laxly ufctr Heel INSIDE THDRSDffI MARCH 14,1996 •0 ■eSSSSSEe Media Enhance Negative Stereotypes of Hispanics ■ Anew poll says North Carolinians have negative feelings about Hispanics. BY ERIC FLACK STAFF WRITER Media stereotypes of Hispanic-Ameri cans could contribute to North Carolin ians’ fears about the increasing number of Hispanic-Americans in their community, said one faculty member in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication. Anew poll conducted by the journalism school reported that 41 percent of North Carolinians surveyed thought the Hispanic influx was bad for the state, while 24 per cent thought it was good. Fifteen percent of those polled thought it was equally good and bad, while 21 percent had no opinion. Assistant professor ofjoumalism Lucila Vargas, a native of Mexico, said North Carolina’s negative attitude toward His panic-Americans was the result of the ste reotypes portrayed by the mass media. “In my opinion, people think about Hispanics in stereotypical ways, an image which has been disseminated by the mass media,” Vargas said. Officials: New Parking Plan Will Benefit Students BY REINO MAKKONEN STAFF WRITER Several University parking officials said Wednesday that a campus parking plan pro posed for next year would increase safety for students without limiting parking options. The proposal would require permits to access several campus lots from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Katherine Kraft, former chairwoman of the ex ecutive branch’s parking committee and presi dent-elect of the Graduate and Professional Stu dent Federation, said the 1996-97 plan would benefit students, not harm them. Kraft noted the availability of free evening parking in the Bell Tower lot and the opening of a pay-for-use lot on the Mitchie property (lo cated across from Fraternity Court) as viable UNC Freshman Mauled Over Break At Western Carolina Fraternity Party ■ Trisha Roberson, who was injured March 8, is in fair condition and will undergo surgery on Friday. BY JOHN PATTERSON STAFF WRITER A UNC student remains in fair condition and will undergo surgery Friday at Asheville’s Memorial Mis sion Hospital after being hit by a pickup truck and dragged nearly 700 feet while visiting friends over Spring Break. Trisha Roberson, a freshman from Weaverville, was leaving a Pi Kappa Phi fraternity party at Western Carolina University March 8, when she and three other people were struck, reports state. According to N.C. Highway Patrol Sergeant C.L. McMahan, Roberson was walking down a driveway from the fraternity house when a 1990 Ford pickup, driven by Herbert Marshall Conley Jr., 20, of Sylva, struck and dragged her about 680 feet. Terry Roberson, Trisha’s father, said she was visit ing high school friends at Western Carolina Univer sity, when they decided to attend the party, “She was with some high school friends, and they decided to leave the party after the driver of the truck got in a fight with some other person, ” Terry Roberson said. “Everybody started screaming and hollering when the truck came down the driveway, and when Trisha fell, her jacket got caught on the truck somehow and dragged her down the driveway.”