2The Daily Tar Heel Monday. -November 19. 1984
Season's end does not mean depressed sales
By MA l ( AMPBKI.I
Staff V ritrr
Although football Saturdays bring a lot of money
into town , area merchants are not too concerned
about the end of football season. In fact, at least one
restaurant manager is looking forward to the season s
end. " . '
"Our place got trashed (Saturday) night." said Paul
Cieber. the manager of Four Corners restaurant.
Damage worth $5(K) was done to restrooms at Four
Corners by Virginia fans.
Geber also said several people walked out without
paying their tab. The Wahoos got so loud that it
was hard lor mans' customers to enjoy themselves,
he said. "We've had enough of the football season
this year." he said. "Although it's a bonus to us, the
football season is a tremendous strain."
He said out-of-towners often consider Chapel Hill
a party playground.
Many merchants are looking forward to basketball
season, which begins this week. "Basketball will do
for us basically what football did. except for a shorter
duration," Geber said.
Other business owners do not think the end of the
football season will affect them. Shelton Henderson
of the Shrunken Head Boutique said live or six
Saturdays don't make a year. He said football
Saturdays create more business, but it all evens out.
"Kenan (Stadium) is filled whether we win or lose,"
Henderson said.
Mickey F. well, who owns Spanky s. said students
spend a lot of money during home game weekends
and spend less before and after to make up for the
splurge.
Fop of the Hill manager Mike Galagher said
business would see a marked decrease in post-football
season sales. He added that cold weather would also
lower sales. "It gets too cold to go to (fraternity) court
parties, which is a major source of our business." he
said.
U.S. charged with slowing Nicaraguan health advances
By JIM TOWNSEND
Staff W riter
Nicaragua is achieving widespread
gains in medical carefor its citizens, but
the U.S.-backed guerrilla movement is
slowing that country's efforts to
improve its health care facilities, said
a recent visitor to Nicaragua.
Mark Rivo, a third-year family
practice resident at Duke University
returned from Nicaragua as one of 220
American physicians participating in
the second annual United States
Nicaragua Colloquium on Health.
Rivo called for patience and
increased understanding in America
about Central America and said recent
events are "nearing a crisis stage" and
could have far-reaching effects. Rivo
said he did not believe the Reagan
administration was giving an accurate
representation of events occurring in
Nicaragua.
"Eighty percent of what you hear
about Nicaragua comes directly from
the Reagan administration," he said. "It
is important that Americans get their
information from a number of different
sources. We must educate ourselves
about what's going on in Nicaragua. If
we do not, we are destined to have our
foreign policy dictated by a president
who has an extremely simplistic view
of the region."
Nicaragua has achieved significant
impi.'M n-.-nts in health care since the
Sandinista revolution in 1979. Rivo
said.
"Infant mortality has dropped from
an estimated 1 20 deaths per 1, 000 live
births before the revolution to 82 per
1,000 in 1983. The number of health
posts (out-patient first aid clinics) has
grown from about 56 to 200. Before
1979, the country had 37 hospitals. In
the first five years of the revolution, 17
new ones have been opened."
Rivo said a large-scale immunization
campaign has virtually eliminated a host
of diseases like polio, measles and
whooping cough. He said literacy in
Nicaragua had improved from less than
50 percent in 1979 to almost 90 percent
in 1983.
But health facilities have become the
targets of attacks by U.S.-backed anti
Sandinista Contras, with 22 rural health
clinics destroyed by the Contra forces
in 1983, Rivo said.
The U.S. boycott on trade with
Nicaragua has hampered that country's
efforts to improve its health standards,
he said.
"They have pressured U.S. compan
ies into refusing to sell supplies to
Nicaragua, and, consequently, it has
become extremely difficult to get parts
of medical machines or to order drugs
needed for patient care, supplies that
must come mainly from the U.S."
Short course turns professors into students
By KEVIN WASHINGTON
Staff Writer
University professors, asociate pro
fessors, instructors and graduate teach
ing assistants will get a chance to
improve their classroom teaching skills
today when William Bigoness, director
of the Young Executives Institute, leads
STV
a seminar on increasing student
motivation.
Bigoness, an associate professor in
the School of Business Administration,
will speak on "Enhancing Student
Classroom Motivation." The seminar
will be held in Dey Hall at 3:40 p.m.
Ed Neal, director of the Faculty
from page 1
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South Campus dormitories by the fall
of 1985, and in the commons rooms
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Walt Boyle, STV director of produc
tion, said the station's viewing audience
may expand soon if Carrboro's Alert
Cable system adds the University Access
Channel to its lineup.
"There's a real good chance that
within 90 days well be on Alert, which
we're excited as hell about," Boyle said.
"That's a lot of the student population,
and weVe been getting questions about
it. It's going to be good for the students,
for Alert and for STV."
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Demonstration unit can be viewed at Computer Department of
Student Stores Daniels Building
Development Office, said he hoped the
seminars would become part of a
continuing program to help teachers at
the University develop their skills.
He said the Bigoness seminar would
be more of a discussion than a lecture.
"Bigoness is an expert in labor relations
with management," Neal said. "He
studies motivation. He's going to take
the basic principles of motivation and
apply those to teaching. It will be a
general-input type of thing where we
get people to ask questions and kick
things around a bit.
"Motivation principles are quite
simple. How it's applied to education
is fodder for debate."
Neal said the University needed these
types of programs to help teachers who
have never had training. "Those who
are naturally inclined do well. Others
just muddle through," he said.
Many universities have faculty train
ing programs, he said. "We have a
little bit of everything," Neal said. "We
don't have the money other universities
have, however."
Neal said he planned to continue the
program in the spring with a seminar
on lecturing.
I
Campus Calendar
T
Union.
I
The Carolina Student Fund DTH
Campus Calendar will appear daily.
Announcements to be run in the
expanded version on Mondays and
Thursdays must be placed in the box
outside the Carolina Student Fund
office on the third floor of South
Building by 3 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m.
Wednesday, respectively. The dead
lines for the limited editions will be
noon one day before the announce
ment is to run. Only announcements
from University recognized and cam
pus organizations will be printed.
Monday
1 p.m. Orientation Resume Writing
Workshop in 306 Hanes.
6 p.m. Vigil for Peace in Nicaraguain
front of the Franklin St. Post
Office.
7 p.m. Womens Forum Committee,
"Women and the New World
of Work" in the Y Lounge.
Ski Club meeting in 209
Tuesday
5:30 p.m. CCF Thanksgiving Dinner,
CCF House, Glenburnie
Street. Call 942-8952 for a
ride.
7 p.m. Astronomy Club will show
the NASA Film: "Viking" in
247 Phillips.
AIESEC General meeting in
the Union.
Alpha Epsilon Delta meeting
with Dr. Proctor on Cariac
Surgery, 4th Floor Clinic
Auditorium oi NCM H.i
7:30p.m. Students for Mondale
Ferrarro, left-over funds meet
ing in 210 Union.
8 p.m. Young Democrats Executive
Meeting at the Wesley
Foundation.
Wednesday
7 p.m. CCF Bible Study at CCF
House, Glenburnie Street.
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"Enhancing Students'
Classroom Motivation
A Faculty Development Seminar
by William J. Bigoness,
Associate Professor of Business Administration
Toy Lounge in Dey Hall
Monday, November 1 9, 1 984
3:40 P.M.
Sponsored by the Faculty Development Office
All Faculty Members Welcome
India seeks extradition
from Associated Press reports
Ni:W DKLHI. India The
investigation into Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi's assassination
spawned new reports Saturday of a
wide-ranging conspiracy by
members of the Sikh minority, living
inside India and abroad.
The independent Hindustan
Times newspaper reported in its
editions yesterday that the govern
ment "is processing papers for the
extradition" from Britain of Jagjit
Sungh Chauhan, head of a move
ment by a small minority of Sikhs
to convert Punjab state into a
separate Sikh nation.
The newspaper said the govern
ment would charge Chauhan with
conspiring to "wage a war against
the state," and other offenses.
Chauhan, who lives in Reading,
England, publicly called for Gandhi's
assassination last June in reprisal for
the army attack on the Sikh's holiest
shrine, the Golden Temple.
U.S. aids Ethiopa
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopa The
United States is likely to be involved
for at least a year in an international
airlift of food to Ethiopian famine
victims, U.S. government and avi
ation officials say.
"We're going to be here for 12
months at least, because the problem
is going to be here for 12 months,"
said an official of the U.S. Agency
for International Development who
spoke on condition of anonymity.
Some Western diplomats said
nrivatplv that the fart that Fthionia
which echoes the Soviet Union
on most foreign policy issues
seems willing to accept such an
".....'Nv.'.....-.'.......x.:.va
News In Brief
American presence is a reflection of
the country's dire need.
They said the American relief
effort in Ethiopia, one of the United
States' most strident critics, could
become the biggest in Africa over
the next year.
CIA agents investigated
WASHINGTON Congres
sional investigators are planning to
interview midlevel CIA officials who
were disciplined over the spy agen
cy's Nicaraguan rebel manual but
who reportedly claim they were
made "scapegoats" to protect senior
CIA officials.
Administration and congressional
sources, who insisted on anonymity,
said last week that several of the six
CIA employees, punished in connec
tion with the manual, have refused
to accept the discipline by refusing
to sign letters being placed in their
personnel files.
The sources said those objecting
to the discipline claim they had no
role in approving the original man
ual, which counseled the CIA
backed rebels on "selective use of
violence" to "neutralize" officials of
Nicaragua's leftist government.
President Reagan approved a
recommendation by the CIA inspec
tor general meting out discipline to
a number of midlevel agency officials
but sparing senior officials from any
punishment.
Visitor: Constitutional changes
have not weakened apartheid
By AMY STYERS
Staff Writer
The new constitution, effective in
September 1983, allows for a black
House of Representatives in addition
to the all-white House of Parliament.
This new house is responsible for black
affairs but cannot enact laws that
conflict with national law.
The new constitution, effective
November 1983, allows for a black
House of Representatives in addition
to the all-white House of Parliament.
This new house is responsible for black
affairs but cannot enact laws that
conflict with national law.
Although the Reagan administration
has called the change constructive, Ellis
said the new body was powerless. "The
fundamental pillars of apartheid remain
intact," he said.
The government justifies its actions
by saying it is in line with principles
that are capitalist, Christian and
civilized, said Motlalepula Chabaku, a
South African graduate student at N.C.
A&T State University in Greensboro.
Capitalism and religion promote
attitudes that apartheid thrives on, she
said.
"Religious people are responsible for
much of the racism and prejudices in
the world," she said, citing the so-called
Bible Belt of the U.S. South as a racist
area.
Chabaku said white South Africans
see their government as ordained by
God and deserving of respect.
More people have survived
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Carolina Union Weekly Features Presentation
CDnirnatmmas Ciralte Week H
, m i m . . am . V
r raining o rreicnmg, Matting, mounting i 7)
AMI H.T A r M
Monday, November 26
Frame Finishing
Tuesday, November 27
($5 Fee for Materials)
Knitting Wednesday, November 28
Sponsored In Part by Creative Pastimes" "
Origami Thursday, November 29
Sign ops for all workshops E!m. 203 ia the t
Union November 19 & 20 1:304:33 PM