Wat iathj (Ear Brrl & Volume 103, Issue 44 102 years of editorial freedom Serving the students and the University community since 1893 No More Fare Pilot Program Will Eliminate U-Bus Fare in August BYTHANASSISCAMBANIS EDITOR Starting next fall, when you climb on the U-Bus, don’tbotherreachingforchange or your bus pass. A pilot program approved by Univer sity officials Monday will eliminate the fare on the U-Route shuttle that circles campus between UNC Hospitals, South Campus and Franklin Street. “If the U-Bus pilot project is successfiil, then next year student government will explore supporting the cost for student ridership with a fee,” said Student Body President Calvin Cunningham, who pushed for the fare elimination. The Department of Housing will foot the s6o,ooocost of subsidizing the U-route, which is commonly used by the approxi mately 3,200 South Campus residents. Over the last academic year the U-route served 240,520 passenger trips. Department ofTransportation and Park ing officials said they hoped the fare elimi nation, which will go into effect this Au gust, would spur a ridership increase. Michael Klein, director of the DTP, said the University would evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot program by moni toring ridership figures. “lam hopefiil of more than a 20 percent See U-BUS, Page 2 Williamson’s Lawyers Cite Mental Illness in Shootings BY WENDY GOODMAN CITY EDITOR According to an affidavit submitted by Wendell Justin Williamson’s lawyers to Orange County Superior Court on Friday, actions which occurred on January 26 “were the product of and resulted from paranoid schizophrenia, an illness over which he had no control.” The third year UNC law student from Clyde has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder in the shooting deaths of Kevin Reichardt, a UNC sophomore lacrosse player, and Chapel Hill resident Ralph Walker. He has also been charged with 11 counts of assault with intent to kill and two counts of discharging a firearm into occupied prop Capowski Says No to Mayor’s Race BY WENDY GOODMAN CITY EDITOR Chapel Hill Town Council member Joe Capowski made his candidacy for re election this November official Wednes day. Capowski has served on council since 1991, and said he was looking “forward to the campaign” this year. Capowski, who took a political cam paigning class at UNC last semester, said that hisdecisiontorunforre-electiontothe council instead ofonetorunfor mayor had been difficult but one with which he was happy. “I didn’t want to make the kind of time commitment being mayor requires at this point in my life,” he said. “Asa strong council member, I can work just as suc cessfully for the issues I am concerned with.” Flicka Bateman, Capowski’s campaign manager, said that his decision to run for council could come as a shock to some of his supporters who encouraged him to en ter the mayoral race. “I am glad he will still be working in town government in some capacity,” Bateman said. “I think our town deserves more Joe Capowski’s.” Capowski said that his campaign would focus on issues that had been and remained important to him and to the to wn of Chapel Hill. The main issues of the campaign would focus on preservation of neighborhoods, balanced growth, alternates to the auto mobile and especially improving town gown relationships. “Since the entities (UNC and the town) grew up together and share the same space, we must cooperate in its use," Capowski said. He said by targeting in on these issues, he hoped student awareness as to the con- WEEKLY SUMMER EDITION P-2-P Facing Potential Guts in Funding BYTHANASSISCAMBANIS EDITOR The P-2-P van service, which trans ports staff and students 24 hours a day, might face some cutbacks when the University’s internal budget process is over. The Pan-University Budget, allo cated at the discretion of the chancel lor, currently gives over $500,000 dol lars to fund the van service. Some administrators to question the size of the P-2-P van service allocation and the service’s efficiency. “My belief is that it’s a valued service and in all likelihood will be continued,” said a transportation official. Provost Richard McCormick said final decisions on the Pan-University Budget probably won’t come until July, when the state legislature finalizes its appropriations to the University. “We didn’t single out P-2-P for spe cial scrutiny,” McCormick said. “I don’t think the ridership most impor tant to students is imperiled.” Staff, disabled students and students going to Student Health Services can use the van service, which is separate from P-2-P Xpress. All students can use P-2-P after dark. erty, according to court reports. Williamson’s lawyer, Kirk Osbom, and public defender, James Williams, filed a series of motions Friday stating that Williamson “was actively psychotic at the time of the shootings" and that the shootings were a result of Williamson’s mental illness. The illness was further ex plained in an affidavit submitted by the public defender. The main motion, which was intended to prevent Orange-Chatham District At torney Carl Fox from seeking the death penalty, claimed that the death penalty “would constitute cruel and unusual pun ishment” in this case. Statements made in an affidavit alluded to Williamson’s “history ofmental illness” and his suffering from bizarre behavior DTH/IOHN WHITE JOE CAPOWSKI announced his plans to run for re-election to town council. Chapel Hill Town Council nection between them and the town would increase. Now that Capowski’s plan for re-elec tion had been finalized, the question re mains as who will enter the mayoral race this fall. It has been rumored that Town Council member Rosemary Waldorf and former Town Council member Julie Andresen will both seek the position. Waldorf said that Capowski’s decision had no affect on what she would decide. “I am thinking about it very seriously, but I am not ready for any official an nouncement,” she said. “I haven’t had enough time to think about it.” Another possibility is that Town Coun cil member Mark Chilton, elected when he was a UNC student and who is also up for re-election, will choose to run for mayor. “I certainly have had many calls over the past weeks encouraging me to run for mayor, but I haven’t made any formal announcement, ” he said. “I am going to be weighing my options." It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. Albert Einstein Ck*pl HBt North Caroßaa THURSDAY, JUNE 15,1995 . ■... : ’■ 11 DTH/ERKPEREL Chancellor-elect Michael Hooker's new house is the old George Watts Hill mansion, located next to the General Administration building on Raleigh Road. Hooker will officially move into his new house in July. All of the furniture in the house is furnished by the University. See story on page 4. - -■ and various forms of hallucinations. According to the affidavit, Williamson experi enced auditory hal lucinations in which he believedhe heard “voices maintaining a running commen tary on his thoughts or behavior.” The statements also showed that Williamson had been a patient at University ofNorth WENDELL WILLIAMSON'S lawyers filed motions in court to prohibit the death penalty. Carolina Hospitals and Student Health Services because of his psychiatric prob- Hardin Given Lifetime Service Award Gov. Makes Presentation at Fund-raising Dinner in Raleigh Tuesday Night BY BRONV/EN CLARK ASSOCIATE EDITOR Gov. Jim Hunt presented a prestigious state-wide service award to outgoing Chan cellor Paul Hardin at a fund-raising dinner Tuesday night. “I don’t think I deserve it,” Hardin said of the North Carolina Public Service Award. “I am in company over my head.” The annual award, established 23 years ago, recognizes those who have given out standing service to the people and the state ofNorth Carolina. Past recipients include William and Ida Friday, Tom Petty, Jesse Helms and Hunt. “Paul, you could run for the legislature from any place in North Carolina, and I wish you would,” Hunt said, after joking about the numerous N.C. addresses Hardin has held. Asa child of Methodist ministers, Hardin moved frequently while growing up. Hardin thanked the North Carolina Public Service Award Society for the honor, but said he accepted the award humbly. Colleagues, friends and Hunt extolled Hardin for his service to the University. “(Students) do come to Carolina from all over this nation and the world,” Hunt said. “And so we need a man like Paul Hardin. A man of integrity, of caring, of vision. A man who believes in what we can be, not just what we are.” Hunt said he believed Hardin’s leader ship earned UNC much national and inter national respect. Pamela Gann, dean of the Duke Uni versity Law School, praised Hardin for his career in the public eye. She lauded his farsightedness in dealing with racial ten sions at various points in his career and his leadership in UNC’s bicentennial fund- House on the Hill lems. In June 1994, medication was pre scribed to him for his mental illness. How ever, Williamsonstoppedtakingthismedi cine prior to the shootings and resumed the medication on January 27. The defense detailed in the documents thatWilliamsonbelieVedhehad telepathic powers at least three years prior to the shootings.With these powers, “hebelieved he could read people’s thoughts and they could his.” Fox could not be reached for comment on the motions at press time. The defense made a range of other mo tions on June 9. One was to suppress state ments which Williamson made to Chapel Hill Police following the shootings. The defense claimed that these statements were made while Williamson was under duress F Iff* i&i v i I I ... f > s Vjg DTH/EJUKPEKEL Governor Jim Hunt honors Chancellor Paul Hardin with the North Carolina Public Service Award at a fund-raising dinner for cystic fibrosis June 13. raising campaign. “Paul Hardin has held a career in the public eye and has done much by precept and example to uplift mankind,” Gann said. Hardin was a dedicated leader whose commitment to UNC had enriched the University community, Hunt said. “Paul Hardin has a well-eamed reputa tion as someone who works and fights for what he believes in,” Hunt said. “During the last seven years, Paul Hardin has treated the university community as an extended family.” Attorney Wade Smith said he was privi leged to have known Hardin over the years. “When I see Paul Hardin, my heart and unaware of what was happening due to his schizophrenia and morphine with which he was being treated. The defense also made a motion to disallow the personal characteristics of the shooting victims from being included in trial testimony stating that it would show the “emotional impact of the shootings on the family” which could persuade the jury to convict. Another motion to prohibit the jury from deciding whether the death penalty was appropriate in the case was filed. The defense claimed that granting the jury this power “infringes upon the right to a fair trial.” The defense also filed to extend the deadline forfurthermotions.Williamson’s next court date has not yet been set. leaps up,” Smith said. “There will not be another Paul Hardin, not one so keen and so bright.” Hunt, who presented the award to Hardin, said he believed that Hardin was instrumental in leading the state toward excellence. “This man has led UNC at Chapel Hill and our state in its finest hour. I am proud to recognize him for that and to thank him for every North Carolinian.” An 11-member committee of civic and business leaders selected Hardin as this year’s recipient of the service award. The dinner also serves as a fund-raiser for the Carolinas Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. News/Featurcs/Ans/Sporti 962-0245 Bunness/Advennisg 962-1163 01995 DTH Publishing Coip M rights reserved. McCormick Heading For Seattle BYTHANASSISCAMBANIS STAFF REPORT UNC Provost Richard McCormick was expected to accept a job offer to become President of the University ofWashington at Seattle Wednesday evening. McCormick, who has been at UNC since 1992, has been linked to several searches for top administrative posts around the country. The UW-Seattle Board of Regents met to vote on an offer after a negotiating team talked to McCormick and another finalist this week. Their meeting and final official vote was held after The Daily Tar Heel went to press, but sources close to the search confirmed that McCormick would be presented as the board’s choice. The Seattle posi tion opens up Sept. 1, and McCormick would succeed Wil liamP.Gerberding, who has been at UW since 1979. “The University of Washington is a distinguished uni versity, one of the finest in the world,” McCormick said Wednesday after noon. “Anyone would be honored Provost RICHARD MCCORMICK will most likely take over at UW-Seattle Sept 1. to have their name associated with the presidency of that institution.” While McCormick declined to address specifics before the Seattle Board of Re gents made an official announcement, he was willing to sing the praises of the Seattle campus. “Like UNC-Chapel Hill, it is a compre hensive multi-missionresearchuniveisity,” McCormick said. He went on to cite UW’s extensive research programs in the sci ences, which he said are second only to Johns Hopkins University’s in funding. Wednesday’s announcement comes as the culmination of a 13-month search that has been plagued by charges of secrecy from Seattle media. McCormick said that over the last year he has traveled twice to Seattle—once for the NCAA Men’s Final Four in March, and another time in connection with his candidacy for the UW presidency. Sunday, McCormick was ranked as the front-runner for the presidency, and this week he discussed salary and other issues with a negotiating teamledby amemberof the UW Board of Regents. At UNC, McCormick draws a salary of $142,900. The Seattle presidency pays SIBO,OOO, but thatsalary might be re-nego- See MCCORMICK, Page 2