8 Thursday, July 8, 1999 Ashley Stephenson EDITOR Jacob McConnlco C3IYOTUI fit NATIONAL EDITOR Board Editorials On the Record State law says people need not provide a reason for requesting public records, but chances are agencies will ask for one. The results of a recent test of North Carolina’s public-records access law revealed that residents could expect to be denied one third of the time when requesting a city or county public record. In addition, the study showed that law enforcement agencies had a higher refusal rate and often violated state law by asking the requester to identify themselves. State law explicidy states: “No person requesting to inspect and examine public records, or to obtain copies thereof, shall be required to disclose the purpose or motive for the request” The investigation was sponsored by the N.C. Press Association and the N.C. Associated Press News Council and involved reporters from across the state who present ed themselves as average residents seeking access to records that had been deemed pub lic by the state. Most county and city agencies complied with the requests and reports stated that some were very pleasant to deal with. However, reporters ran into the most trou ble when requesting records from law enforcement officials. Some were pressured into revealing their identity, which is against state law. Others were told that the records were confidential. One reporter was threatened with being put in jail and two others had license-tag checks run on their cars. This disregard for state law raises real questions when considering the fitness of the men and women that are expected to protect residents’ rights. It is alarming that police officers, sheriffs deputies and, in some cases, sheriffs were not aware of the law or did not care about the law. Editorial Notebook - Rachel Carter UNC: Soccer Mom UNC's proud soccer legacy is on center stage as eight of the twenty members of the U.S. Women's National Soccer Team are from UNC. Of all the things UNC prides itself on, from low tuition to being the first public uni versity in the nation, the University is still known for one thing - Michaeljordan. It doesn’t seem to matter what leaps and bounds the school takes, Jordan still remains the most famous alumnus and he seems to be UNO’s greatest claim to fame. But now eight women might have some thing to say about that and kickjordan from his place of eminence in UNO’s heart. The World Cup this year has suddenly turned a spotlight to a growing audience - young girls. And it is those girls who have made Mia Hamm a household name. Soccer has become more popular every year and children learning to play the game look at the best players and try to leam. The best is the U.S. National Team. The U.S. Women’s National Team. Saturday’s tide game against China stands to break the crowd record at a women’s only sport - the record set at Giant Stadium in June by U.S. Women’s World Cup fans when the team beat Denmark 3-0. Officials are expecting 90,000 fans. Little girls have posters on their walls of Hamm, Julie Fouay, Michelle Akers and Briana Scurry. It’s the first time in sports his tory that girls in America have had brilliant athlete role models like the U.S. team. Two of the team members - Joy Fawcett and Carla Overbeck - have children and many, including Hamm, are married. Fawcett and Overbeck are proof to girls that 01?? ioih} (Ear Urrl Professional and Business Staff Business and Advertising: Kevin Schwartz, director/general manager; Cnrissy Beck, director of marketing- Lisa Reichle, business manager Customer Service: Jennifer Mackey, Natalie Copy: Wendy Epnet, Sarah Merritt and Deidre Scofield. Design: Ashley Clark, Adrienne Coppetnoll and Katherine Haggerty. Graphics: Maty Cole and Dan Helias. Arts/Features: Caill Jacobs, Malanie Kolasa, Justin Matlowe. Matt Mansfield and Jonah Mitri. City/State A National: Amy Anderson, Jim Harris, Mike Iskandar, Sophie Milam and Daniel O'Brien the editors are approved by the majority of the editorial board, which is composed of the editor and all summer desk editors the Daily Ta Heel IS published ty the OTH Publishing Corp, a non-profit North Carolina corporation, Monday-friday, according to the Unhiersity calendar. Callers with questions about billing or display advertising should call 962 -1163 between 9 am, and 5 pm, Classified ads can be reached at 962-0252. Editorial questions shodd be directed to 962-0245 It is the equivalent of a speeder arguing to a state trooper that he or she was not aware of the speed limit or did not care, therefore the law does not apply to them. The result is that government gets stronger and residents are made weaker. N.C.’s public-access statute was created to provide residents with information about a number of governmental activities. The statute ensures that individuals mov ing to new areas can see crime reports from the neighborhood they are moving to. In addition, the statute makes information available about property taxes, county and city fees and the salaries of officials that were elected by the people. It is time for law-enforcement and other public servants to realize that just because they tote a badge, carry a gun or hold a high ranking position they are not above the law. In our system of government residents are forced to comply with the law whether they agree with it or not. The process provides legal recourse but requires initial compli ance. I-aw enforcement and public officials should be forced to adhere to the same set of rules. After being denied access to a pistol-per mit application a reporter told Orange County Sheriff Lindy Pendergrass what the public-records access statute stated. Pendergrass replied to the reporter, “Don’t you tell me what the law is. I know what it is. I’m the sheriff.” It is this pervasive attitude that should alarm and outrage residents. Clearly, the message that a statement like this imparts is that law-enforcement view their role as that of law maker and not law enforcer. they can balance sports with family. Leading the team are the eight UNC women. From Lome Fair, who will return for her final year of eligibility in the fall, to 31- year-old Overbeck, the Tar Heel influence is enormous. They are a credit to the University, because they are smiling, well behaved, excited and damn talented. To honor the memory of Michael Hooker, who was a supporter of Tar Heel sports, the UNC team wrote ‘Michael’ on one sock and ‘Hooker’ on the other during Sunday’s game. The team knows that making women’s soccer a popular and thriving sport depends on them. So they are reaching out to the fans. On the U.S. national team’s Web site, Fair, armed with a digital camera, gives fans an up-close look at the team’s fondness for nail polish and hair dye, their shopping exploits and the clutter of their hotel rooms. Figure skating star Tara Lipinski has been recruited to make commercials begging President Clinton to go to World Cup games and he listened, showing up to the July 2 vic tory against Germany. Nike has jumped on board too, with sev eral commercials that emphasize the impor tance of “team” for the women. And of course, there’s the Gatorade com mercial where Hamm challengesjordan to a series of contests -and beats him. With the team’s strong drive into the minds and hearts of the public, it might soon be a question of Hamm beating Jordan in popularity too. Mcßiyant and Kitra Sheppard, representatives. Display Advertising: Joel Sasser, senior account executive; Katelyn Bottoms and Andtea VanHoever, account executives. Editorial Staff Photography: Emila Ruiz Sports: Roland Hoffman, Ted Keith, Mike Ogle, Jerry Walterick and Wes White. University: Will Foushee, Brad Kline, Brooke Roseman, Dan Office: Suite 104 CeroUne Union Cant pus Mall Address: 3# 5210 Bo 49, Carolina Union U.S. Mall Address: P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 2751*3257 Wqt iailg ®ar Mttl Established 1893 ■ 106 Years of Editorial Freedom Wsvw.unc.edu/dth Rachel Carter SPORTS EDITOR Verna Kale .ARTS/FEATURES EDITOR Advertising Production: Beth O'Brien, man age!. Classified Production: Penny Persons. Simmons and Jason Sugar. Editorial Production: Stacy Wynn, manager. Printing: Triangle Web. ISN 410709436 Editorial Stacey Hartley COPY DESK EDTTOR LuraForcum COPY DESK EDITOR Chapel Hill Race War Imminent Last weekend while most people were lighting sparklers and grilling hamburg ers, Benjamin Nathaniel Smith was plan ning a shooting rampage in the suburbs of Chicago. He killed two men and wounded six. He joined the World Church of the Creator, a church where white supremacy is gospel. The members ain’t boy scouts. They advocate white power masked in religion. They have turned hate into a profession. The members of the World Church of the Creator have every right to hand out hate lit erature. But, they should have more integrity. They should come right out and say who they think should die. They don’t because they know that fighting words are not protected by the First Amendment After all, they’re leader wants to be a lawyer. Tricky racists. Its leader, Matthew Hale, claims that the group does not condone violence. Sure. And Hitler aspired to be a rabbi. Claims that white supremacy groups aren’t into violence are ridiculous. Picture it You are a self-proclaimed neo-Nazi. The hate litera ture you distribute is all nigger-this and kike- Readers' Forum Hooker ‘Pain in Neck’ For University Mired In Unchallenging Ideas TO THE EDITOR: Michael Hooker was a pain in the neck to every tweed-jacketed educa tional bureaucrat in the UNC faculty and administration. He was the whirl wind of change, ruffling the feathers of every smug academic hack who had grown too comfortable with non management by committee. Michael Hooker came to the uni versity thirty five years ago a callow youth from the hardscrabble coal fields of rural Virginia. What went on in the classrooms and libraries of Carolina was not a luxury for him, it was a miracle. It opened worlds to him that his own father would never see or understand. And it salvaged him from a lifetime in the dark, cramped burrows, and a lung full of coal dust by the time he was 40. He never forgot what miracles could be wrought in the halls and classrooms by passionate teachers, who cared about their students, and who believed in die power and glory of knowledge. Miracles that could trans form a coal miner’s son into a chan cellor. To paraphrase Wordsworth, “The University is father of the man.” A quarter century later, he proved another great alumnus wrong. He could go home again. And when he did, he had a vision of what the uni versity should be. He believed in the promise that education held for all those who sought it, the power it had to elevate the humble and bring hope to those, who only a generation before knew only despair. He wanted nothing short of a rev olution, a return to UNC’s original ideals, a university of the people, by the people, but most importandy for the people He had a vision, and it was not the stuffy, etiolated, sarcophagus the uni versity had evolved into under the layers of dust deposited by the creak ing leadership of academic pedants. Cara Brickman PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Thomas Ausman DESIGN EDITOR ■ CARA BRICKMAN Guest Columnist that. You want them all dead, but you just want to talk about it? Come on. Hitler did not make a name for himself by being all talk now did he? He thought Jews sucked. He wanted them all dead. They were to blame for unemploy ment in his motherland. They hoarded all the money while his Aryan brothers went hungry. They were sneaky backstabbers with hideous hook noses. Hitler wrote that the only way to cleanse the Aryan race was to do away with the undesirables, includingjews, gypsies and homosexuals. Of course there is no way of knowing what they talk about at their church meetings. But, The University had lost sight of its mission, and sunk into a parody of the self-absorbed university. Michael Hooker seized the University by the scruff of the neck and shook the dust from every comer of campus. He kicked open the doors and windows and pointed to the far horizon and declared that the true campus of this University lay there in the tiny valleys of the mountains, the sprawling mill towns of the Piedmont, the isolated tobacco farms of the east tidewater plains and the tiny fishing villages of the coast. He returned with vigor to make good the promise of Chancellor Battle in the university’s first renaissance, where “the bound aries of the University would be co terminus with the boundaries of the state itself.” The Chancellor ordered the school of education to reach out to the high schools of the state. He smashed the ivory towers and insisted the University live in the world of busi nesses and government across the state. He dragged the University kick ing and screaming into the real world. He insisted that the university cease its role as chief beneficiary of the peo ple’s largesse, and return again to its role of servant of the people. Previous chancellors were the noble keepers of flame, acolytes of the grand tradition. They loved the bricks and mortar set by General Davie and the stones trod by Thomas Wolfe. But for Michael Hooker, his university was the people, and the people who mattered most, his stu dents. He sought to return the cam pus to the electric atmosphere of his youth. He fought to revive a universi ty where the faculty cared more about molding a generation’s leaders than what was on the lunch menu at the faculty club. He refocused the attention of the University back to the undergraduate school that defined its character, his tory and meaning. He demanded that the faculty lavish its best efforts, not just on the tiny graduate classes of tomorrow’s professors, but also on the undergraduates who would stream Allison Bums ONLINE EDITOR Ted Basladynski GRAPHICS EDITOR something tells me the discussions have more to do with stringing up black people from trees and less to do with the Blessed Trinity. “Gee, we never saw anything like this com ing,” Smith’s neighbors told news crews. Whether or not Smith had violent tendencies or looked like he was capable of murder, he did in fact kill two people before turning his gun on himself after a police chase. There was something about hearing day after day that blacks, Asians and Jews among others were parasites of the United States that got to Smith. And while the World Church of the Creator does not condone violence, it has indisputably bred it. Smith went on this killing spree in affluent neighborhoods not unlike our own in Chapel Hill. It might be wise to remember that while we are out walking our dogs or at the drive thru window at Wendy’s. You never know when a walk can turn into a crime or when a dispute over french fries can turn into a race war. Thank the racists. Cara Brickman is a senior English and pho tojournalism major from Indian Trail. Reach her at cbrick@email.unc.edu. back across the state, changing the face of society. He wanted the very best for every student, and embraced technology to ensure the world would hold as much promise for them, as it had for him. He mandated that every freshman be able to own a computer by 2000, and that every professor integrate com puters into die classes as fundamental tools of learning. He fought to estab lish four new Kenan Professorships for undergraduate faculty and made it clear that excellence in undergradu ate teaching was the keystone of his administration. He restored the promise that education held for those who had none without it. The last time I saw Chancellor Hooker was in the spring of 1998. It was bright April afternoon, and I spotted him charging down a walk way on the south quad, in that per petual bounding gate that marked his personality, pushing through the swarming sea of students. I watched as he nodded and flashed that famous smile at each and every student, star tling them as he charged through their midst. One lanky youth raised a clinched fist over his head and called out with a toothy grin, “Yo, Captain Hook” and the Chancellor smiled back and waved. “Most Excellent Chancellor" cried a scruffy, over weight kid with glasses. He respond ed with a Cheshire Cat grin and a mock imperial turn of the wrist with out breaking stride, leaving a fleet of grinning, startled students, bobbing like tiny boats in the wake of a great carrier, awed by the sudden encounter with the leader they all felt knew and shared their own hopes and dreams. That is the way I will always remember Michael Hooker, striding down the sun-dappled quad of his youth, surging through the innocent, the eager, the hopeful sea of beaming faces that reflected back his charis matic grin, joyful to be surrounded by his true university. Randolph Ryan Class of 1982 tTltr Saily 3-ar Urd j? The Daily Tai Heel wel comes readet comments and criticism. Letters to the editor should be no longer than 400 words and must be typed, double-spaced, dated and signed by no more than two people. Students should include their year, major and phone number. Faculty and staff should include their title, department and phone number. The DTH reserves the right to edit letters for space, clarity and vulgarity. Publication is not guaran teed. Bring letters to the DTH office at Suite 104, Carolina Union, mail them to P.O. Box 3257, Chapel Hill, NC 27515 or e-mail forum to: dth@unc.edu.