tidily (Ear Hrrl Volume 103, Issue 20 102 yean of editorial freedom MB Serving the students and the University community since 1893 IN THE NEWS Tof stories from the state, nation and world Biological Weapons Found In Tokyo Cult Compound TOKYo—Police were reported Tues day to have found lethalbacteriaata dooms day religious group’s compound, suggest ing the sect, suspected in a nerve gas attack onTokyo’ssubway, was preparing for germ warfare. Even before the subway attack, a book published by the group dwelled on the themes of poisons, germ warfare and the subways. Known as Aum Shinri Kyo, or Supreme Truth, the sect is suspected in the March 20 attack that killed 10 people and sickened about 5,000. The group has denied in volvement, and no arrests havebeenmade. Police raiding Supreme Truth’s proper ties have found quantities of chemicals, some of which reportedly can be used to produce the deadly gas used in the attacks. Limo Driver: I Didn't See Bronco Outside Simpson's LOS ANGELES —A limousine driver testified Tuesday that he didn’t see a Ford Bronco parked outside O.J. Simpson’s es tate at about the time prosecutors say Simpsonwas committing murder two miles away. Allan Park, a Town and Country lim ousine driver sent to take Simpson to the airport, said he had looked directly at the area where the white Ford Bronco was later found because he had been trying to spot an address number painted on the cuib. Deputy District Attorney Marcia Clark exhibited a photo showing Simpson’s Bronco parked just a few feet in front of the house number that Park testified he saw the night of June 12. Fighting Rages in Algeria; More Than 500 Rebels Die ALGIERS, Algeria More than 500 Islamic rebels died this past week in Algeria’s largest military operation against guerrillas fighting to install Islamic rule, sources said today. There was no way to reconcile widely conflicting reports of casualties from re cent fighting across Algeria. But the report ofhundreds of deaths in mountains west of Algiers suggests that the scale of the mili tants’ operation has grown. The fighting, reported in four regions, also shows how determined President Liamine Zeroual is to crush the militants before elections planned for later this year. InWashington, D.C., Secretary of State Warren Christopher said the violence in Algeria was a matter of great concern to the United States. Carter Brokers Cease-Fire In Sudan's Ongoing War KHARTOUM, Sudan—Former Presi dent Jimmy Carter has brokered a two month cease-fire between Sudan’s Islamic government and rebels locked in one of Africa’s longest and bloodiest wars. The cease-fire, to take effect at midnight Tuesday, was announced by Carter and Sudan’s military leader, Lt. Gen. Omar Hassan el-Bashir. In announcing the truce late Monday, Bashir offered rebels a gen eral amnesty if they laid down their arms. More than 1 million people have died in the 12-year war or in famines produced by the fighting, which has pitted the Islamic government against Christian and animist southern rebels. Carter said he sought the truce to allow health workers into to try to eradicate the worm parasite that causes diarrhea. Gingrich Urges Doctors to Back Medicare Tightening WASHINGTON, D.C. House Speaker Newt Gingrich appealed to physi cians Tuesday for help in passing the Re publican agenda, including radical changes in Medicaid and limiting the growth of Medicare. As the Georgia Republican tried build ingpolitical pressure fortheGOP’splanned revamping of the two biggest government health programs, the Senate’s senior bud get-writer provided the fust outline of the reductions he planned for them. Sen. Pete Domenici, R-N.M., who chairs the Senate Budget Committee, said he would produce a budget next month that would slow the current 10 percent annual growth of Medicare to 6 percent or 7 percent. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Weather TODAY: Partly cloudy; high mid-60s. THURSDAY: Showers and possible thunderstorms; high in the 60s. Ex-Governor, Chairman Axed From BOG BYERICABESHEARS STAFF WRITER In a surprising move, the Democrat controlled N.C. Senate chose not to re elect incumbent Board of Governors Chair man Travis Porter, a Democrat, and sent eight Democrats to the board, which su pervises the UNC system. Former Republican Gov. Jim Martin also fell victim to Tuesday’s N.C. Senate voting, which mirrored last week’s Repub lican sweep of the BOG seats elected by the Republican-controlled N.C. House. “There was a feeling that we needed some new folks. Governor Martin is still an ex-officio member,” said Sen. Clark Plexico, D-Henderson, co-chairman of the 3 Men Rob UNC Student, Friend At Gunpoint in Coker Arboretum Incident Marks Fourth Time a UNC Student Has Been Robbed in Past Week STAFF REPORT University Police received a report at 10:43 p.m. Sunday that a female UNC sophomore and her male friend, a student at Georgia Tech, had been the victims of armed robbery, accordingto police reports. The robbery occurred while the couple was lying on a blanket talking in the center of Coker Arboretum, police reports state. The incident was the fourth time a UNC student had been robbed in the past week, including one other time on campus, ac cording to police reports. Suspects in the three previous robberies had not been armed, but University Police Spllik matters Faculty Choose Teaching Ahead of Research Today's Focus: Teaching About the report The top-tobottom review of UNC was conducted over a period of two years for the purpose of reaccrecfiting the University. The self study is now being assembled into final form and will be reviewed by an evaluation team in early May. The article is based on a draft of the final report that was provided to the DTH. DTH PHOTO BY EWYPBREL The fourth in an occasional series on UNC’s self-study BY MARISSA JONES STAFF WRITER A draft of the University’s comprehensive self-study downplays the long-debated ten sion between teaching and research and concludes that in cases of conflict most faculty put students first. “The notion that teaching and research are a zero-sum game is wrong,” said Pamela Conover, who led the study’s review of undergraduate pro grams. “They reinforce one another. “My research influences what I teach my un dergraduates, and students ask questions, even in introductory courses, that affect my research.” James White, who studied UNC faculty for the report, agreed. “I doubt I ever gave a lecture in which some part of it wasn’t illuminated by some thing I picked up in research.” Student-Faculty Ratio 40 Student-faculty •p ratio has improved Jj ii on the whole in ~ 30 recent years. |2O Arts and Sciences | u UNC average •§ Medicine z 0 ’B6 ’B7 88 'B9 '9O '9l '92 '93 Big Country, Cinderella Cowboys Travel Long Road to Seattle BYADAM DAVIS ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Oklahoma State center Bryant Reeves is aptly nicknamed, for if there’s one thing his Cowboys have learned this year, it’s that this is a Big Country. By the time OSU completes its trip to Seattle for the Final Four, it will have played games in five time zones and will have traveled 29,215 miles enough to circumvent the globe with a few thousand miles to spare. Saturday at 5:42 EST, the Cowboys (27- 9) will try to extend their magical journey for two more days as they face top-ranked UCLA (29-2) in the national semifinals. “It’s one of those things it’s kind of like a fairy tale,” said OSU’s other star, shooting guard Randy Rutherford. Chapel Hill, North Carolma WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29,1995 Senate Education Committee. “We can maintain his ex pertise and let some one else have a vot ing slot." Martin and Por ter were not re elected partly be cause the Senate wanted new blood on the BOG, Plexico said. “(As for) Travis Porter, it was not a slap in his face. As goodajobashedid, Former Republican Gov. JAMES MARTIN will remain on the UNC Board of Governors as a nonvoting member. there’s still other people, fresh faces that —with the help of Chapel Hill authorities are investigating any possible connec tion of this theft with the others. Capt. Walter Dunn ofUniversity Police said Tuesday that he was not sure whether investigators had linked the separate inci dents. The victims described the suspects as three black men of medium build wearing dark sweatshirts and baggy jeans, accord ing to police reports. One suspect was 5’ 8” tall, another was 5’ 10” and the third suspect was described as a six-footer, reports state. The latter two suspects were wearing dark-colored hats, but it is unknown if they were armed, according to reports. The three suspects approached the couple in the Arboretum, and one asked, “How are you all doing?” According to reports, tbe 5’ 8” suspect then displayed a This “Cinderella’s” carriage stopped first in Baltimore, where the fourth-seeded Cowpokes thrashed Drexel and sent Ala bama back to its sweet home. On to East Rutherford.N.J., where OSU upset top-seeded Wake Forest in the East Regional semis. And before midnight struck, the Cowboys held second-seeded UMass to 27.6 percent shooting in a 68-54 triumph. Now OSU’s players are headed West, meaning they get to turn their watches back—something the real Cinderella never got to do. The only thing the Pokes need now is a better carriage the plane that brought them home from New Jersey was the same plane that was hijacked in Beirut in 1985. Cowboy fans, for one, are glad that the carriage is not yet a pumpkin. Would you like to buy a monkey? David Letterman from "Cabin Boy" need to be put into the system,” he said. Democrats retained controloftheboard. The new members will take their seats in July. Martin will keep a nonvoting BOG seat, as former governors are allowed to stay on as members emeriti. “The only way to avoid a disappoint ment is to never put yourself up for one,” Porter said Tuesday afternoon. “I’ve cho sen a different way, and I’ve had a political disappointment.” BOG Vice Chairman Joseph Thomas, who will run for the chairmanship, said that in his eight years on the board a stand ing chairman had never lost a re-election bid. The 32-member Board of Governors is dark-colored gun and said, “Empty your pockets.” The victims complied with the suspect’s request, and they then threw up their hands and said, “That’s all we got,” according to reports. The suspects took the Georgia Tech student’s wallet, which was valued at S3O and contained S3O in cash, a driver’s li cense, his student and work identification cards, three bank cards, and an insurance card, reports state. After the holdup, the suspects began running toward Davie Hall. The victims ran in the opposite direc tion to Everett Residence Hall, where they notified University Police of the incident, reports state. According to reports, Chapel Hill po lice were also notified and officers assisted in locating possible suspects. More than a third of the faculty who responded to a 1994 survey said they did not face any conflict between teaching and research. In history semi nars, chemistry research projects, senior honors theses and other student-faculty interactions, re search and teaching occur simultaneously and effectively, the report states. And professors who do experience a clash be tween research and teaching tend to resolve the conflict in favor of teaching, the study found. Fifty three percent of faculty survey respondents said their research was somewhat or substantially hin dered by teaching. Faculty and instructor dedication to teaching has paid off, the report concludes, pointing to high national rankings of programs and departments, alumni satisfaction, and student achievements as evidence of UNC’s educational excellence. Although teaching is already central to the University’s intellectual life, the report says it could be further improved with more frequent peer re views of professors and higher-profile recognition of excellent teaching. The report also discusses educational issues such as student-faculty ratios and draws intriguing conclusions about the differ ent teaching styles of men and women. Darryl Gless, who directed the self-study, said the University was in sound shape for the upcom ing review. “Literally, we meet all the criteria,” Gless said. “But with some of them, we didn’t feel that we were fully meeting standards for a university of this quality. We’re setting high standards forourselves.” See TEACHING, Page 2 “The thing that was a little bit of a surprise to me the other night when we returned, at 2:30 in the morning, was that we had over 6,000 people in our arena to welcome us home and had about4oostand ing outside when we landed in Oklahoma City, ” OSU coach Eddie Sutton said Tuec day. Reeves, a 7-foot, 292-pound giant, is one of the main reasons Cowboy fans are excited. He’s averaged 21.4 points and 9.5 rebounds this season. And in the NCAAs, he’s beaten a bevy of talented centers. He outscored ’Bama’s Antonio McDyess and Wake’s Tim Duncan. But against the Minutemen, he was dominant. He scored 24 points and grabbed lOboards, while holding UMass big man Marcus See OKLAHOMA STATE, Page 9 ttteL ■#* V ' I elected by the Gen eral Assembly to four-year terms. Every two years, 16 are elected, eight by the House ofßepre sentatives and eight by the Senate. The Republican majority House elected eight Repub licans Thursday: Robert Brown, Orville Coward, John Fennebresque, Lamie Horton, W. BOG Chairman TRAVIS PORTER said it was a ’political disappointment' not to be re-elected. Kenneth Morgan, Cary Owen, Barbara You're Outta Here ll|> fmMa mm . I DTH/ERIK PEREL North Carolina second baseman Hanes Torbett tags second, but the Louisville hitter was safe at first in the Tar Heels' 8-5 win Tuesday. See story, page 7. State Softens Objections To Sidewalk Dining Plan BYRYAN THORNBURG CITY EDITOR AND DAVID GERLACH STAFF WRITER The prospect of eating dinner or lunch outside at a downtown Chapel Hill restau rant is close to becoming a reality. The state Alcoholic Beverage Control Board and the N.C. Department of Transporta tion seem to have abandoned their prior objections to the plan. Gorman Gilbert, Chapel Hill’s repre sentative to the DOT, said the department would allow Chapel Hill to choose how to use the sidewalks. The department had previously been concerned about liability that the state would have for patrons consuming alcohol on a state right-of-way, such as that sur rounding Franklin Street. Two stipulations come with the DOT’S acquiescence to the sidewalk dining plan: Oklahoma State East Region Champions Ncws/Features/Arts/Spotts 962-0245 Business/Advertising 962-1163 C 1995 DTH Publishing Cotp. All rights reserved. Perry and Earl Phillips. In response to the House naming eight Republicans, the Senate, which has a Democratic majority, elected eight Demo crats. Four were re-elected: Thomas, Ben jamin Ruffin, Marshall Rauch and C. Clifford Cameron. Four BOG members are new: F. Edward Broadwell, William Brown, C. Ralph Kinsey Jr. and Paul Rizzo, former dean of the Kenan-Flagler Business School. Plexico said politics had played a role in the election process. “The House did that first and made it difficult for the Senate to do anything else, ” hesaid. “With 170 elected politicians, you See BOG, Page 4 “By late spring, under the most optimistic scenario, you ’ll be able to eat outside in Chapel HUI. ” ROSEMARY WALDORF Chapel Hill Town Council member the tables and chairs on the sidewalks must be able to be removed at night, and the town must claim responsibility for the pa trons. Town Manager Cal Horton said at Monday night’s meeting that those condi tions would be agreeable to the town’s staff. Similarly, the ABC, which had wanted the town to place physical barriers between the dining area of the sidewalk and the See DINING, Page 4 QSu Conference: Big Eight Coach: Eddie Sutton (sth season. 123-44 at OSU, 553-208 overall) The Road to the Final Four beat Drexel, 7349 beat Alabama, 66-52 beat Wake Forest 71-66 beat Massachusetts. 68-54 Probable Starters: F Terry Collins, 7.6 ppg F Scott Pierce, 4.9 ppg C Bryant Reeves, 21.4 ppg G Andre Owens, 7.8 ppg G Randy Rutherford, 19.7 ppg