Oh no The weekend is on the way and so are the clouds and cooler temperatures. Tonight should be cooler and Friday should bring rain. Vc!umo C3, Issue No. 124 f (- 1 il l I k O I LI final The Dental Healers won the intramural basketball finate this week. See page 7 for details. Serving the students and the University community since 1X9 3 Thursday, March 22, 1979, Chapel Hill, North Carolina Please call us: 033-0245 Faculty gets. tilt lew group for women By KATHY MORRILL Staff Writer On a campus as large as UNCs, where only one out of five faculty members in tenure-track positions is a woman, interaction among the female faculty is often limited because of a lack of contact. "That was the main reason we formed the Association for Women Faculty," said Mary Turner Lane, vice president of AWF and director of the women's studies program. "There was a felt and expressed need among women faculty that they wanted and needed to know one another better and to familiarize themselves with U niversity programs,-a wards, fellowships and other opportunities available to them." Carol Reuss, treasurer for the association, said the size of the University and the varied distribution of women faculty among the departments often isolate women. "1 am very fortunate in the journalism school to have so many women faculty with whom to associate. In other departments, where there are fewer women, it is more difficult for them to meet and talk with one another. According to Lane, one of three instructors and or assistant professors is a woman, as is one of 1 1 full professors. Lane said over the past six to eight years, various women's organizations on campus, including AWS, Women's Forum and the Valkyries, brought the women faculty together by inviting them to teas and receptions. "As the women got to know one another, they felt the need to form an organization which would bring them together more often and through which they could share their experiences in beginning professional careers and in learning to work effectively in predominantly male departments," she said. Lane emphasized that the AWF is not a political movement but an organization responding to changes on campus. She said she hopes AWF members and all other women faculty members .will take an active part in advising women undergradute and graduate students who are now beginning to seek new career and job possibilities. "I feel that the female faculty will continue to be sought out more and more as increasing numbers of women students continue to enroll at UNC." The purpose of the AWF, as stated in the constitution, is "to create and maintain a hospitable environment for See WOMEN on page 2 'iW- c,. V 4 " j I nllilMUKJl. ITIIYI I l ."( v ' s:VV::1 ' " " 'V&y $ ro tests start 1v Israeli PairlisiinriKBimil y(Bg ft a. J X 1 vX 5 - x 1 J z Alpha Phi Omega's ubiquitous balloons float on . . .sales to benefit Campus Chest JERUSALEM (AP) The Israeli Parliament overwhelmingly approved a historic peace treaty with Egypt early today, ending a state of war that had existed since Israel's birth three decades ago. Before the vote, Saudi Arabian and Iraqi newspapers called for all-out war against Israel, and thousands of Palestinians in Abu Dhabi demonstrated against the treaty. The vote in the 120-member Knesset came just after 4 a.m., following more than 28 hours of debate that started Tuesday. When the call was made for a vote on approval of the treaty, tliere was a show of handP to indicate overwhelming approval. Parliament clerks then counted the hands for an exact total. They came up with 95-18. with seven members either present and not voting or abstaining. During the debate. Prime Minister Menachem Begin again asked Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to join him in signing the accord in Cairo and Jerusalem. The Saudi Arabian and Iraqi press, which reflect government thinking lashed out at the Egyptian-Israeli treaty and called for war against Israel to regain Jerusalem and occupied Arab lands. In Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates, several thousand Palestinains held a tumultuous rally, chanting slogans against Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and carrying banners condemning the treaty. It was the largest rally ever in this oil-rich sheikdom. "Jerusalem is calling us. Only fighting will bring it back, not speeches, not talks' said Sheik Abdul Aziz Bin Mobarek. In Jerusalem, outside the Knesset, angry members of the ultranationalist Gush Emunim Bloc of the Faithful gathered at the gates to protest the treaty. They were not allowed in. They also set up a prefabricated building at an unauthorized settlement in the occupied Sinai Peninsula. Jewish settlers in the Sinai town of Yamit closed the- town gates for two hours to protest the treaty which will evict them in three years. The outbursts followed Begin's statement on Tuesday that Israel never would withdraw to its pre-1967 borders or tillow establishment of a Palestinian state. Oil-rich Saudi Arabia leads the pro Western moderate front in the Middle East and the Saudis have pumped healthy amounts of financial aid into the impoverished Egyptian economy. Iraq has been traditionally hawkish against. Israel. Zbigniew Brzezinski, U.S. national security adviser, recently returned from a visit to Saudi Arabia where he tried '. without success to persuade leaders to support the Egypt-Israeli accord. A front-page editorial in AUezira a daily Saudi newspaperwith a circulation of 5,000, said Palestinians should fight "until they turn the occupied lands into a blazing inferno for the enemy. "We should convert all our resources into, rifles, guns, tanks and fighter aircraft and turn every able-bodied man into a good soldier or commando willing to die for this cause," the editorial said. Another Saudi paper, Al Riyadh, circulation 10,000, wondered why ."anybody should want to sign a treaty with Israel after what Begin said. "With the West Bank and Gaza gone and with the exclusion of Jerusalem and the denial of Palestinian rights, why . bother to go to Washington, Tel Aviv and Cairo to sign anything? the paper asked. See MIDEAST on page 2 More than 1,000 petition Moard OKs study for environmental studies on park tng ecstQ By ME LAN IE SILL Staff Writer More than L000 students have signed a petition asking for a curriculum in environmental energy studies to be "established Within the College of Arts and Sciences. Senior Miriam Eaves presented the petition to Arts and Sciences Dean Samuel R. Williamson Tuesday. "We feel this area is relevant and highly applicable to the needs and interests of the student body," the petition states. It was signed by 1,050 students. "Assuming the University is responsive to the student body, we request careful consideration of the proposed curriculum and resolution of the matter." Eaves, an interdisciplinary environmental energy studies major, led and coordinated the effort to collect signatures lor the petition. "I think the petition demonstrated to him (Williamson) that this is an area which is lacking and which needs to be improved," Eaves said. The petition cites steadily increasing enrollment in Political Science 173 (Population, Environment and Politics) as proof of rising student interest in environmental energy studies. It also suggests expansion of course offerings and tenured faculty positions as means of implementing curriculum change and development. Eaves said efforts to collect signatures, which have been under way since January, were minimal. , "We really haven't launched a full-scale campaign to get signatures." Eaves said. "I think the number of signatures we got with the small effort put out is See PETITION on page 4 III, IIII Miriam Eaves By ANNE-MARIE DOWNEY Staff Writer The proposal for downtown parking decks cleared a significant hurdle Tuesday night when" the Chapel Hill Transportation Board unanimously approved the town staffs parking recommendations with only slight modifications. The plan was also presented to the Planning Board Tuesday but no action was taken, Both board's recommendations and those of the staff will be submitted to the Board of Aldermen on March 26. The staff plan calls for construction of two parking decks in the central business district. A three-level deck that could be expanded to five levels would be built on Municipal Lot No. 1 behind the Franklin Street Post Office. The staff also proposes building a surface lot in the West Rosemary Street area that eventually would be used for decking. Although the Transportation Board' did accept the basic proposal for the decks, its approval of the staff plan was See PARKING on page 4 XX VVx I,,, , -w: -i i lD 0 (kmiblte 0 mmm mm mmm M L 1 BOUT 5 PERCENT OF ALL STUDENTS entering Carolina for the first time this falL will flunk out because they have not earned a 1.5 grade-point average after two semesters. Many move away from Chapel Hill unnoticed, becoming part of a statistic that is seldom mentioned. Few realize students who flunk out are a large part of the 50 percent of the student body that fails to graduate in the traditional four years. "When 1 flunked out of school, I thought, 'What a stigma, ' Stevie says. "1 thought it would follow me the rest of my life. I can just now talk about it after three years. Stevie was ineligible to return to UNC after her freshman year. She worked for nine months as a janitor until she returned to summer school. There she became eligible to return in the fall. She is now a senior at UNC and maintains a 3.0 grade average. UNC students are required to maintain a grade-point average of 1.75 after four semesters. An overall average of 2.0 is required for graduation. Ineligible students may return to UNC when they have completed enough courses in summer school or by correspondence to raise their grade average to the minimum level. Although the grade requirements are clear-cut, the individual students and their situations vary greatly. A study conducted by the University for the Civil Rights Office of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare and published in February does predict, in very general terms, who is less likely to graduate. The study shows that 79.7 percent of the black men who dropped out of UNC in the fall of 1977 did so because of academic failure. Of the 65 black women who left UNC the same year, 42 were academically ineligible to continue. Of the 535 white females who didn't return, academic failure was the reason for about 20 percent of them. Thirty-one percent of the 686 white male dropouts in the fall of 1977 flunked out. University administrators find that the higher the student's Scholastic Aptitude Test score, the greater the chance that student will graduate. About 59 percent of the students with SAT scores lower than 1,000 will graduate, while 72 percent of those with scores of 1 ,400 or higher will graduate within five years. "UNC has a low rate of retention compared to small prestigious low-enrollment colleges,' says Timothy R. Sanford, assistant director of institutional research which conducted the study. "Compared to the non-competitive state colleges, the retention rate is astronomical. But sex, race or SAT scores cannot predict many of the individual problems that arise and cause a student to flunk out Ism tl 8 FJ1 c TheTrr based on I 7 vIf decide to aft" the fP53" School Offi ?lxSibiHtv is or 2nd Sum Xf t Mission rw?n, h e of !.' J e neraW I ! ver, on. a course . ' Yu trill u y y jteni sh I . bie- yo"4re v "Often problems arise due to a combination of m f " a t . A. 1 A personality and style ot dealing wnn siress, ays ui. Myron B. Liptzin head of the mental health division of the Student Health Service. About 8 percent of the student body visits the mental health clinic each year, and Liptzin says most of these visits concern academic failure. He says many college students parents are going through a mid-life crisis that may involve changes like divorce and change of occupation or location. This can create problems for the student who needs stability at home. Lintzin savs. See FLUNKING on page 4 i f , z: f