. . - . . ....
Pertly cloudy
It will be partly cloudy today
and Friday with the high in
the mid 70s and the low in the
50s. A partly cloudy and
cooler weekend is in store
with the high in the low 70s
Pit panderings
There will be an exhibition of
College Bowl teams in the Pit
this afternoon. Openings for
four-person teams to
compete in the College Bowl
are still available.
IJ v
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Volume CS. issue No. 3JK"2f
Thursday, October 5, 1978, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
, Please call us: 933-0245
Heard hut not seen: man of mirth, music beM the mike nights af MftR
By MAURA TWOMEY . ."
Special to the Daily Tar Heel
He's been in your bedroom, your living room and
your car, but you wouldn't recognize him on the street.
Short and stocky, his shoulder-length brown hair parted
in the center, Daniel Brunty simply does not attract
much attention until he speaks.
"Good evening. This is Daniel here with you at
WQDR. Got a cut for you from the new Boston album.
It's good. Sit back and listen." The voice is deep, calm
and unmistakable. At WQDR in Raleigh, Daniel has
iust told 300,000 people a lie.
He turns in his swivel chair with a frown. 'God, I hate
doing that. You have to lie a lot on this job. With the
microphone on, I say it's good, when I really think it's a
piece of crap."
Daniel breaks into a smile. His blue eyes laugh as he
asks why he, "some wimp at a rinky-dink radio station,"
is being interviewed. His modesty is admirable. Daniel,
at 26, has been a professional disc jockey for 10 years,
working both AM Top 40 stations and progressive FM
album stations. His radio show in Charlotte drew over
57 percent of the total listening audience. He has made
hundreds of commercials, opened . concerts, taped
television promotional spots and worked the discos. His
knowledge of music and record companies is extensive
Daniel's experience and expertise helped him land the
prestigious 7 p.m:-midnigh't shift on the most popular
album station in the Triangle area. And his powerful,
well-modulated voice sure didn't hurt.
"I romance a microphone. The mike is my contact.
Bill
passage
etBSM
may
obtain funds
By DINITA JAMES
Staff Writer
The Campus Governing Council
approved a bill Tuesday that would allow
the Black Student Movement to request
funding for projects even if they default
on loan payments. '
The bill comes after the Finance
Committee denied BSM requests during
the budget process because it said the
group lacked definite program TIans. At -that
time committee members told BSM
to return in the fall and present specific
plans.
CGC passed a bill last month to
withhold additional funding if BSM loan
payments were in arrears. The bill
approved Tuesday now will permit BSM
to request project funding but not in
categories from which earlier
appropriated funds will be taken to repay
any outstanding part of the loan.
The resolution, introduced for
immediate consideration by CGC
Speaker Randall Williams, passed
unanimously."
Allen Johnson, BSM chairperson, said
he was very surprised the bill passed by
such a wide margin. He earlier said he felt
the measure was punitive and he
questioned the motives of the council.
Johnson said he thought the CGC was
sincere in the motives behind its latest
action. "I really think Randall Williams
was," he said. "He worked real hard and
put a lot of initiative in on hiswn. He
came and asked me questions about a lot
of things.
"For once, I think the CGC made a
very fair-minded decision. I hope things
will continue to be better in the future."
In introducing the bill, Williams said
he had talked to Johnson about the recent
conflict. "Allen Johnson and I have had a
communications problem that's partly
been my fault," he said.
"I still agree with the purpose of the
bill, but I don't think we should tell them
to come back to us later for, funding of
certain projects, and then inadvertently
tell them they can't a few months later."
'Rhonda Black, Finance Committee
chairperson, confirmed the fact that
BSM had been asked to come back in the
fall for certain projects. "We couldn't
fund things that weren't justified with
specific plans," she said. "We told them
during the budget process that when they
had definite plans, to come and ask for
the money then."
How profs spend time
UNC examiiie faculty
By TONY MACE
Staff Writer
University administrators are
investigating faculty workload and
tenuring procedures in the 16-campus
UNC system.
A questionnaire circulated last month
seeks to determine how much time faculty
members spend on instruction research
and paid outside consultingactivities said
Arthur Padilla, UNC associate vice
president for academic affairs and
coordinator of the study.
A second questionnaire, sent to the 16
chancellors across the state, is designed to
find out how many new people are
entering tenured faculty positions.
The investigations are the University's
response to a 1977 N.C. General
Assembly resolution directing the UNC
Board of Governors to find out how
faculty members spend their time.
When you're on the air, you need someone to talk to, not
talk at. I don't consciously try to change my voice on the
air, but I'm an entertainer for five hours a day.
I see myself like Johnny Carson. Johnny is the
ultimate jock. He's the traditional morning man. He
puts people together, 1 put music together. The only
difference is that I don't dress well." He looks down at
his blue jeans, open shirt and navy tie.which has "Bish"
written on it. v
"See this tie? I've worn it for 16 days straight now. It's
a promo for Stephen Bishop's new album. 1 just wear it
to be different. I'm mirth director here at the station."
But this job is not always fun. His hands deftly rule the
console of buttons, dials, controls and switches in front
of him. Two turntables and four tape machines are
simultaneously monitored. His timing is perfect, and he
claims the technical aspects of his job are second nature
to him now, but it has not always been that way.
"I can't understand why anybody would get into this
business. Sure, there's some neat stuff, but it's a long
day 8 in the morning to after midnight. Three or four
hours in the production room, sometimes working two
hours on one 60-second commercial. I listen to an
average of 50 new albums a week and read three
newspapers a day. And the pay is low."
But the job has its advantages, too. "It's neat to walk
into a McDonald's and hear people talking about you.
It's scary. The might say you're an ass. There's always
that fear."
Success came to Daniel because he overcame his fear
while on the air and is confident of his work.
A'
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aMitifMiiftffliTttrii.iyi-,-ii;iY;y'ff
ASUVtttegslay Esebamen
Soccer scuffle ends in
By BILL FIELDS
Staff Writer
Behind a scrappy defense and very
capable goalkeeper . Kevin Kane, ' the
UNC soccer team battled to a 0-0-overtime
tie with Appalachian State
Wednesday afternoon on Fetzer Field.
Wednesday's match was identical to
the one. the Tar Heels and the
Mountaineers played last season in
Boone, where the two North Carolina
soccer powers finished in a similar
scoreless overtime tie.
With heavy rain coming down for the
majority of the first 45 minutes, neither
team could mount many scoring threats,
and the match became a defensive
struggle with the Tar Heel and
Mountaineer back lines and goalies
taking center stage.
Kane, in his fourth game in the lineup
since Martin Trimble was injured, was
solid as he recorded13 saves on shots
from a talented Appalachian squad that
includes six foreign players.
"Kane played a phenomenal game,"
UNC coach Anson Dorrance said. "He's
a fine goalkeeper.i The way Kevin is
The resolution survived a close vote in
the House Higher Education Committee,
but passed overwhelmingly on the House
floor.
"My feeling was that the Board of
Governors could take care of its own
house," said Rep. Lura Tally of
Fayetteville, chairperson of the Higher
. Education Committee. "It finally passed
because people couldn't see much harm in
it."
The resolution reflects legislative
concern that faculty members are too
often unavailable to students, said Rep.
Trish Hunt of Chapel Hill.
We hear from parents who say my kid
is going to flunk out because they can't
get an appointment with their professor,
or because they've got graduate students
instead of professors." Hunt said.
"So we said 'let's find out how the
X
V
ipll
-A
(?) kicks before Roy Daroff (13) in an
playing . now, I'm satisfied with my
goalkeeper." - .
Although Kane handled the 13 shots
and ASU goalie Steve Knowles had four
saves, the match was mostly a defensive
struggle, with play frequently getting
rough. The UNC trainer went on the field
several times to attend to injured Tar
Heels. .. ..
Adam Abronski sustained a cut on the
back of his head in the first half. Sean
Naber, cut down by a hard check in
overtime, was knocked out of action.
Gerry O'Donnell, Cooper Osborne and
Rick Marvin were shaken up but
returned to play.
With play' rough and hard, a vocal
contingent of App fans and a couple
'hundred Tar Heel fans, who braved the
rain of the first half, showed they Ayere in
the Fetzer Field stands. The referees
frequently were chastised by the fans for
letting some of the rougher hits go
without penalty.
: " Dorrance said that on one occasion the
referee missed a call, and it was the play
which Naber was injured on. "It's not
polite to say, but he missed the one with
Naber," Dorrance said.
workload
faculty are spending their time Let's find
out, for example, if there is consulting
work being done on state time," she said.
Hunt said some support for the study
comes from an anti-education sentiment.
"There are a lot of people in the state who"
are very anti-education. They say too
much money is spent on faculty salaries,
and we're not getting enough out of it."
With the student population
diminishing and new faculty positions
growing more scarce, the legislature
needs to know how the tenure situation b
shaping up at the University system's 16
campuses, Hunt said. ,
Padilla said he has interviewed
department heads at UNC, N.C. State
University and UNC-Greensboro to
gather information on tenure-granting
procedure
His report is expected in December.
- "Somewhere along the line in this job you've got to get
an attitude that you're special. I'm egotistical and hard
to get along with. I'm not patient. But I think I'm good.
I'm very good, otherwise I wouldn't do it. I'd be pumping
gas." V-.1-''; ' - s ' -.. :-: ; .
About his friend and hero, Bruce Springsteen, Daniel
says, "I will do anything in my power to help his career
because he took the time to say to me, 4 Hey, you're
important. " The same goes for Billy Joel, Janis lan and
Southside Johnny. Because they have brought so much
pleasure, anything I can do to help them, 1 will." For that
reason, Daniel never accepts the free promotional
tickets to concerts by these performers, preferring to buy
his own. "It's a matter of principle," he says. -
Intense, too, are Daniel's musical dislikes.
"I detest Led Zeppelin. I hate Fleetwood Mac. I wish
Stevie Nicks' face would break out. On the air, 1 get a
chance to appear hip. Peter Frampton and the Bee
Gees boo. The Beatles yea. It's an image thing, a
love-hate relationship an radio. The people who agree
with me listen and the people who don't agree listen. If
you make them dislike you enough, they keep listening
to find out what dumb thing you'll say next."
He shakes his head and swivels his chair around to
select one of the 900 albums on the wall behind him. The
phone rings. The taped news show ends. The commercial
is begun right on time. The boss calls with a schedule
change. '
"They say it's a glamorous job, but it's a lot of work,"
Daniel says ruefully. "Come on, it's after midnight. Let's
go on home." -
"1
DTHAllen Jemigan
overtime tie Wednesday
deadlock
"They did their best," he
"Today's game was a difficult
added,
one to
referee." Dorrance said he was pleased
with the outcome. "A tie helps us more
than ASU," he said referring to the
chances of an NCAA post-season bid'.
"It (the tie) should give us a shot to get a
bid. .We play a tougher schedule than
ASU does." At this point in the season,
Carolina 5-1-2, and ASU 3-0-1, are
considered to be the top teams in North
Carolina.
Throughout the match, Appalachian
tried to Work the ball to star mid-fielder
Thompson Usiyan, but Carolina kept
him in check. Kane made several saves of
Usiyan's shots, including one with :50 left
in regulation when Usiyan dribbled
through the defense and went one-on-one
with Kane. - . ' . ,
"I was conscious of him," Kane said: "I
had him in the corner of my eye the whole
game." Defenseman Glenn Harris said
the defense watched the Nigerian closely.
"Rick (Marvin) marked him' at the
outset, then we would just pick him up
when he came into out zone," Harris said.
Trish Hunt
4:
A
i i i
i ... , .V
V
(,
A'
1
9
Seldom seen DJ Daniel Blunty
em wl8 r
to mIIow
WASHINGTON Supporters of an
extension of time for ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment moved closer
to their goal Wednesday as the Senate
rejected a proposal to permit states that
haVe ratified E R A .to use the additional
time to rescind their votes.
.The rescission amendment, sponsored
by Sen. Jake Garn, R-Utah, was voted
down 54-44. Garn argued that it was
unfair to give ERA backers more time
without giving opponents equal time.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., principal
Senate sponsor of the ERA extension,
said after the vote that passage of Gam's
proposal effectively would have killed
any chance for final ratification of the
ERA. It probably would have pulled the
extension measure off the floor, he said.
Sens. Jesse Helms and Robert Morgan
of North Carolina voted for the.
amendment. But Morgan still favors
extending the time-limit, said his. press
secretary, Gibson Praher.
"States that have passed the ERA did
so with the understanding that it would
be ratified in seven years," Prather said.
"If we give an extension they should be
given the chance to change their minds. It
would be better if .we lost a couple of
states and had an amendment that would
stand up in the courts."
Helms is against the extension because
it is unconstitutional, said Clint Fuller,
the senator's administrative assistant
Garn has predicted that the question of
whether Congress has the power to
Apartments
Eli
ho
using situation to ease
ByTERRIHUNT
';.V ' Staff WrHer; '
A Carrboro apartment complex
should have 16 units for rent in December
and 176 other units to be occupied by
next summer.
"This complex could certainly ease the
housing crunch around here," said
Clarence Mayo, a Carrboro city planner.
"I'm sure that wherr they planned the
project, they had the students in mind."
' Construction already has begun on Tar
Heel Manor Apartments, located at the
intersection of N.C. 54 bypass and N.C.
54 Business West, across from Berkshire
Manor Apartments. According to the
project's contractor, the first apartment
building will be ready for occupancy in
December. .
"We planto rent the buildings when the
construction ; of each of them is
completed," said Cassandra Poole,
secretary for the project's contractor,
McAllister Construction Co.
Whenconstruction of the entire project
is completed, the complex will have 12
two-story apartment buildings with 16
units in each building. Each building also
will contain an apartment designed for
handicapped persons.
The complex, being developed by Roz
Kovens of Chapel Hill, also will include a
swimming pool, bargeque pit, paddle ball
courts and a combination office-laundry
building.
"Tar Heel Manor won't be much
3
CD
DTHAWen Jemigan
puts on an album at WQDR
0
eras
stt&ite
extend a time limit will be settled,
ultimately in the courts.
A final vote on the extension is
scheduled for Friday, li would allow state
legislatures an additional 39 months, past
the present deadline of March 22, to
decide" wtetfeto 'ratify ERAl Senators
on both sides of the issue predicted the
extension will pass. "
Before the vote on the amendment, the;
Senate rejected a substitute offered by
Sen. Adlai Stevenson, D-Ill., which
would have declared the Senate neutral as
to whether states that have ratified could
reverse their action. -
President Carter was gratified by the
Senate action, said Sarah Weddington,
special assistant to the president for
women's issues.
"The president is now confident that,
the Senate will adopt the extension
resolution by the end of the week," she
said.
ERA initially was approved by
Congress and sent to the states in 1972. It
needs ratification by 38 state legislatures '
to become part of the Constitution. Of
the 35 legislatures to ratify ERA, those of
Idaho, Kentucky, Nebraska and
Tennessee have voted to reverse their
stands. The Kentucky rescission vote was '
' vetoed by the acting governor.-
Gam's amendment would have applied
only to reversal votes taken after the
extension period begins on March 23. It
would not have validated those already
taken, although the four states would
have been free to vote again.
to open soon;
different physically from any other
apartments in the area," said Sonna
Loewnethal, Carrboro city planning
director. "They'll be similar to something
like Old Well Apartments, but they'll be
more expensive because building
materials are more today."
Poole said each apartment would rent
' for $270 per month.'Their exterior will be
white-brick veneer with brown trim. -There
will be a breeze way in the center of
each builing with eight apartments on
each side.
All the apartments have two bedrooms
and one bath. They will be fully carpeted
with a living room and a dining room,
and a wall papered bathroom and
kitcb:n. Poole said the second-floor
apartments will have balconies, while
first-floor apartments will have patios.
The 1 i apartments for the handicapped
will be located on the first floor.
Bathroom and bedroom doors will be
larger, special safety devices and support
bars will be installed in the bathroom and
all other state standards for the
handicapped will be met, Poole said.
. "We have had people stop by to see
when the apartments will be available,
but none of them have been students,"
Pool: said. "The apartments will be
available to students, but are designed
more for graduate students or young
married couples."
Poole said interested persons can call
or come by the-office, located on the
building site, and sign a waiting list.
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