Baiiy ®ar Hppl BRIEFS Stories from tie University and Chapel Hill Council Postpones Action To Make Cablevision Pay The jury is still out on whether Cablevision of Chapel Hill will have to pay refunds to local cable subscribers. The Chapel Hill Town Council decided at its meeting last week to postpone an action forcing the company to refund each cable subscriber until Federal Communi cations Commission cable rate regulations could be researched and interpreted. Chapel Hill Town Manager Cal Horton said the FCC’s new rules were so compli cated that the council decided to put a 60- day suspension on the ruling. The town is employing a technical con sultant in Minnesota to “interpret” the FCC regulations and determine if Cablevision overcharged customers by us ing an inaccurate inflationtableintheFCC manual, Horton said Tuesday. Horton said the charging error could be as much as 6 cents per month per customer since new federal cable regulations were passed six months ago. That could mean Cablevision would owe each subscriber up to 36 cents in refunds, he said. If a mistake occurred, it was not Cablevision’s fault, Horton said, adding that the FCC had provided inaccurate in flation tables in its manual. “We reviewed the cable company’s records and found they were acting in good faith,” he said. An interpretation of the regulations will be available within 60 days, Horton said. The town council then will decide what action to take, although any decision could be contested in court. Horton said, “The whole thing is a mess that is very compli cated, and it is not surprising to me that the cable company made a mistake.” Music Concert to Kick Off N.C. Folklore Celebration The Curriculum in Folklore will spon sor “A Celebration of North Carolina’s Folk Traditions” beginning today. The program will commence with a secular music concert at 2 p.m. today in Person Hall. Scheduled to perform are Joe Thompson, Odell Thompson and John Holeman. The performance will be pre sented by Glenn Hinson, assistant profes sor of anthropology. At 2 p.m. March 30 in Person Hall, Charles Zug, professor ofEnglish and chair man ofthe folklore department, will present a tale-telling session featuring Orville Hicks, Bobby McMillon and Frank Proffitt. The program will attempt to demonstrate the vast cultural heritage of North Carolina, Zug said. “We’re trying to reach students and make them aware of the rich tradi tional heritage ofNorth Carolina by listen ing and talking to some of the artists." “A Celebration ofNorth Carolina’s Folk Traditions” will run through April 20, and events are free. UNC to Host Symposium On Business, Environment The Business and Environmental Stu dent Alliance will host “Bridging the Gap: The Converging Arenas of Business and Environment” from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday at the Kenan Center. The symposium will serve as a means of demonstrating the idea of cooperation be tween the environmental and business sec tors, said Sally Beth Stone, the co-chair woman of BESA. “We’re hoping to show case the fact that there is collaboration between institutions that have tradition ally been in opposition," she said. The keynote address will be given by Bryan Thomlison, director of public affairs and environmental management for Church & Dwight Cos. Inc., the manufac turer of Arm & Hammer brand products. After the keynote address, participants will attend oneoftwopanel discussions on environmental business opportunities and integrating environmental concerns. A closing panel discussion will focus on the University’s role in an environmen tally sound economy and will be followed by a complimentary lunch. The symposium is free. To register, con tact Deborah Williams at 962-3398. Orientation Staff Wins Two First-Place Awards The 1994 orientation leaders won two first-place awards and one third place at the Southern Regional Orientation Work shop at Florida State University. They won first place for overall achieve ment and for the song competition. Their performance in the skit competition earned them a third-place ranking. The songs and skits serve as part of orienting freshmen to various aspects of UNC and to the first-year experience. The group’s central theme was that par ticipation in orientation was critical to making a successful transition to college, said Shirley Hunter, orientation director. “Interacting with that many universi ties really gave us the chance to augment our already successful program, ’’said Lina Patel, one of the 18 orientation leaders. This year’s SROW is the largest gather ing of orientation professionals and para professionals in the United States and Canada. More than 60 schools participated in the workshop to enhance orientation pro grams, Hunter said. “The entire University can be proud of the quality of presentations made by these student leaders and the positive impres sion they made on other workshop partici pants.” FROM STAFF REPORTS Business School Ranks High in Minority Numbers BY DAWN BRYANT STAFF WRITER UNC’s Kenan-Flagler School of Busi ness earned high marks from national pub lications for the high percentage of black and Hispanic enrollment in its graduate program. The Journal of Blacks in Higher Educa tion ranked the business school among the “Best Business Schools for Blacks” in its survey of 35 leading graduate business school programs. Kenan-Flagler is tied with other schools in the country for its percentage of minor ity enrollment. Black students comprise 7 percent of the enrollment in the school’s master’s of business administration pro gram, according to the results of the sur Algonquin Publishes Unknowns Local Publisher Has Faith In Budding Novelists’ Works BYJAYTAYLOR STAFF WRITER Getting a first novel published is no easy task with most of the large, New York publishing houses refusing to read unsolic ited manuscripts. But there’s a publisher right here in the Southern Part of Heaven that relishes dis covering new writers. Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill was founded in 1982 by then-UNC English Professor Louis Rubin with the simple intention of “publishing good books” and a desire to help new authors get started. “Louis taught a lot ofwriting students at UNC, Hollins College and Johns Hopkins (University) who he tried to help get pub lished, and he kept finding that, unless you have an agent or contacts in New York in the publishing business, it was nearly im possible to get published,” said Shannon Ravenel, Algonquin’s editor-in-chief. “He wanted to start a publishing house where writers would be less intimidated.” The whole idea was to start a house that wasnotapartoftheNewYork publishing universe, said Algonquin Senior Editor Robert Rubin, Louis Rubin’s son. “One of the reasons for starting the house here in the South was to be an outlet for writers who don’t hobnob with people at cocktail parties in the Northeast.” The company’s willingness to take risks and to support young authors can be best displayed in the story of Jill McCorkle. In 1984, McCorkle, a former student of Louis Rubin’s, was a 25-year-old secretary at UNC Hospitals who had written a novel. “The first book we had of Jill’s was “The Cheer Leader,” a coming-of-age novel, which is very common for a first novel,” Ravenel said. “We were publish ing only five books a season, and we had at that point a rule of only one new fiction writer on each list. So Jill was waiting to be published. “While she was waiting, she wrote a second novel, which was not a coming-of age novel. It was a more mature novel and represented a great stride for a young writer.” But McCorkle’s second novel posed a problem for Ravenel and Rubin. They couldn’t publish her second novel, “July 7th,” and then follow it with the coming of-age novel. Then Ravenel had an idea. “What about publishing them both at the same time? It will explain graphically what we’ re about—launching young writ- UNC Music Professors Moonlight in Local Bands BYKARI COHEN STAFF WRITER Perhaps you have wandered through Hill Hall, the headquarters of UNC’s music department, and heard the sometimes discordant sounds of students wailing away on saxophones and trombones. Then you turned the comer and heard the glorious strains of a trumpet behind closed doors. Chances are you have wandered near the office of James Ketch, professor of music and director of the UNC Jazz Band. Ketch is an accomplished trumpet player and just one of the many music department faculty members who play in local and national bands. Ketch serves as a musical director for the North Caro lina Jazz Repertory Orchestra and also serves on the New Psychology Study Looks for Ways to Control Binge Eating BYMEUNDA MORRISON STAFF WRITER There are more pressures in attending college than making good grades, landing an internship and finding a job to be the next Donald Trump. Pressures exist to fit in, to be a part of the crowd and to be thin. The images that govern standards of beauty vary from the hourglass figure, to the waif look, to the healthy, toned look. But the general ideal has created an obsession with being thin that has resulted in a host of women, and some men, turning to drastic measures to trim down. Many people are familiar with the eat ing disorders of anorexia nervosa and bulimia. But one development in eating disorders has not been studied extensively because it often is not thought of as a UNIVERSITY & CITY vey, released in the journal’s winter 1994 issue. The February 1994 “Career Guide” is sue of Hispanic Business magazine ranked Kenan-Flagler as one of the top five MBA programs for its 4.2 percent Hispanic stu dent enrollment. The results found the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor had the highest percentage, of -Hispanic enrollment, fol lowed by the University of Texas at Aus tin, Anderson Business School at the Uni versity of California at Los Angeles, Stanford University and Kenan-Flagler Business School. Provost Richard McCormick said the business school’s undertaking to diversify the student body was essential to academic success. “The University is very proud and m it l .... -r—'• 'i/* M, h w ' fßr? J yjjk § - ,f v . H| . iff - - V/C , 1 , - DTH PHOTOS BY ELIZABETH MAYBACH Rob Odom and Marie Elizabeth Price (above), both employees of Algonquin Books in Carrboro, pose with recently published books. The company, which brought out its first list of new offerings in fall 1983, prides itself on discovering new writers and not just publishing manuscripts but helping launch writing careers. Another of Algonquin's 12 employees, Ann Crowther (right), who attended UNC for both undergraduate and graduate schools, proudly displays one of the company's newer books. Crowther has been with Algonquin Books since its foundation. ers,” she said. “And it will show the confi dence we have in this writer. Nobody had ever done it before that we knew. “It got Jill a lot of attention. We were able to do something very daring and very splashing. We were able to show what we are all about. It worked out very well for us and for Jill.” Algonquin is using another risky mar keting strategy for “The Cage,” the first faculty ofthe Crown Chamber Brass. But Ketch’s talents are not limited to jazz, and he frequently sits in with the N.C. Symphony. “My time is equally spent between classical and jazz,” Ketch said. “Playing jazz takes a lot more out of you, and I’ll never schedule a classical performance right after doing a jazz show.” Ketch also has received a great deal of national, and even some international, exposure. “Every year, there is a meeting ofthe International Trumpet Guild, and I have played at nine of those annual conferences,” he said. In addition, Ketch played in England for several years with the British Brass Band, and he was named outstand ing trumpet soloist at a competition in Ohio. As if all of his band commitments and course teaching were not enough, Ketch also teaches private lessons and disorder. It is called binge eating, which occurs when a person eats large amounts of food during small intervals of time, said Linda Craighead, a professor in the UNC psychology department. The clinical definition of anorexia is “the radical restriction of caloric intake that results in a profound weight loss,” according to “Harrison’s Principles of In ternal Medicine.” An anorexic person constantly diets and exercises to lose weight without a loss in appetite, according to the guide. The per son sometimes uses diuretics and laxatives to accomplish weight loss. An anorexic person also might eat in binges and then exercise to prevent weight gain. People are diagnosed as anorexics when they weigh from 10 percent to 15 percent less than their weight requirement. pleased with the excellent record the busi ness school has had with its strong and successful efforts to recruit minorities.” Chris Canfield, director of communica tions at the Kenan-Flagler Business School, said the school used special recruiting ef forts to attract qualified minority candi dates. “We have a target goal for having a class that is diverse, including blacks, His panics, women and those with various job backgrounds,” he said. Minority enrollment fluctuates from year to year, depending on the number of minority applications received, he said. Kenan-Flagler is one of 11 members of the Consortium for Graduate Study in Management that allows minorities to ap ply for admission to any of the 11 Consor tium schools through its St. Louis head .a J^H&flMk, jyMN iH “ayw^p novel by Audrey Schulman, set to be re leased this spring. “We feel so strongly about this woman’s story-telling ability that we’re giving a money-back guarantee,” Ravenel said. “We think this has not been done before. It certainly has not been done on a first novel. ” One of Algonquin Books’ goals is to do more for aspiring writers than to put their works in print. must find time to practice on his own. “There is never a dull moment. I’m usually doing some thing with my profession from 8 in the morning until 9 at night, whether it’s preparing for class, practicing, teaching or whatever," Ketch said. Yet another of Ketch’s band affiliations is with the Gregg Gelb Swing Band, in which Keith Jackson, a trom bonist and lecturer in the music department, joins him. Jackson describes himself as “... a classical player who plays some jazz. Probably by the time I’m 35 it will be about even, but right now my jazz chops are much further be hind.” Along with playing in the Gregg Gelb Swing Band, Jackson is also a member of the N.C. Jazz Repertory Please See MUSIC, Page 4 Bulimia, defined as “ox hunger,” is a series of episodic eating binges in which a person goes on a massive eating binge followed by self-induced vomiting. A bulimic person also might induce diarrhea through laxatives to lose weight. Unlike bulimics, binge eaters do not purge themselves to lose weight. Often the person feels at a loss for control. Binge eaters can be from normal weight to heavily overweight, but an overweight person is not necessarily a binge eater. This type of eating pattern is the focus of anew study being conducted by Craighead. Craighead says she is studying binge eat ing because different treatments exist for people who are overweight without deep psychological problems and for those who binge. Many weight-loss programs do not quarters, instead of through the individual school. Applicants rank their preferences, and the consortium sends the candidate’s application to the various schools for them to determine whether to accept that candi date. The consortium can also award fel lowships to qualified applicants. Harry Portwood, chief operating officer of the consortium, said the consortium gave member schoolsn excellent oppor tunity to find qualified minorities. “It has an excellent impact, providing opportunities for qualified minorities and helping the schools in recruiting that kind of talent,” he said. Five of the top 10 business schools ranked by Hispanic Business are members ofthe Consortium. The article states, “Among the top B “When you try to launch an author, you’re trying to get them taken seriously as a writer and establish them as a literary personality,” Robert Rubin said, citing McCorkle as an example. “(McCorkle) is a creative writing teacher at Harvard. She writes book reviews for the New York Times. She’s a force. She’s a presence.” Please See ALGONQUIN, Page 4 evaluate why a person eats a certain way. Their goal is to get the weight off, and sometimes it results in yo-yo dieting, she says. But Craighead’s study is different from weight-loss programs in that a person might lose some weight because the need to binge is lessened, but for the most part, the weight level remains the same. The person might be in a better position to lose weight, she said. “The goal of the study is to focus on how people start and stop eating with emphasis on what makes people stop eating when they are full,” Craighead said. “What we want to do is to give (binge eaters) an awareness of cues for them to stop eating after consuming an amount of food.” Craighead says the study is important because there is a need to focus on under- Wednesday, March 23,1994 schools, three win hands down when it comes to pulling in Hispanics. The Univer sity ofMichigan, North Carolina’s Kenan- Flagler School, and the University ofTexas at Austin are well-known on the business school circuit for attracting Hispanics in large numbers.” UNC’s business school also is success ful in attracting minority faculty and is one of the top four business schools in the country for its percentage ofblack faculty, according to the Joumalofßlacks in Higher Education. Three percent of the acuity is black, compared with a national average of less than 2 percent. Canfield said Kenan- Flagler had minority advisers and special organizations such as the Alliance of Mi nority Business Students to assist minori ties after they entered the school. Leaders Inducted To Honor Society BYLESUE DUNAWAY STAFF WRITER The Golden Key Honor Society gave 400 new members invitations to commu nity service when it inducted them into its group at a reception Sunday. “The Golden Key is more then just an honor society that gives its members a certificate ... we encourage them to be come community leaders and participate in Golden Key programs,” said Sharon Grimes, faculty adviser for the society. Aside from the student inductees, the society annually accepts honorary mem bers who have displayed extraordinary leadership skills in both the Chapel Hill and University communities, Presi dent Tonya Beam said. The six honorary members included business school Dean Paul Fulton, Dean of Students Frederic Schroeder, UNC-system Presi dent C.D. Spangler, Chapel Hill Mayor Ken Broun, N.C. Rep. Anne Barnes, D-Orange, and UNC-system President C.D. SPANGLER was inducted into Golden i Key Honor Society. ‘ J Cynthia Wolf Johnson, directoroftheN.C. Fellows Program. “I feel it (is) an honor and a privilege to be included in the society, ” Spangler said. “Asa member of the society, I will do my best to assist and encourage leadership and participation in the community.” The Chapel Hill chapter of the honor society was founded in spring 1993 by eight charter officials, Beam said. There are about 250 chapters nation wide, and four were founded recently in Australia. “We are a national honor soci ety in the process of going international,” Grimes said. Although student induction into the society is based on academic performance and is restricted to the top 15 percent of each class, the organization’s primary fo cus is on community service, Beam said. "These various programs give thehonor society members an opportunity to be come involved in the community” and the community benefits as well, Grimes said. The Chapel Hill chapter has recently become involved with the Best of America, a national Golden Key program. The pro gram involves pairing up honor society members with University athletes to go into the elementary and middle schools to teach children about drugs and substance abuse. In another effort to reach out to the Chapel Hill community, Beam said the honor society would be sponsoring an es say contest for middle school students on “How to Improve the Chapel Hill Com munity." The honor society has continued working with the elderly at the Carol Woods Retirement Home and promoting student/ faculty interaction by sponsoring dinners during which faculty and students can dis cuss their concerns, Beam said. Anyone interested in becoming a mem ber of the Golden Key Honor Society may attend a meeting at 7 p.m. Monday in 569 Hamilton Hall. standing why people overeat before they reach a sense of satisfaction. This often is a hard task in college, where there are social pressures to be a part of the crowd and to participate in group activities, she said. “People with eating disorders often hide from social events because they don’t want others to know they have a problem, ” said Heather Allen, a graduate student involved in administering the study. The duo has devised a method to help binge eaters learn how to cope with crowd pressure without giving up the fun and excitement of night life. First, they recommend making a list of high-risk situations that might be hard to handle. Avoid the ones that can be avoided; Please See EATING, Page 4 3