(Slip Daily (Ear Hppl Volume 103, Issue 142 JL 102 years of editorial freedom M Serving the students and the University community since 1893 INSIDE ffllMW UNC Drops Devils With Late Rally ■ ’V DTH/ERJKPEREL UNC’s Serge Zwikker (45) and Antawn Jamison (33) converge in the lane as Duke's Ricky Price launches a shot during the Tar Heels' 73-72 victory. Aid Office Reassuring Students Worried About Tuition Increase This story is the first in a two-part series dealing with the impact of tuition hikes and federal cuts on student financial aid. The next story will focus on graduate students. BY DAWN PRINCE STAFF WRITER Students who qualify for need-based financial aid will receive a tuition grant to offset the S4OO increase if they apply for financial aid, the director of the Office of Scholarships and Student Aid said Wednesday. The office will use 45 percent of the tuition increase to create a pool from which it will draw tuition grants for students with the most need. The office has instituted several new tactics in their attempt to combat the confusion caused by the increase and the federal budget crisis. The office is calling next week Financial Aid Awareness Week, and has been telephoning last year’s financial aid recipients with a reminder of the March 1 priority deadline and advertising the deadline with posters on campus and in The Daily Tar Heel. Representatives from that office will have information tables in the Student Union to hand out financial aid forms and answer questions. One common question from students who have contacted the office was whether their financial aid packages for this semester would arrive on time. Students were concerned that they would be delayed due to federal government shutdowns, Morris said. Morris was able to reassure students, she said, because the University’s Contracts and Grants Office managed its money well in order to absorb the shock for students. Financial Aid Awareness Week will highlight little known information about financial aid such as the new look of the Financial Aid Application (FAA) put out by the College Board. The form is now called the Financial Aid Profile and looks a little different. Students will recognize its questions, which have only been slightly revised. This form must be accompanied by a filing fee of $19.95 and can be picked up in the financial aid office. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid will be mailed out to all of last year’s recipients, as always, although it might arrive later than usual as a result of the federal shutdowns. Students who were not former recipients but wish to file the free application this year can pick up copies at the information tables Wanna Laugh? Pick Up a Duke Chronicle It’s always humiliating for a Dookie when their team falls to the ever better UNC team. But some Dookies are hurting more than others on this fine morning, and the staffers of The Duke Chronicle are hurting the most Take a stroll over to the lovely gothic campus and pick up a copy of today's issue. Following a traditional agreement, the Dookies have printed their masthead in Carolina blue, announcing (grudgingly) that Dean Smith is still God. There is justice. You don’t have to fool all the people all of the time; you just have to fool enough to get elected. Gerald Barzan Busted at the Bars ALE agents made an unusually high number of arrests in Chapel Hill over the weekend. Page 3 CSS/PNANCIALAID ■ The FAA (Financial Aid Application) is now called the Financial Aid Profile. Information about the Financial Aid Process: ■ The priority deadline is March 1. ■ Loans should not be affected by the federal budget crisis. ■ Low-income students are eligible for assistance with the S4OO tuition hike. ■ The Office of Scholarships and Student Aid offers a free computer scholarship search. SOURCE; UNC OFFICE OF SCHOLARSHIPS AND STUDENT AID DTH/HEATHER LEWIS and in the financial aid office. The S4OO increase may make some students not formerly eligible for aid eligible this year. Students may also be concerned about allocations for next year’s aid. Although the University has not been notified of its federal allocation, Morris said she is not concerned because financial aid awards are always based on the previous year’s federal allocations. “I don’t want to downplay the seriousness of the federal shutdowns (their impact on financial aid), but I honestly don’t see it yet as a disaster. Until the reconciliations are finished we can’t really talk about those issues,” Morris said. She said her main concern has been the processing of next year’s financial aid forms. Students who turn in those forms by March 1 will receive priority over students who turn them in later. Morris is also concerned about Pell Grants for next year. A proposed U.S. House bill would raise the amount of the maxi mum Pell Grant by SIOO, but would also raise the minimum grant from S4OO to S6OO. According to a report by the U.S. Department of Education, that increase would eliminate awards for more than 228,000 low income college students. A study done by the Office of Scholar ships and Student Aid estimated that such an increase would eliminate awards to 138 UNC students, but those students are on the lower end of the need schedule. However, loans affect a larger number of college students than grants. A report by the College Board indicated that loans now comprise 56 percent of federal, state and institutional student aid, up seven percent over the past decade. Morris said students should not worry because federal loan programs should not be affected too severely. He also said even though the grace period for paying back Stafford Loans may be eliminated, it would cost students only six months’ interest. Chapel Hill, North CaroHM THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1,1996 Governor Files Gov. Jim Hunt filed to run for re election Wednesday. Hunts says it will be his last election. Page 9 BYROBBIPICKERAL SPORTS EDITOR It was inevitable that the Tar Heel fans would storm the floor. After all, North Carolina had trailed by 12 points going into the second half. After all, former UNC center Rasheed Wallace encouraged the celebration from the sideline. Men's Basketball Duke 72 North Carolina .. 73 And this was, after all, Duke. “You’d like to think it was our players, but our crowd definitely helped us win the game,” UNC coach Dean Smith said. “The better team didn’t win.” Indeed, the eighth-ranked Tar Heels looked sloppy, uncoordinatedand justplain bad at times, but feisty UNC (16- 4, 7-1 in the ACC) scrapped back in the final Virginia Tops UNC Women 87-71 See Page 11 13 minutes of Wednesday night’s thriller at the Smith Center and edged the Blue Devils (12-8,7-1) 73-72 in front of a rowdy crowd of 21,572. The contest felt eerily familiar in its waning minutes. UNC trailed by four at the 1:13 mark until an Ademola Okulaja tip-in cut it to one. Crowds of UNC students stormed the floor following Wednesday's game. The win marked the Tar Heels' sixth consecutive victory over Duke. Deja vu, UNC-Duke style. After all, the two rivals have a history of down-to-the wire matchups. Sophomore sixth-man Steve Wojciechowsi hit a long trey at the other end to put the lead back at four, but UNC countered with a 3-pointer by its own sopho more guard, Shammond Williams—over Wojo. Duke lead: down to one. After an official timeout, UNC got the ball back on an alternate possession called when Wojciechowski’s pass to Chris Collins hit Collins’ hands and went out of bounds. UNC got the ball down to its paint, but senior guard Dante Calabria fumbled it in the lane, and the ball ended up in the battling grips of Collins and Williams. Duke tried to call a timeout, but the officials looked to the possession arrow. “If we get that timeout, maybe we win the ballgame," Duke coach Mike Rryzyzewski said. They didn’t. With little more than 17 seconds left, Calabria tapped in a Serge Zwikker miss. Advantage, Tar Heels. Duke took a timeout, and Ricky Price launched a baseline prayer at the other end, but the shot was short. It was the Tar Heels’ first one-point win See MEN’S BASKETBALL, Page 4 DTH/ERKPEREL Sports commentator Dick Vitale tosses a signed copy of his book to a fan. Vitale was at the Bull s Head Bookshop on Wednesday to sign copies of his new book. He also was in town calling the UNC-Duke basketball game. Vitale Signs Books, Jokes With Fans BY MELISSA STEELE ASSISTANT FEATURES EDITOR The line wound around barriers in an attempt to keep the impatient crowd in some sort of order as they waited to have their books signed by Dick Vitale. While waiting, someone in the crowd yelled, “ Go Devils!” Vitale’s ears perked up. “Oh, God, I got a Dookie here trying to wake up the crowd,” Vitale said. “I’m gonna have to kill that sucker.” Even as he scribbled messages and signed his name a few hundred times in a row, Vitale’s exuberant personality still showed through. He made jokes and small talk with his fans. He tried to act as Cupid, too. In between signing books, Vitale spotted a guy and a girl “flirting” in line. "Uh-oh, here comes Ms. Personality,” he said when she reached his table. He inquired as to whether they wanted to go on a date that night. “I’ll give you S2O, and you can go out to dinner,” he said. The couple missed out on a free night on the Rising Seniors Five pairs of candidates ready themselves for the race for Senior Class president. Page 2 < WJnious\ TSm. 1 Jamison’s Double-Double Lifts Tar Heels BYTODD GRAFF ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR He wanted to leave the floor amid the screaming cheers of the Smith Center. Fotthis was Duke, the game he’s waited to play all season. But with 4:13 left, North Carolina’s Antawn Jamison picked up his fifth foul. So the freshman sensation sat, fidgeting with his tape and shoes, trying to con centrate, all the while wondering what hap pened. It was his game only MM ANTAWN JAMISON had 23 points and 14 rebounds before fouling out with 4:13 remaining in the game. minutes before. He had dominated the the heart of Duke’s defense for 29 minutes. But with a little extra body on a loose ball, his day was over. “It was real hard for me to sit on the bench after a play like that,” Jamison said. “But I know I can count on my teammates when I’m on the bench.” With 6.5 seconds remaining, Jamison’s trust was honored, as Dante Calabria followed a Serge Zwikker miss to give UNC a 72-71 See JAMISON, Page 4 town because the girl had a boyfriend. Even though the line seemed to move quickly, new people tagged on the end throughout the signing session. Erica Eisdorfer, an employee at the Bull's Head Book Shop said close to 500 people at tended the book signing. About half way through the signing, Vitale’s second marker was running out of ink. “That line’s still there?” he asked. Students and adults wound their way through the line, books and newspaper articles in hand. They asked for dedica tions to their parents, boyfriends and for themselves. Somepeopleboughtthebooks as birthday gifts and asked Vitale to write notes such as “Happy Birthday, Baby”. He signed most bools with “Go Heels!" and his famous scrawl of an autograph. Later in the afternoon, a Dick-Vitale sound-alike contest was held in the Bull’s Head. However, due to the time change of the contest, only three contestants showed. Mark Kaley, a freshman from Greens boro, made the first impersonation. “It’s a slam fest. It's a jam fest. It’s News/Featare/Ajtj/Spoto Business/Advertising 01996 DTH Publishing Corp All lights resaved. Today's Weather Cloudy; high mid-30s. Friday: Rain, sleet: high 30s. Hanton Launches Lawsuit ■ The 22-year UNC veteran claims Lawrence Gilbert defamed her character. BYJAYMOYE ASSISTANT UNIVERSITY EDITOR HILLSBOROUGH - A former re search analyst in the Department of Biol ogy testified Wednesday that Associate Vice Chancellor Lawrence Gilbert distrib uted a defamatory memo about her one week after firing her in May 1991. Wilma Hanton, a UNC employee for 22 years, said Gilbert, then biology depart ment chairman, fired her after she accused him of plagiarizing her research data in an article he published in 1991. Mark Dorosin, one of Hanton’s attor neys, said Gilbert’s memo stopped his client’s career in its tracks. “It destroyed her reputation, held her up to ridicule and created contempt among the people who were her peers,” he said. Hanton saidheruseofthe department’s electron microscope facility caused ten sion. She said she was fired after defying regulations on use ofthe microscope, which was purchased in 1984 with money from the National Institutes of Health. According to Hanton, she made a bio logical discovery during research in March 1987 and agreed to collaborate on a study with Gilbert. In 1991, Hanton learned that a dissertation completedby one ofGilbert’s doctoral students and an article published by Gilbert both contained her data. Nei ther document credited Hanton, she said. On April 18, 1991, Hanton reported that her office had been broken into and that data had possibly been stolen. Hanton said she filed an administrative complaint with Gillian Cell, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at that time. The com- See HANTON, Page 2 awesome with a capital ‘A’,” he said. Nick Beard, a junior from Atlanta, GA, was the second contestant and described the first time he met Vitale at an autograph signing session. “(Vitale’s) excitement makes it interesting for anyone else watch ing the game,” he said. The third contestant, Morgan Green, a freshman from Wilmington, gave his im personation of Vitale calling a UNC game and describing Dante Calabria’s action on the court. “Give that boy some Windex,” he said. “He’s cleaning the board!” The contest ended in a three-way tie, the contestants winning a copy ofVitale’sbook. There seemed to be some extra excite ment in the air during Vitale’s visit due to the anticipation of the Duke-UNC game. One of the students waiting in line asked Vitale for an extra favor. “I’m a little nervous about the game tonight, Dick,” he said. “Just for good luck, can I mb your head?” With good humor, Vitale leaned his balding head down and let the guy rub it as his friend snapped a picture. 962-0245 962-1163