' v.::.. r ' T t i I I 1 Weather Clear and cold today, high in the upper 30s. Fair tonight, low around 20. Fair Wednes day, high near 40. 1 y ftmriniim ji Copyrighl 1984 The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Off the Air Due to Monday's adverse weather conditions, Student Television's "Late Night" show, originally scheduled to air on Wednesday, had been postponed until Mon day, February 13 at 11:00 p.m. Volume 91, Issue 127 Tuesday, February 7, 1984 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessJAdvartising 962-1163 Five inches of snow fall in Chapel Hill By SHARON SHERIDAN Staff Writer Big, wet, fluffy snowflakes the type that cling to tree branches and are ideal for fashioning snowballs and snowpopulations descended on Chapel Hill Monday morning. Some UNC students used umbrellas to keep their hair snow-free, while others entered classrooms with a white, melting outer layer. The air was punctuated with the cries of the startled and the wounded, as snowball fights were waged across campus. Senior Brant Burgiss went cross country skiing near Silent Sam. But by mid-afternoon the sun was out, and melting snow was plopping down on to almost snow-less sidewalks. Much of the winter's first snowfall had melted into slushy puddles. Snow fell for about six hours in the Triangle area, dumping 5 inches on Orange County, said Wayne Jones, a specialist with the National Weather Ser vice'. Nearby counties also got their share of snow with Person getting 5lA inches, Granville receiving 5 inches and Durham, Chatham and Vance counties getting 3 to 4 inches. Jones said Raleigh-Durham Air port reported the largest accumulation in the area 6.9 inches. Some neighboring states also got snow, Jones said. Bluefield, W. Va., and Rich mond, Va., both got 2 inches, Atlanta got 1 or 2 inches of snow Monday morn ing and parts of South Carolina had snow, Jones said. "It snowed quite a bit over in Ten nessee last night," he said. "But I believe that we had the distinction of getting the most of this particular storm." Jones said the storm was caused by a "little low pressure system that developed in the Georgia and South Carolina area and moved south of our immediate area." He said, "There was ample moisture in the area and cold air, and so it just snowed." Jones predicted "temperatures would fall quickly to about 15 degrees by this morning and said there would be fair skies and temperatures up to the mid-30s today. There was a traveler's advisory through Monday night because the night's cold temperatures were expected to freeze the melted snow, he said. See SNOW on page 5 , V,'- mm j v "4 mmm Mgriu--.ii H ffli ' ilt WfBM 111 illMlW ''' " ' " ' ' ' ' J 'Up f A 3- ill mm a" w 1 -----'i-ii-if j- iiiijm .if 1$ 'rv f 1.1.1 ..ii 7, -Mfe jtf ' 5.-f , v 'Ka Jys j J - V'x " r yrZ il tt ' ' ? V lwilila..i.u..,.,i, i ' I "" I '"IMn"lfM.MHiiiiniii muH,,!,.. i -.-.v. , v 5 I f DTHCharles Ledford The Pit, as seen from the top floor of the new Davis library, was carpeted in white during the first snow of the winter. 5 inches were recorded in the area. Mo 0 ' . The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon Anti-government Moslem militiamen seized most of west Beirut in furious street battles with the Lebanese army Monday and demanded the resignation of Christian President Amin Gemayel. As night fell, a gunship and two warplanes of the U.S. 6th Fleet turned their firepower on rebels who rocketed the U.S. Marine base at the international airport on Beirut's southern edge, a Marine spokes man reported. One Marine was wounded and a French soldier was killed in the new explosion of fighting, which plunged the American-backed Gemayel administra tion into its worst crisis since it took office 16 months ago. Two other Frenchmen and eight Italian soldiers in the Beirut multinational peacekeeping force were also reported wounded. Police said at least 90 people were killed and 300 wounded in Monday's fighting, pushing the overall toll to about 160 dead since the latest round of Lebanon's intermittent civil war broke but last Thursday. Hooded Shiite Moslem irregulars and their Druse allies drove Lebanese army units from most of their checkpoints on Moslem west Beirut's main commer cial thoroughfares and residential neighborhoods. At sundown, an eerie haze of smoke and cordite shrouded the city of one million people. Thunderous blasts of artillery, rocket-propelled grenades, Katyusha rockets and mortars echoed among the high-rise buildings. The shellfire, falling on major crossing points between east and west Beirut, drew a crescent-shaped belt of flame through the city's heart. The fierceness of the fighting was reminiscent of the 1975-76 civil war. For the first time Shiite Moslem leader Nabih Berri called on Gemayel,- a Maronite Christian, to resign. ."The battle is about to end, Lebanon's little shah (Gemayel) is on the verge of collapse!" Berri, leader of the Shiite movement Amal, declared in a radio broadcast. Gemayel's Sunni Moslem prime minister, Shafik Wazzah had resigned - with his : eight : Cabinet members Sunday to clear the way for a national coalition Cabinet to try to end the conflict, which pits the army and the Christian right-wing Phalangist militia on one side against Syrian-supported Druse and Shiite fighters on the other. In the United States, President Reagan issued a statement Monday deploring "the actions of those who would destroy the legitimate government of Lebanon" and blaming the Syrian government for the attacks. White House spokesman Larry Speakes said the Reagan administration hoped Gemayel "will quickly be able to form a responsible, broadly representative government." Special Middle East envoy Donald Rumsfeld and other U.S. officials held urgent talks with Gemayel at the presidential palace in suburban Baabda, Lebanese state radio said. Secretary of State George P. Shultz, in Brazil, said the administration would be reviewing its Lebanon policy in the light of "what emerges." 4 Walid Jumblatt, leader of the Druse Progressive Socialist Party, said in a statement issued in Damascus, Syria, that any political settlement with Gemayel's government was '.'impossible" and the president's resignation was necessary to solve the country's crisis. Both Jumblatt and Berri accused the 42-year-old president of helping the Phalange Party of his father, Pierre Gemayel, to dominate the army and the government. , At the root of Lebanon's unending conflict is the demand by the Shiites, Druse and other non Christian communities comprising the majority of the population for a greater role in running the country. Gemayel said Sunday he was inviting the warring Moslem and Christian factions to new reconciliation talks Feb. 27 in Geneva, Switzerland. He promised sweeping reforms to give Moslems a greater say in government, and suggested he was willing to scrap Lebanon's eight-month-old troop withdrawal pact with Israel, as demanded by his opponents and their Syrian backers. The Sixth, Fleet flotilla stationed off Beirut went into action about 7 p.m. Monday, after the Marine base at Beirut airport came under rocket fire. Marine spokesman Maj. Dennis Brooks said two A-6 In truder fighters from the aircraft carrier Kennedy and the guns of the U.S. frigate Garcia pounded insur gent artillery apparently Druse positions in the hills east of the airport. Pentagon officials said it was the first U.S. air strike here in two months, since 28 planes of the Sixth Fleet attacked what were described as Syrian anti aircraft positions Dec. 4. Two planes were shot down : thorand a pilm kined- r -:-r.r - Brooks denied a local radio report that the bat tleship New Jersey had fired its guns Monday. The major said no Marines were injured in the rocket fire, but one was wounded in an earlier small arms attack and was evacuated for treatment aboard the amphibious ship Guam. " The Marine spokesman denied an earlier report that two other Marines guarding the U.S. and British embassies in west Beirut had been wounded. Forums begin; candidates move into last week of campaigning By KATE COOPER and JIMZOOK Staff Writers Candidates for the 1984 campus elec tions kicked off a week-long series of forums at Spencer dorm and Granville Towers Sunday night and Ehringhaus Monday night. Candidates for student body president, Daily Tar Heel editor, Residence Hall Association president, Carolina Athletic Association president and Senior Class President and Vice-president spoke before fewer than 40 people at the Spencer and Ehringhaus forums and about 80 people at Granville Towers. The RHA-sponsored forum and the Craige Residence College forum, which were both scheduled for Monday, were cancelled. Student body presidential candidates Mark Dalton, James Exum, Susan Gad dy, Greg Hecht, Chip Medlin, Paul Parker and Frank Winstead all said they wanted to increase student participation and input in student government. James Exum said student government as it is now does not work. "We are reac tive rather than active," he said. If elected, Exym said he would take the 1 1 committees in student government and reorganize them into three areas: govern mental relations, student affairs, and faculty and administration. Gaddy said her past experience with student government would help her be an effective student body president. Dalton said his experience as RHA president would help him improve com munication with the administration. "One majdf Issue will be a new phone system," he said. Dalton said he would look to make sure students had the choice between pay ing a fixed rate or measured rate for telephone calls. In a related incident, student body presidential candidate Mark Dalton said Monday that his name would not appear on the ballot. Byrd announces candidacy f or C A A presidency By JIMZOOK Staff Writer Jeff Byrd, a junior business administra tion major from Smithfield, announced Monday his candidacy for president of the Carolina Athletic Association. The main issue he will address if elected, Byrd said, was the "lack of stu dent and community interest in homecoming and non-revenue sports. "I would like to emphasize a more unified homecoming," he said. "What I mean by that is I want to try to incor porate more student organizations and more community support for homecom ing." ' ' Byrd said he hoped to accomplish that task by involving area businesses in the homecoming proceedings. He proposed a small advertising pamphlet of coupons for area businesses which would include a. schedule of all activities during home coming week. ... It would also carry pictures of each or the candidates for homecoming queen so that students could know what those nominees looked like before the day of the game, Byrd said. Another area Byrd said he wanted to improve upon was the intramural pro- gram, v ; . . ... . "I'd like to try and upgrade the quality of the referees in the intramural sports program," Byrd said. He said he wanted to do this by scheduling regular meetings with the referees and the professional staff of the IM department and the Sports Club Council. Byrd also wants to bring increased publicity to IM activities and the Sports Club Council through The Daily Tar Heel. Concerning ticket distribution, Byrd said he liked the current policy for foot ball distribution, and he hoped to work out a suitable policy for the basketball gam3 in the new Student Activities Center. "I will work with the Rams Club and Coach Smith for an acceptable seating ar rangement for student fans in the new "My petitions weren't turned in," Dalton said. "The day (Saturday) the petitions were due, I received news that one of my campaign workers, a person in a very important position, couldn't find time to continue collecting signatures." Dalton will still run as a write-in can didate. Hecht said he would use student government funds to publish a flier to in form students about student government. "I think the student body, president should set real high goals only if they have realistic means," he said. Medlin said students were asking, "What does student government do for me?" "There is too much apathy," he said, "we need to start bringing issues to the students." Medlin said he would accomplish this by going directly to dorms, apartments, and fraternities and sororities and talk with them about student government and what it is doing. He urged students to vote, whether they voted for him or not. Parker said there were three main, issues in the campaign: student employ ment, student store prices and a new phone system. "I'm not just telling you what the pro blems are but putting solutions with them," he said. Parker said he would like to create a system to coordinate temporary jobs for students, check out the various alter- 1 iyr - I tk JUL ctloms natives before making a decision on a new phone system, and work for lower prices in the Student Stores for merchan dise and textbooks. Frank Winstead, who is running for four offices, said he would draw more people into student government if elected. All the candidates came out in favor of the proposed student fee increase, except Winstead, who said it was not needed. A lighter side of the Ehringhaus forum was Dalton' s response to a Winstead comment during the segment for SBP candidates. ( "My campaign briefing book seems to have disappeared," Winstead said. Jok ingly, Dalton responded by saying, "I have it. I couldn't read it, it makes no sense." DTH editorial candidates John Con way, Jeff Hiday and Christine Manuel discussed improvements they would like to make in the paper. "I am very much committed to more sports coverage," Conway said. If j Elections Board rejects complaint against DTH' Jeff Byrd Student Activities Center," he said. Byrd said he felt his experience in various athletic positions, made him a qualified candidate. . He is a member of the Volleyball Club and the Water Skiing Club, and he has been an IM referee. Byrd is also on the executive board of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. By MARK STINNEFORD Staff Writer The Elections Board Monday night re jected a complaint that The Daily Tar Heel, was not providing adequate coverage to Frank Winstead 's candidacy for four campuswide offices. Winstead, a junior from Rocky Mount, is running for Student Body President, Residence Hall Association president, Carolina Athletic Association president and Daily Tar Heel editor. Winstead is seeking four separate stories in the DTH announcing his can didacies. DTH Editor Kerry DeRochi said the newspaper would run a single front-page story on the Winstead an nouncements. "I've done the work for four cam paigns; I have got four distinct platforms," Winstead said. "I say I'm running for four offices. I think I should be treated as a candidate in each race." DeRochi said giving Winstead four separate stories would provide him with an unfair advantage over other can didates. "That's putting his name and face in a very prominent place of publication four days in a row," DeRochi said. "That's a luxury not granted to other students. Winstead noted that he was required to submit four separate petitions to run for the offices. In elections forums, he is also treated as a candidate in each race, he said. t "For each candidacy, I have had to meet Election Board requirements," Winstead said. "The DTH is the only one (organization) that is not treating me fair ly." On Saturday, Winstead.submitted four letters, one for each office he is seeking, asking Elections Board Chairman Andy Sutherland to mediate the dispute. Sutherland proposed Monday that the DTH run an extended story covering Winstead's announcements for the four offices. DeRochi accepted the compromise, but Winstead rejected it, appealing to the full elected, he said he would guarantee a full page of sports coverage every Monday and more equitable treatment of all sports. Conway said he would like to see the editorial page better researched. "I think that in some respects The Daily Tar Heel has been irresponsible in regard to the back page," Conway said. He also said he would work to renegotiate the paper's printing contract to cut expenses. If elected, Hiday said he would like to create a business and elections desk and increase sports coverage. "The purpose of the business desk is to bring the student and business world closer together," he said. Hiday said he would work with the Career Planning and Placement Service to inform students about companies and the types of students they want to, hire. During the 1984 elections, Hiday said he would use the elections desk "to get the student perspective on the elections." See FORUMS on page 2 ' V '" '" ' h'- i I V ) y jx : v -V y .y f Frank Winstead Elections Board. The board ruled that Winstead could receive adequate coverage in a single story outlining his platforms for each office. "I feel he (Winstead) is a single can didate seeking four different offices," Sutherland said. "Legally, we have no power to control the policy of the DTH, hut we can rule if it's fair or unfair on how See WINSTEAD on page 2