f-t jm. Wrestlers defeat Maryland in Sunday's match, 23-17. See re lated story on page 6. Start the day off with a smile. See Valentine personals on page 7. Hodge podge Freezing rain mixed with snow or sleet changing to rain before ending in the af ternoon. Highs in upper-30s. Lows in mid-20s. Lights! Cameras! Action! Academy Award hopefuls The Verdict' and 'Gandhi are reviewed today. See stories on page 5. n r MIT JP x v -r Copyright The Daily Tar Heel 1983 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume S3, Issue ysi C Monday, February 14, 1983 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSports; Arts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 M i . -x-;' . :.:' 't A "5, ft ) ; t 11 5 ' i - i r j ,4 at? 2 . , DTHAt Steel o V!!do;:to' ccnlcr center ccorcd 14 pointo end grabbed 7 rebounds in the 56-53 upset D1 7"7 7-"? ; cut c ; J. .y r.";ht, U .:c::rir. j j net to tlow Its c.-.cc-l.va-ccll: ; r '.vt. Lr.1 :r to -rcb ajlttb rrrct, a I"::!; nr" i i : C"2 cf C j I ; t cu"3 prcjrims n c;"?-? t.: ; : by kr:o:k:r.j c,i tV.: Gcr.crcl Meters of th? NC-VA. .urd-.y r.frncon, thj Hth-rarAed Vi:ir:c :? tc! J t!.:.t t!.:y v. ;r; six c 1 i.i ly c :j cf i! E-rly 1 jr i. ,i vr ' t "1 didn't want Notre Dame coming in and taking our ," Villanova center John Pinone said, ,41 said, Time out a minute.' There's no rv v vveren.t gonna get here $ The team took a bus to A::, z Oty, NJ. and nVw in from there at 12:30 Sunday rr.or;r.3. And by out-rebounding and outplaying a sluggish North Carolina squad bloat :d by 18 straight wins, the hungry Wilde-its v. rested a 56-3 upsa victory over the Tar Heels on their hrr.e court, a feat that ha$ been repeated just 17 other times in 22 Dean Smith seasons. - . . ; After seesaw scoring at the outset of the second half, . '.-".ova began to pu!l away with 10 minutes left in the - rinor.e drove in, recovered his own shot, and laid the ' h to make it 41-37. Unanswered baskets by Harold . ' .y, Gary McLain, ar.d Mike Mulquin put the Wildcats : 3 with just ovsr five minutes Isft " . Ses CATS on peg o 6 Tuesday's elections to decide Monroe-ReckshiiniSBP race, CAA, RHA, By LIZ LUCAS Assistant University Editor Because no candidate received a clear majority of votes in several of the campus elections last Tuesday, students will return to the polls tomor row to elect student body president, Carolina Athletic Association president, Residence Hall Association president, and a Campus Governing Council representative from District 16. Voting irregularities, including a discrepency of over 300 votes not registered on the poll tender's sheet at Morrison residence hall, led to a new elec tion of student body president. Jon Reckford, who came in only 101 votes behind second place student body presidential candidate Hugh Reckshun, challenged the Elections Board after the vote count Tuesday. After challenging the Elections Board, Reckford dropped out of the election, leaving Reckshun, who received 30.68 percent of the vote, and Kevin Monroe, who received 40.38 percent of the vote, to compete in the re-vote, to be Jield along with the run-offs Tuesday. . Reckshun said that he had not used the addi tional time for campaigning. "I've frequented a few night spots downtown, but I haven't really done any more campaigning," Reckshun said, ad ding that even without Reckford in the race the election will still be close. The close race for student body president was not surprising, Reckshun said. "Students are final ly waking up to Student Government and realizing something is going on up there," he said. "Whoever gets elected will have to. do things dif ferent now that there is some student awareness," he said! Monroe could not be reached for comment Saturday and Sunday. In the RHA presidential race, Mark Dalton and Henry Miles will be competing in Tuesday's run off. Both candidates agreed that this extra week of campaigning before the run-off has been helpful. See RUN-OFF on page 6 I "'- 1 f.'cnrce ' r " Dalicn Baxter D rank dri vin arrests increase in "Chabel Hill. By BOB KQMPLETON Staff Writer Arrests for driving under thie influence between November 1982 and January 1983 increased by 77 percent from the same time period last year, according to statistics released last week by the Chapel Hill Police Department. The department was aiming for a 10 percent increase in DUI arrests when its drunk driving enforcement program went into effect last November, said Gregg Jarvies, master officer at the Chapel Hill Police Department. The town received a $66,000 federal grant for a one-year pro gram to increase the enforcement of DUI laws and to increase public awareness of drunk driving dangers. The grant accounts for 70 percent of the program's cost, with local funds paying the remainder of the bill. One phase of the program places four to six officers on local roads to look specifically for drunk drivers on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights. The intensified patrol is an addition to the eight-to-12 officers normally on duty. Police said they hope that increased enforcement and visibili ty of police patrols would deter people from drunk driving. "I think they are more aware that officers are going to be out there," Jarvies said. A state study estimated that on any given night one out of 10 drivers on N.C. roads is drunk, and that the chance of a drunk Dram shop proposals driver getting caught is one in -200. Jarvies said the chance of being caught in Chapel Hill pro bably is higher than in other parts of the state. "We hoped the odds would go down from 50:1 to 30:1," Jar vies said. ; , Besides increasing the DUI arrest rate by putting more of ficers on the road, the grant also provides for a computer pro gram to be used at the Research Triangle Institute. The com puter will assimilate data on arrests to help police locate par ticular trouble spots in town. Because of delays, the computer program is not yet in use, but Jarvies said the department has obtained good results mapping the data by hand Part of the grant is being used to increase public awareness through the public schools. Officers have given talks at high schools and junior highs, and have set up displays at public places such as University Mall. The police will have a booth at Apple Chill this spring, and will talk to freshmen about drunk driving during orientation next fall.. Although awareness about the dangers of drunk driving and more vigorous enforcement of DUI laws may heighten awareness, they will not solve the problem completely, Jarvies said. "To do that you have to change people's attitudes about drinking and driving." he said. He said that the "I'm not going to get caught" attitude is still quite prevalent, and that as long as such attitudes persist, drunk driving will be very difficult to stop. B artenders question efficiency of laws against serving drunks s By J. BONASIA Staff Writer "It's impossible for a bartender to know when someone becomes intoxi cated, " J. Ruffin Bailey, general counsel for the N.C. Beer Wholesalers. If passed, the dram shop statute of Gov. Jim Hunt's, drunken driving legisla tion would make bar owners and con venience store operators civily liable for damages caused by underage or intoxi cated persons they sell alcohol to. Enforcement of the law would hinge on the ability of bartenders to effectively determine if customers are drunk. But some bartenders have questioned their ability to determine drunkenness. That was the case last Thursday, when a UNC student with a blood alcohol con tent of 0.14 percent considered more than legally drunk in North Carolina was served alcohol in five Chapel Hill bars. Not only was he served, but not a single bartender said he recognized the student's drunken condition. "Unless people are stumbling around or slurring their words, there's no visible means of knowing that they're intoxica ted," said one bartender, who asked not to be named. "And so they get served." According to a research assistant at the UNC Center for Alcohol Studies, the stu dent, Alan Chappie, a senior from Leesburg, Va., was "substantially im paired by the alcohol he consumed" Thursday afternoon. Chappie's measured blood alcohol content exceeded the legal ly intoxicated level after he consumed 11 beers. Philip Meyer, UNC Journalism School professor, said Chappie's easy purchase of the beers was not conclusive proof that the dram shop law would be ineffective. But Meyer did say that it is "strong evi dence that the incident of bartenders catching these drunks is quite low, although we can't be sure just how low." In its present form, the bill says that " 'intoxication' means the condition of a person whose mental or physical func tioning is presently substantially impaired - as a result of the use of alcohol." Jim Drennan, associate professor of the UNC Institute of Government, said the general assembly might change the wording of the bill to read "visibly im paired" rather than "substantially im paired." Some bar and convenience store opera tors have said that the law will shif t the responsibility of drunk driving from the drivers to those who sell the alcohol. "If I owned a gun shop and I sold you a gun, and then you went home and shot your wife, would I be responsible for the murder?" asked one bar owner. 'Our 'dram shop law is sound Dublic policy," Orange County District At torney Wade Barber told a legislative hearing. "It imposes specific respon sibilities on those given the privilege to sell alcohol. "It is sound public policy to require those privileged to serve alcohol to carry insurance to cover the liabilities they may incur as a result of abuse of that privi lege," Barber said. As originally introduced to the General Assembly, ABC permit holders would be required to purchase liability insurance between $100,000 and $300,000. As part of a compromise package, a state senate judiciary committee, however, amended the law, educing the , minimum liability insurance to between $25,000 and $50,000. Under the compromise, liability would be extended to state ABC stores. The burden of proof originally fell to the de " fendant, but has been shifted to the plain tiff. The dram shop provision is not a new idea. It has been used by some 20 states in various forms. "This law is really not the house of horrors many have made it out to be," said Robert G. Byrd, professor in the UNC School of Law. "Many states have imposed a dram shop act, and in some See DRAM on page 6 Stolen speech examination halts class, angers students Reckshun Rowers By LISA PULLEN Staff Writer Last Thursday, 250 students in Speech 61 were assembled in class, preparing to take the first exam of the semester. Some were hastily flipping through notes at the last minute, others were sitting quietly, awaiting for the exam to be distributed. At 12:30 p.m., students began putting books and notes away, ready to begin work on the exam. But instead of handing out the exam, professor Robert Cox made an announcement to the class. "We have to talk," Cox, an associate professor in speech communication, said. Cox told the class that the test original had been stolen, from teaching assistant Cori Dauber's per sonal belongings in her office in Bingham Hall Wednesday afternoon. What happened next was an hour of class discussion on the honor system and what should be done about giving the exam. "At first, everyone was real calm," senior Trace Wiren said. "Everyone was just totally quiet when he was telling us." Diana Baxter, chairperson of the Graduate Stu dent Court, spoke to the class at Cox's invitation about the responsibility of students at UNC to uphold the Honor Code. Cox then handed out 250 drop cards to the class, umung me student wno naa taKen tne exam to leave the room and drop the class. No one ac cepted the offer. Cox also offered to go ahead and administer the exam, but the students in the class decided that was unfair, he said. "The conclusion was that it was really unkosher to hand out the exam because it would set a prece dent for others to steal tests," Wiren said. Cox then left it up to the class to decide what to do about taking the exam. One student suggested passing out the exam as a study guide. "The students in the class objected to that," Cox said. As discussion mounted, students became angrier and more vocal, Cox said. "It was a very tense, anguished time," he said. "They understood it in personal moral ways that they never have faced before. They no longer felt inconvenience, but injustice." The class also expressed sympathy for the teaching assistants ajid Cox. One TA had stayed up all night typing the exam, and Dauber had of fered to resign, Cox said. "It was emotional almost," Wiren said. "The reaction was not so much we are mad at that one person but that we felt sorry for Dr. Cox. See EXAM on page 4