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Chillanova
Mostly sunny today with
high around 60, low around
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Mf 111 1 II
Term paper help
Do you have the term paper
blues? The Undergraduate
Library can help. See story
on page 3.
Copyright The Daily Tat Heel 1992
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Volume 90, Issue
Monday, March 22, 1982
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1163
I
New report
scrutinizes
FSAC plan
By CHIP WILSON
Staff Writer
Citing incompleteness in an earlier
report on food service improvements,
Student Government released a proposal
Friday for the financing of the renova
tions of Chase Cafeteria and Lenior Hall.
The study, written by Student Body
President Mike Vandenbergh, executive
assistant Donald Beeson and food service
committee chairman Kevin Monroe, sug
gested only limited renovations of Chase
and opposed the transfer of the Fast
Break snack bar from the Carolina Union
to Lenior Hall. The report was a response
to suggestions issued last week by the
University Food Service Advisory Com
mittee. "At that committee meeting they an
nounced their ideas, but said the details
would be worked out later," Beeson said.
"That wasn't enough."
The primary points of disagreement
between Student Government and the
FSAC concern:
Lenior Hall renovations. Student
Government agreed with the FSAC plan
to convert the first floor of Lenior Hall
into cafeteria space, but opposed moving
Fast Break from the Carolina Union to
Lenior's basement, which now houses the
Pine Room.
"Since the Fast Break ,is the only
(ARA) unit that is making a profit, we
question the transfer," Beeson said.
"The Fast Break brings students to the
Union and the Union brings students to
the Fast Break."
Chase Cafeteria renovations. The
FSAC proposed that Chase operate on a
full, three-meal basis. Student Govern
ment contended Chase should only serve
supper, because of low business during
the breakfast and lunch periods.
Therefore, Student Government refuted
the need for more kitchen renovations.
Financing of the proposed renovations.
The FSAC recommended a per-student
fee increase of. about $12. Since the Stu
dent Government proposal would require
less remodeling, that fee would only be
$6.
See FOOD on page 3
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Tar Heels
to invade
DTHJeff Neuville
A Carolina fan celebrates UNC's victory Sunday afternoon
.about 1,000 people and refreshments spilled onto Franklin St.
Enthusiastic Tar Heels
'taking it to the streets '
Peter KrogtVYackety Yack
Villanova's John Pinone tries to block a basketball by Mike Jordan
...the UNC freshmen scored 15 points
By JOHN CONWAY
Staff Writer
If the victory celebration following
the East regional basketball finals Sun
day on Franklin Street is any indication
of the scene to follow the national
championship, one thing is certain:
pandemonium may reign in Chapel Hill
next week.
Only minutes after the conclusion of
the UNC-Villanova game, people
gathered in front of NCNB Plaza and a
crowd of about 1,000 eventually lined
both sides of Franklin Street. The
crowd shouted cries of "We're number
one" and "New Orleans" in celebration
of the victory.
"We're here to rally," said UNC stu
dent Larry Smith. "The Tar Heels are
on Bourbon Street and they are going to
; rally and we're going tor support them
all the way to the championship."
The crowd cheered as cars traveled up
See FRANKLIN on page 6
Superdome
By CLIFTON BARNES
Staff Writer
"I've never been to the Final Four
twice in a row."
Well, Jimmy Black, few people have
gone to the NCAA basketball finals at
all. And it's been eight years since a
team has made it to the finals two years
in a row.
But the North Carolina Tar Heels will
be going for a second straight time as
they defeated Villanova 70-60 in Raleigh
Sunday for the Eastern Regional cham
pionship. v
The Tar Heels finished second in the
country to Indiana last year.
"Last season our goal was to get to
the Final Four," said Matt Doherty,
who scored 13 points. "This year we
pushed it forward to win the national
championship.
"We have experience there; I don't
think we'll be rattled by media atten
tion," he said.
"If we go out and play hard, we'll
win it," said Black, who scored 11 and
dished out 10 assists. "We feel like
we're the No. 1 team but we have to
show it. Everyone wants to beat the No.
1 team."
The Houston Cougars, a 99-92 winner
over Boston College, will try to knock
off the No. 1 Tar Heels Saturday night
in New Orleans. The winner takes on
the Louisville-Georgetown winner for
the national championship a week from
today.
The Tar Heels showed off their No. 1
form to a tough Villanova team.
Despite shooting only 42 percent
from the floor in the first half, the Tar
Heels held a 28-22 halftime lead a
lead they got at 6-4 and kept through
out. ' ' I was disappointed in our shot selec
tion in the first half," said UNC coach
Dean Smith, who will be making his
seventh visit to the Final Four. "We
weren't shooting the shots, we wanted;
we were shooting the shots they were
giving us."
See BASKETBALL on page 6
Rep . Andrews fo resees
student aid increase
Consent decree causes conflicts
By MARK STINNEFORD
Staff Writer
Despite proposed federal budget cuts
in education, student financial aid will be
maintained not only at current levels but
may even be increased slightly in the next
fiscal year, Rep. Ike Andrews, D-N.C,
told a small group of students and ad
ministrators in Gerrard Hall Saturday.
"It may be that I'm a damn poor prog
nosticator," Andrews said. "But I don't
think so."
"My prediction is that in the terms of
the totality of student assistance, there
will be no decrease in funds for fiscal year
83. In fact, I actually think there will be
some increase.
"Some programs may be cut," he add
ed. "But I think you'll find others in
creased by as much or more."
Andrews, who serves North Carolina's
4th congressional district, said budget
cuts proposed by President Ronald
Reagan's administration had created
"what might be termed a reason for
fear." He warned students not to react to
that fear by "shrinking from it or sur
rendering to it."
Because the economy is in bad shape,
an increase in productivity is the
"ultimate solution" to the problem, An
drews said.
"Not only must we sustain a quality of
education at the maximum obtainable
level for young people for their own sake,
but even beyond that, to meet the necessi
ty for enhancement of productivity," he
said.
Andrews, who serves on the House
Post-Secondary Education Committee
and its parent committee, the House
Education and Labor Committee, declin
ed to describe specific financial aid pro
posals and figures.
"Our recommendation from the sub
committee and the full committee as to
each and every program is for an in
crease,'
The
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Graduate
and Professional
Ike Andrews ,
Students Federation presented Andrews
with a petition bearing more than 2,000
signatures protesting the administration's
proposed elimination of Guaranteed Stu
dent Loans for graduate and professional
students.
, The petition called for a tightening of
the GSL program. It also recommended
enforcement of more stringent collection
procedures, continuation of the $30,000
income limit for participants, establish
ment of a minimum grade point average
See RALLV on page 3
By LISA PULLEN
Staff Writer ,
Students at two UNC system universities are angry over the
effects implementation of the corisent decree has had on their
schools' publications.
Winston-Salem State University students recently have charg
ed that their newly-issued undergraduate bulletin is misrepresen
tative of the black tradition of the school. Similar charges have
been rnade by students at North Carolina Central .University
students concerning its summer school catalogue.
Although WSSU has an 85 percent black enrollment, almost
half the photographs in the 1981-82 bulletin include white
students. The bulletin contains course descriptions and general
information about WSSU.
"Students feel it is not truly representative of our school."
said WSSU Student Body President Michael Sutton. "We don't
want to lose our black identity."
At predominantly black NCCU, summer school catalogue
editor Thomas Scheft said students were upset over the "im-.
aginary situation" the catalogue portrayed.
Of the 18 pictures showing at least two students, 10 of them
included white students,. Scheft said. NCCU is 87 percent black.
The changes in the publications are a result of the consent
decree signed by the UNC system and the. federal government
last July. The decree stipulates that certain publications of the
16-member UNC system portray the system's policies of racial
non-discrimination. Publications must also be distributed to
high schools throughout the state.
In order to ensure that consent decree requirements are met,
specific publications are reviewed by the UNC General Ad
rninistration before they are printed.
But in implementing the requirements of the consent decree,
WSSU's bulletin was made "deceptive," said Marilyn
Roseboro, director of public relations at WSSU. A prospective
student would have no way of knowing" that WSSU, was a
predominantly black institution after reading the bulletin, she
said.
When the bulletin was initally presented . to General Ad
ministration officials, it was rejected because it lacked pictures
depicting integrated situations, Roseboro said.
General Administration officials recommended that 22 of the
50 photographs in the bulletin be changed to include white
students, she said.
Administration officials pointed out specific illustrations as
unacceptable in NCCU's catalogue, Scheft said. One picture
was rejected because a black female student's hairstyle was
labelled a "stereotype," he added.
William C. Friday, president of the 16-campus UNC system
said that the publications reflected the administration's attempt
to "carry out the letter and the spirit of the consent decree."
The chancellors of both WSSU and NCCU were aware of
regulations posed by the decree and beyond that were free to
publish whatever they wanted, he said.
Students at WSSU became increasingly vocal when bulletins
were issued several weeks ago, Roseboro said. There had been
See BULLETINS on page 4
Creative writim
ram rowm
First of four pans
By LISBETH LEVINE
Staff Writer
When Max Steele came to Chapel Hill
in 1966 to start a creative writing pro
gram, UNC offered two courses. Since
then the program has steadily grown and
improved and it now offers 11 or 12
courses each semester and enrolls over
200 students. It may be the largest under
graduate program in the country.
Several factors contribute to the pro
gram's popularity and quality. "Creative
writing attracts people," said Daphne
Athas, a lecturer in the program since
1967. "It has a star quality about it."
English professor Doris Betts feels the
size of the program helps to make it so ef
fective. "If you only have one good
name, students tend to follow the
teacher's style. Here, you'll probably get
the same teacher only once. Students can
take what they can use from each
teacher," Betts said.
Max Steele, director of the creative
writing program, considers the program's
strong point to be the rapport between
the 'teachers and students. "The creative
writing program' is the home base for so
many students. I can tell it's a good class
if I see them together outside of the class
room," he said.
Steele makes sure creative writing
teachers won't lower their standards by
having them teach one literature course a
year. "Otherwise, you develop a tin ear
for student miiuscripts," Steele said.
James Seay, a poetry lecturer, feels
talented students make the difference in
the program. "I'm still being impressed
by good students," Seay said. He pointed
Having an outlet for student work is
one factor that English Department
Chairman Joseph Flora considered im
portant for. a solid writing program.
"Students need a chance to share their'
work with others," he said. He cited The
Cellar Door and The Carolina Quarterly
as two such outlets. !
"The purpose of a liberal arts educa
tion is to know yourself," Steele said.
"Writing students find that writing is a
method of discovery. They're richer,
creative writin
out that UNC undergraduates have been
chosen over graduate students at N.C.
State University and UNC-Greensboro
for three consecutive years in the
Academy of American Poets competi
tion. A frequent judge of poetry competi
tions around the country, Seay has seen
quite a bit of student poetry. "Our ad
vanced and honors students are superior
to others around the country," he said.
more reflective people. They're the
healthiest students around, because they
have a healthy interest in themselves and
others," he said.
It is a natural assumption for many
that the teachers themselves determine
the quality of the program.
"I feel that I've gotten an unusually
gifted group of teachers," said Jenny
Doelling, a senior psychology major who
has taken several writing courses. "They
taught the basics but also encouraged
creativity and experimentation," she
said.
Doris Betts said the atmosphere among
the faculty was distinctive. "There are no
cliques or professional competitiveness,
or ranking teachers against one another. .
It's nice not to feel guilty if you're pub
lished and someone else isn't," she said.
Athas is troubled by the influence of
television on society. "Television is
. blasting you with stereotypes. There's no
assumption of mystery about a person.
People think they know other people in
stead of viewing them as a potential uni
verse of wonder," she said.
Seay noted the changes, saying enroll
ment has decreased in poetry courses in
the last two decades. "In the 60s and 70s
more people were in poetry de riguer. It
was a socio-politico thing. Now, it's more
aesthetic," Seay said.. "I used to get psy
chedelic poetry that was just an in
coherent jumble of words."
See CREATIVE on page 4
News Briefs
Earthquake hits Japanese island
TOKYO (AP) A major earthquake hit Japan's northernmost island of Hok
kaido on Sunday, injuring 99 people, destroying homes and triggering landslides in
coastal fishing villages, police said. Authorities said no deaths were reported.
The Central Meteorological Agency said the quake the strongest to hit Japan in
nearly a decade had a magnitude of 7.3 on the Richter scale of ground motion,
with a series of aftershocks. An earthquake measuring 8.3 killed about 200,000 peo
ple in Yokohama and Tokyo in September 1923.
Israelis, Palestinians clash
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) Israeli troops clashed with Palestinian demonstrators
in the occupied West Bank on Sunday for the third straight day and seven Arabs
were wounded by gunfire, Israel Radio said.
Three Israeli soldiers were injured by rock-throwing demonstrators and two
tourists were hurt when their bus was stoned in Bethlehem, the military said. The
nationalities of the tourists were not immediately known.
The opposition, the Labor Party, announced it would submit a no-confidence
motion in Parliament Tuesday because of the government's handling of the Palesti
nian unrest.
French elections set hack Socialists
PARIS (AP) The Socialist government of President Francois Mitterrand suf
fered another setback Sunday when leftist candidates failed to wrest control of a
majority of provincial councils from conservative forces in' regional elections.
The elections were run-off races for 1 ,063 of 2,029 seats in 95 provincial councils,
which will become powerful political bodies under Mitterrand's decentralization
program.
With 991 of the 1,063 districts counted, the leftist parties in Mitterrand's coali
tion took 50.39 percent of the vote against 48.03 percent for conservative forces.
But the left's gains did not offset the built-in advantage for the right.