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The Daily Tar HeelThursday, April 18, 19853
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By RUTHIE PIPKIN
Staff Writer
Jim Heavner. president of the Village Cos., has
given his support to STV and told members he was
willing to work with them and the administration to
get cable in the dorms.
Heavner wrote a letter to John Wilson, past
program director for STV, clarifying the previous
confusion about whether Heavner was willing to
donate cable to the project. Heavner said that although
he never intended a donation, he was willing to work
out a business arrangement that would allow the
University to own the central plant on a cable system
installed by Village Cable.
Heavner wrote: "Village Cable might provide the
cable hardware or build the cable plant and, in return
for some long-term arrangement to serve the
University through this plant, actually deed it over
to the school."
Heavner said he thought the administration did not
want the central plant to be owned outside of the
University.
In a telephone interview Wednesday, Heavner said
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he could understand how the confusion occurred. "I
can see how good people in good faith might have
perceived this as a donation," Heavner said. "But 1
never used the word donate, or if I did, I didn't use
it in the charitable sense of the word.
"The essense of our point of view is this: If it is
the University policy or desire to have ownership of
the physical asset, then there are traditionally accepted
business practices under which such an arrangement
could be made. How that would take place is a detail
that could be worked out in conversations with the
principles of each entity."
Kuncl said recently that he supported the cable
project but could not budget it now because many
dorms needed repairs and that he did not want to
raise student rent beyond a reasonable rate. "It (cable
in the dorms) is not seen as the highest priority of
student rent money. . . . Looking at our priorities,
we have other work we need to do before."
Although Kuncl said he would install cable in the
dorms if he had the approximately $75,000 it would
take to start on South Campus, some STV members
said he never considered the issue seriously and used
the telecommunications committee established last
spring to study the issue to stall STV members
pushing for installation.
But Peter Weiss, a committee member from the
Residence Hall Association, disagreed. "It may appear
that way now, but I don't think that was the intention
of the committee," Weiss said. "Money that could
have been earmarked for cabling the campus had to
go to the new dorm.
"1 don't think he did it just to appease (STV
members)," Weiss said. "Kuncl made it clear from
the beginning it was something he thought people
wanted. ... I think he was serious about it."
Wilson said Kuncl had not responded to the
committee's recommedation to have cable in South
Campus dorms by the fall of 1985 and in North
Campus dorms by the fall of 1986. "That's (the
committee's recommendation) is the last they, I or
anyone has ever heard of it," Wilson said. "Picking
up the phone to call Village Cable seems to be the
first step. Heavner wants to help. (He's) eager to do
it."
Kuncl said he could not consider budgeting the
project before next year.
JParking regulations enforced,
throughout examination pgrioi
By KIM WEAVER
Staff Writer
Parking tickets will be issued on
campus until the final day of exams
despite rumors to the contrary, said
Mary Fox, a parking coordinator for
the UNC Parking Control Office.
"Exams are not an exception," she
said Wednesday. "Classes are still in
session."
Because of ineffective wording in
the signs posted around campus
concerning parking during exams,
many students thought the Traffic
Office didn't ticket during the exam
period and thus received tickets last
semester.
New signs, which will be posted
the day prior to the first day of
exams, thus have been made for this
semester.
Students complained last year that
when parents or friends came to pick
them up at the end of their spring
semester exams, they were ticketed
even though their cars may have been
in the lot for only a brief period,
Fox said.
She said one of the goals for exam
week this semester was to make
students aware of the parking situa
tion. It is the responsibility of the
students to inform their parents and
friends of the parking situation, Fox
said. Parents and friends are encour
aged to stop by the information
booth in Hanes parking lot to
acquire a temporary parking sticker
if they wish to park on campus, she
said, adding that if someone is
standing near the car, or seated inside
it, the car will not receive a citation.
Phi Beta Kappa Inlllales
The following is a list of names of
those UNC students recently initiated
into Phi Beta Kappa, a society honor
ing those students with high quality
point averages.
David Paul Adams of Butner, in
business administration; Kevin Lee
Anderson of Prospect, Ky., in political
science; Susan Lynn Baker of Mad
ison, Wis., in biology; Charles Kevin
Barlow of Lenoir, in business admin
istration; Billy Wayne Berry Jr. of
Jamestown, in chemistry; James
Daniel Bishop of Charlotte, in business
administration; Edna Marie Boyce of
Morganton, in political science; Mary
Elizabeth Leech Brady of Chapel Hill,
interdisciplinary; Frank Anthony
Bruni Jr. of La Jolla, Calif., in English;
Ronald Jeep Bryant of Charlotte, in
RTVMP; Sarah Jane Carothers of
Sylva, in physics; Christine Alice
Cavalaris of Columbus, Ohio, in
chemistry; Amy Marie Chaney of
Candler, interdisciplinary; Cynthia
Ann Conard of Canton, in psychology;
Marshall Albert Cross of Newport
News, Va., in chemistry economics;
Michael Edward Crow of Baton
Rouge, in business administration.
Bruce Walter Dean of Raleigh, in
mathematics; Suzanne Edwina
DeChamplain of Charleston, S.C., in
biology; Michael Scott Deimler of
Gastonia, in psychology political
science; Lianne Marie deSerres of
Chapel Hill, in biology; George Ste
phen Diab of Wilmington, in business
administration; Michael Lee Dockery
of Gainesville, Fla., in chemistry; Jon
Patrick Donnelly of Raleigh, in
biology; Melissa Elna Dorfman of
Manchester Center, Vt., in speech; Eric
Christopher Dreyer of Tulsa, Okla., in
math sciences; Kristin Leah Dutrow
of Durham, in zoology; Mary Kath-f
erine Early of Winston-Salem, in!
business? Joan E: ast it ChapefcHill,!
in biology German; Leonard Todd
Ebright of Bexley, Ohio, in business
administration; Thomas Elliot
Edwards Jr. of Raleigh, in chemistry;
Mary Jane Elliott of Monroe, in
psychology.
John Walter Covington Entwistle
III of Charlotte, in chemistry; Adam
Frederick Falk of Chapel Hill, in
physics; Edwin Louis Fountain of
Arlington, Va., in Russian studies
political science; Bonnie Beth Gardner
of Huntington, Md., in journalism
political science; Mark Drew Garrett
of Chapel Hill, in English; Andrew
James Getgood of Lumberton, in
math; Ann Marie Goldschmidt of
Potomac, Md., in international stu
diesbusiness; Toni Goodyear of
Pittsboro, in psychology; Jane Alethia
Gordon of Morehead City, in econom
icsspeech; Sherri Ann Green of High
Point, in health P.E.; Leigh Carroll
Haley of Greensboro, in biology;
Donna Ruth Hammill of Gold Hill,
in business administration; , Dana
Elizabeth Handy of Midlothian, Va.,
in French; Mark Christopher Harper
of Raleigh, in religious studies; James
Albert Harrill III of Winston-Salem
in religious studies.
Darryll Eugene Hendricks of Cary,
in philosophy; Stephen Ward Hilde
brand of Wilmington, in chemistry;
Ruth Ellen Hodges of Raleigh, in
business administration; Donald
Edward Horton Jr. of Zebulon, in
political science; Mary Elizabeth
Hoskins of Nashville, in biology;
Karen Leigh House of Winsont-Salem,
in education; Wendy Carol Howard of
Wilmington, in chemistry biology;
James Baxter Hunt III of Lucama, in
international studies; Lisa Anne Impe
rial of Silver Spring, in business
administration; Waleed Nabil Irani of
Pittsford, N.Y., in chemistry; David
Samuel Jennis of Indiatlantic, Fla., in
business administration; Pamela Kay
Johnson of Blackfoot, Ind., in chem
istry; Christie Lynn Jones of Raleigh,
in psychology; Clarence Jeffrey Jones
of Shelby, in education; Sarah Eliza
beth Keever of Hickory, in business
administration.
Katharine Wilkes Kelley of Atlanta,
: Ga., in international studies; Bruce
Andrew Kintner of Lexington, Ky., in
political science; Maureen Alice Kap
stas of Kinston, in art history; Doctor
i Mark Leonard of Branchville, N.J., in
economics; Renae Lynn Lias of
, mj.W.'fef'ftWItliiorirdwn
4
boroi in math science computer
science; Elizabeth Ann Longino of
Greenville; in economics; Christine
Chrysbstom Manuel of Fayetteville, in
journalism; Elizabeth Gail Marks of
Gherryville, in international studies;
Carol Ann Medlin of Salisbury, in
political science; Susan Rose Mills of
Eden, in math; Sean Michael Muldow
ney of Gastonia, in biology; Robert
Steven Murray of Chamblee, Ga., in
English; George N. Nicholas of Day
ton, Ohio, in history English.
Catherine Lynn Nifong of Pfaf
ftown, in English; Susan Gaye Oakley
of Rougemont, in journalism; Barbara
Dell Page of Elon College, in biology;
Spyridon George Papadopoulos of
Sanford, in chemistry; Glenn Stuart
Peterson of Fairfield, Conn., in jour
nalism; Jennifer Neill Pons of Atlanta,
Ga.i in English; Jeffrey Taylor Prescott
of Greenville, in math sciences; Robert
Scott Ralls of Lake Junaluska, in
industrial relations; Mark Bennit
Renfro of Crestview, Fla., in zoology;
Robin Elizabeth Renn of Key Bis
cayne, Fla., in zoology psychology;
Hillery Hudson Rink III of Thomas
ville, in economics history; Nicolas
Parish Robinson of Charlotte, in
historySpanish; Roberta Marie
Rohan of Greensboro, in math; Lisa
Nell Samuels Rollins of Raleigh, in
English; John Tracy Roper Jr. of
Charlotte, in biology.
David Michael Rosenberg of
Atlanta, Ga., in American studies;
Joanne Ryan of Raleigh, in classical
archaeology; Roger Blase Schlegel of
Washington, D.C., in history Amer
ican studies; Joseph William Seivold
of Parkton, Md., in history; Ethan Ellis
Shapiro of Raleigh, in psychology;
James Hugh Slaughter of Kannapolis,
in history; Allene Robinson Smith of
Wilmington, in economics interna
tional studies; Amy Elizabeth Smith
of Morganton, in chemistry German;
Suzanne Sumner of Greensboro, in
math; Janice Nolomay Sutton of
Jacksonville, in business administra
tion; Jeffrey Roundtree Sykes of
Greensboro, in music; John Edward
Taylor of Gastonia, in political sceince;
Katherine Elizabeth Thompson of
Fayetteville, in business administra
tion; Lacy Eugene Thornburg of Sylva,
in zoology; Herbert H olden Thorp of
Fayetteville, in chemistry.
Lisa Rene VanDeVeer of Raleigh,
in English psychology; William
Bradford Waites of Macon, - Ga., in v,
i, English; Jonathan Grey Frariklin
Walker of Statesville, in math; Andrea ,
Grace Weyermann of Wilmette, 111., in
psychology; Peter Joseph Wiegman of
Asheville, in chemistry political
science; James Michael Wilmott of
Bettleboro, Vt., in economics; James
Sperling Wilson of Shelby, in psychol
ogy; Heber Wilkinson Windley III of
Zebulon, in chemistry; Anne Elizabeth
Worth of Charlotte, in chemistry;
Angela Eileen York of Charlotte,
international studies; Nelson Hugh
Yount of Conover, in math sciences
computer' sciences; Martin James
Zagari of Newark, Del., in chemistry
biology; and David Jordan Zubkoff of
Florham Park, N.J.., in political
science.
UNC delegation to NCSL p
Fesotatioiri opposed to meal plana
By DARLENE CAMPBELL
Staff Writer
The UNC delegation to the N.C.
Student Legislature unanimously
passed a resolution Tuesday night
opposing the mandatory meal plan and
calling it unnecessary, offensive and
unfair.
The meal plan will cost each on
campus resident $100 per semester and
is due to take effect in the fall.
Written and proposed by NCSL
delegation Chairman Ray Jones, the
resolution states that the meal plan faces
considerable opposition by students and
other members of the University
community.
"A mandatory meal plan should
always be a last resort," the resolution
states. "Therefore be it resolved that the
UNC-Chapel Hill delegation of the
North Carolina Student Legislature
goes on record as opposing the pro
posed mandatory meal plan. Be it
further resolved that said delegation
opposes the creation of any mandatory
meal plan without considerable student
input, including a student referendum
to gauge student opinion."
According to the resolution, the
implementation of the meal plan was
decided by the Board of Trustees and
the University administration without
accurate assessment of student opinion.
Reasons stated in the NCSL resolu
tion for opposing the meal plan include
the following:
The funds from the meal plan will
be used to subsidize ARA Services, a
private corporation.
There is no indication that the meal
plan is "necessary or vital" to the
continuance of campus food service.
The meal plan is offensive to
freedom of choice and is unfair because
it only applies to on-campus residents,
thus requiring a small group to provide
a financial base for services which the
entire University community uses.
"The mandatory meal plan is some
thing that the delegation felt strongly
about and wanted to make a statement
about," Jones said. "We hope that (the
resolution) will add to the opposition
that already exists and help in the tight
against the meal plan."
Mandates of the resolution were sent
to Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham
III; Donald A. Boulton, vice chancellor
and dean of Student Affairs; Charles
C. Antle, vice chancellor of business;
Student Body President Patricia Wal
lace and Campus Governing Council
Speaker Wyatt Closs.
The NCSL is an organization com
posed of about 25 schools throughout
the state. As a model legislature for
almost 50 years, about 40 percent of
the legislative ideas proposed by the
organization have been passed into law
by the General Assembly.
Because the NCSL's meal plan
resolution represented a local problem,
it would not be passed on to the General
Assembly, Jones said.
Summer 'Tar Heel' looking for writers
Anyone interested in working for
the summer Tar Heel should come
by the DTH office and talk with
summer editor Jim Greenhill.
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