Congress was required to balance the bud get. “We go over the total allocations and the actual money there to give, and if they don’t match we go over them until they do.” Finance Committee member Joey Stansbury said he did not think most groups would be satisfied with the committee’s recommendations. He said he would continue his opposi tion to groups such as the Phoenix maga zine and Bisexuals, Gay Men, Lesbians and Allies for Diversity. “I don’t think they’ll be satisfied with what they see,” date subsequent warrants based on evi dence found before a warrant was issued. Battle decided that, after the jury is se lected, he would hold a separate hearing to determine if the evidence is admissible. Holding the hearing after jury selection will allow for fairer selection of jurors in the event of a great deal of pre-trial public ity, the judge said. ■ A motion to suppress statements. Sheffield said police failed to read Sokolowski his rights before obtaining a statement of admitted guilt, and Sokolowski also had not spoken to a lawyer. N A motion that if he uses an insanity defense, the issue of insanity and the issue of guilt be decided by separate juries. Battle denied the motion for the time being, but She said the summit gave students a collective voice. Perez said the other benefit of the sum mit for the students was the interaction with their peers from across the nation. Fifty-five students are traveling from as far away as Maine and California to meet at the summit. The students in the simulation draft an agenda and then have a plan of action on how to accomplish the agenda, Perez said. The students examine how the system looks in the ideal world, she said, and then plan how they want to get there. The stu dents draft the agenda based on their own experiences. O’Neill said she liked the idea of the education summit because it was a good ice-breaker for the debates on Sunday. Perez said the summit was unique to leadership conferences and “something never done before.” “This conference is totally determined by students. They determine issues and focus on the debates of the issue,” O’Neill said. said Stansbury, who represents Student Congress Dist. 11. “If it came down to me, I know they wouldn’t be satisfied.” Stansbury said he weighed the group’s monetary situations and ideologies in mak ing his decisions, not whether a group is conservative or liberal. B-GL AD Co-chairman Trey Harris said he expected the Finance Committee to continue its tradition of trying to defund the group, which plans to request $2,582. “There’s never been a year, as far as I know, that they haven’t,” he said. “There is some chance that they might report us without prejudice, but they usually report unfavorably.” Although Harris said he expected lengthy questioning from Finance Com mittee members, he said he was more fo cused on lobbying the full congress to fund B-GLAD. said he would reconsider if Sheffield enters a plea for defense by insanity. N A motion to strike the M’Naghten rule for determining insanity. The judge upheld the rule, which says that a person is insane at the time of a crime if he or she could not then distinguish between right and wrong. The N.C. Supreme Court has upheld the rule. N A motion for the sequestering of wit nesses, which means that witnesses could be segregated from society throughout the trial. The judge granted the motion. During the hearing, Sokolowski ap peared to listen closely, occasionally strok ing his chin or his shoulder-length hair and nodding his head. Once he referred to legal papers in front of him. Senior Phon-a-Thon Ends on a High Note BYJOHN ADCOCK STAFF WRITER A weeklong phon-a-thon aimed at rais ing money for the senior class gift ended Thursday night, but senior class officials said they would not release the final total on pledges received. Matt Williamson, co-chairman of the senior class gift committee, said he could not release the figures because senior class officials were not sure of the totals. “We feel the phon-a-thon has gone very well, and we received a great deal of pledges,” Williamson said. “We just can’t release a number that isn’t accurate or true.” The senior class has held activities in the Pit and spoken with different campus groups about the gift campaign. The senior class set a goal of $325,000. The money raised will be used to fund library services such as an electronic re serve system that will allow students to access and print reserve materials from on Downtown Bank Robbed; Police Search for Suspect BY KRISTEN MIN STAFF WRITER The Chapel Hill Police Department answered its first bank robbery call of 1994 on Thursday. Branch, Banking & Trust Cos., which is located at 143 E. Rosemary St., was robbed in broad daylight Thursday afternoon, ac cording to Chapel Hill police reports. Police reports state that a man walked into the bank and approached the informa tion desk at about 1 p.m. Thursday. As he talked to a BB&T representative about opening a bank account, he passed the employee a note stating that he was demanding money, reports state. The reports also state that the man threat ened the worker with a gun, although no gun was shown. After the note was passed, the representative and the suspect walked up to the teller to get the money. After receiving it, the suspect walked out the door with the money and turned right onto Rosemary Street, said Chapel Hill police spokeswoman Jane Cousins. When the man left, bank employees contacted the police, who responded to the call at about 1:05 p.m. Cousins would not reveal the amount of money stolen. Representatives from BB&T said Thurs day afternoon that they had no comments concerning the robbery or their security procedures. Bank employees gave the po lice a description of the man, and a photo graph was retrieved from the surveillance camera. The suspect is described as a “clean-cut Student Television, another organiza tion that has had trouble getting money from congress in the past, will request $22,989. STVstationmanagerJohn Sabbagh said he hoped the Finance Committee would recognize the goals of STV and its need for funds. “I hope they will see our concern and appropriate the money accordingly,” he said. Some groups will not have the opportu nity to ask for funds this weekend because they missed deadlines to turn in their re quest. The Black Student Movement, which usually requests the second- or third- larg est amount, said its treasurer forgot to turn in its budget proposals. The group officials said it would request appropriations in the fall. Connie Reddan, treasurer of Pauper Players, said the group missed the deadline News/Featurts/Aits/Spom 962-0245 Busmess/Advatniag 962-1163 C 1994 DTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. After the hearing, Sheffield said he was unsure whether he would use a self-de fense or insanity defense. “It might be that there’s a strong enough case for self-defense that it wouldn’t make much sense to weaken it with an insanity plea,” he said. He again contested the first-degree mur der charge, saying the state lacked suffi cient evidence. Orange-Chatham District Attorney Carl Fox would not comment on the case after the hearing. “The state does have to prove premedi tation, and I believe that’s a difficult bur den,” Sheffieldsaid. “Whenyou say some body did something with premeditation, it Please See SOKOLOWSKI, Page 2 line terminals. One of the main reasons the senior class marshals chose the gift was that they wanted the gift to benefit a large number of students. Participants in the campaign were opti mistic Thursday afternoon about reaching their goal. The senior class’ gift has re ceived endorsements from UNC men’s basketball coach Dean Smith and football coach Mack Brown. “We have a really strong campaign, strong phone sessions, and are overall making a firm commitment to reach our goal,” Williamson said Thursday after noon. “We’re satisfied with where we are right now in our fund raising.” Senior class officers said they would continue to raise money by publicizing the campaign. “The phone-a-thon is not the end of the campaign,” said Jason Dugas, co-chairman ofthe gift committee. “We’re going to continue with it afterwards by making personal contact with the people Please See SENIOR, Page 2 I S9R gfc SMCi 3m jjBE The BB&T surveillance camera took this picture of the robbery suspect looking” black man with a medium com plexion in his mid-20s. Reports state that he is of slim build, 180 to 200 pounds and between 6 feet 4 inches and 6 feet 5 inches. At the time of the robbery, the suspect was wearing a blue baseball cap with de signs on the front. According to reports, he was wearing a white T-shirt with an or ange-colored design and a blue, denim, zippered vest with matching jeans. “This was the first Chapel Hill bank Please See ROBBERY, Page 2 because the Finance Committee was in consistent and unclear about when the proposals should be turned in. “There was a meeting to pick up the financial forms that I could not attend, ’’ she said. “But the next deadline on our notification was sev eral weeks later to turn in the forms so I figured I could just pick them up later.” Student Body Treasurer Kevin Hunter then informed Reddan that since she had not contacted him within 24 hours of the meeting, the group would be ineligible for funds, she said. However, Sarratt said that groups had one week between each deadline to appeal and give reason why the deadline was not met. Reddan said Pauper Players also would request appropriations, but she thought the group would probably end up with less money.