2The Daily Tar HeelMonday, November 18, 1985
From staff reports
The II NC Faculty Council voted Friday to ask the
University to divest its holdings in companies and banks
doing business with the South African government.
Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III said he
would present the resolution to the Board of Trustees.
The resolution calls on trustees to divest University
funds and state employee retirement funds from
companies and banks which do "direct and extensive"
business with the South African government and
thereby support apartheid.
It states that "apartheid ... is fundamentally
incompatible with principles of intellectual freedom
and human dignity, and is utterly to be condemned."
The Board of Trustees of the Endowment Fund
'84 HeUms qainnipangini ouMmied by mairkeitmg execuitiSve
By CHARLES FERNANDEZ 1
Staff Writer
"Where do you stand, Jim?" ' f
That question reflects the strategy of
the Jesse Helms campaign Uo make
former Governor Jim Hunt appear to
"flip flop" on issues, said Tom Fetzer,
a former Congressional Club executive.
Fetzer, a vice president for Jefferson
Marketing, gave a video presentation
to the Students for America Thursday
on why Helms won the 1984 senate race.
"We had a much more effective ad
campaign," Fetzer said. "Hunt couldn't
make up his mind on what he wanted
to do." Helms' ads put Hunt on the
defensive and set the agenda for the rest
of the campaign, he said.
Two important factors that contrib
uted to the Helms victory was the
increase in Republican voter registra
tion and voter turnout, Fetzer said. The
Republicans registered 200,000 more
voters in 1984 than in 1982 and also
had a voter turnout that was 10 percent
higher than that of the Democrats.
i 0ericO
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rejected Thursday an appeal by Student Government
asking the University to divest itself of all holding in
companies doing business in South Africa by 1989.
School of Law professor and resolution co-sponsor
Daniel H. Pollitt said he opposed the University's
current investment policy, based on the Sullivan
Principles. "It doesn't work," he said. "It's restricted
to employment opportunities, and it doesnt mean
much."
Under the Sullivan Principles, the University only
invests in companies which do not consider race when
hiring and employing.
Pollitt said that despite the failure of the Student
Government proposal Thursday, he thought trustees
WfuW i;tn to the faculty resolution, passed without
1 '' 'Although Helms won the race with
1 52 percent of the vote, his chances of
getting re-elected looked bleak at the
, beginning of the campaign, Fetzer said.
"We had to tell him (Helms) his
chances were slim and none," Fetzer
said, referring back to December 1982,
when the campaign was getting under
way. With Helms trailing Hunt by 22
points in the polls and Democrats
owning a three-to-one edge in registered
voters in North Carolina, Helms was
wondering if he would ever run again,
Fetzer said.
Fetzer said Helms decided to run
because he was the only Republican
would could defeat Hunt and because
Helms was the leader of the conserva
tive movement in the country.
The Helms camp knew it would be
very hard to erode Hunt's large lead,
he said.
"They (Hunt's campaign staff) started
off with a tremendous amount of
arrogance and cockiness," Fetzer said.
"If they wouldVe gone after Helms
earlier they couldVe buried him."
The main idea of the Helms campaign
ads was to portray Hunt as a "Mondale
Liberal," and link him to higher taxes,
Fetzer said.
"We needed to make Hunt less
popular and Helms more popular," he
said. "We spent 1982 trying to resurrect
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Helms and they let us have the
ballpark."
Fetzer said the Helms staff managed
to make Hunt appear to "flip-flop" on
the issues by putting Hunt in the Helms-for-Senate
commercials. They used
video tapes of Hunt saying one thing
and then tried to show that his record
said the opposite, Fetzer said.
An example of their tactics is a film
of Hunt saying he did not want to
propose to raise taxes, with another film
clip of him voting for a tax increase
at the National Governors' Convention,
including newspaper headlines stating
Hunt had voted for a tax hike.
44 We put Jim Hunt's own rope around
his neck and hung him with it," Fetzer
said. He said the officers of the Helms
campaign decided to use footage of
Hunt in their commercials when their
data showed "the more people saw of
Hunt, the more people disliked him,"
One of Hunt's own campaign ads
helped the Helms campaign, Fetzer
said. Hunt ran an ad that tried to link
Helms with the death squads in El
Salvador and its president, Roberto
D'Aubisson. But the ad backfired by
offending the public with the protrayal
of dead bodies supposedly killed by
death squads, he said.
Fetzer said the ad emphasized Helms'
claim that Hunt flip- flopped on issues.
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any dissent. "If we adopt this resolution today, the
trustees will give it deep consideration," he told faculty
members.
"When we ally ourselves with the students, we can
do together what we could not do alone," he added.
According to Pollitt, the fact that some of the funds
involved are faculty retirement funds means that faculty
members should have a say in where that money is
invested.
The resolution states that faculty members wish to
disassociate themselves from businesses and banks
giving direct and important support to the South
African government.
Other colleges have already accepted this or a similar
resolution, Pollitt said.
Hunt had attacked Helms for his
negative ad campaign, then came up
with his own negative ad, Fetzer said.
Helms suffered his own setback when
a newspaper which endorsed Helms
published an article accusing Hunt of
being a homosexual, Fetzer said. For
the next two weeks, the press attacked
the incumbant senator.
"It threw the camp off stride and we
decided to run June like October,"
Fetzer said, adding that over $3 million
was spend on advertisements during
that month. "We decided to pour on
the coals." ' .'.
From June until election day, the
Helms camp tried to relate Hunt as a
"Mondale liberal" who supported
higher taxes.
"We had to get the tax issue at the
idea level where it would hit people in
the gut," Fetzer said.
Funds raised to
By KENNETH HARRIS
Staff Writer
Although enough money has been
raised to begin a study on the Chapel
Hill-Carrboro merger, Carrboro Mayor
Jim Porto said he considered the merger
one of many options open to Carrboro
in the future.
At present, $10,274 has been raised
for the study through the help of private
donations. Officials estimated that
$15,000 would be needed to fund the
study. An additional $2,000 has been
pledged, but has not been collected.
According to officials, three pay
ments of $5,000 would be made to
consultants. The first payment will be
made when the contract is signed, the
second while the study is being con
ducted and the final payment when the
study is completed.
Porto said he expected an eight
member citizens committee, which
would choose the. consultants for the
study, to be formed within the next
week. He said he hoped the study would
t begin by Decejrnbei, fr M rf
In addition. to its role of choosing
the consultants, Porto said he wanted
the citizens committee to submit ques
tions which would give insight into the
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1985 Domino's Pizza Inc.
PIZZA
c.uvcns
Reagan's arrival In Geneva
tempered By
From wire reports
GENEVA President Reagan's
upbeat mood upon bis arrival in
Geneva was tempered by the leak of
a letter from Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger asking Reagan
to avoid commitments with Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachov on sev
eral arms issues.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the President was
confident of the summit meetings,
but angry over the leak of the letter.
A senior official aboard Air Force
One said he believed the leak to be
an attempt to sabotage the arms
talks. The President called for a
fresh start for U.S. Soviet relations
when he stepped off the plane
Saturday.
More survivors rescued
ARMERO, Colombia Small
groups of survivors continued to be
rescued by helicopters over the
weekend from mud and debris left
by Colombia's volcano eruption.
Colombian officials reported that
Canned food to be collected
A canned food collection sponsored
by the Residence Hall Association, the
Panhellenic Council, the Marching Tar
Heels, the Carolina Gay and Lesbian
Association, campus and town religious
organizations and Student Government
is being held Nov. 18 - 23. Proceeds
will go to the Interfaith Council's soup
kitchen and the Home for Battered
begin study of
feelings of the community concerning
the merger. An evaluation of the
technical aspects of the merger will be
addressed, Porto said.
During the study the consultants
should, at least, poll residents in both
towns at random to see how the people
feel, according to Chapel Hill Mayor
elect Jim Wallace.
At present, Carrboro and Chapel Hill
share some services such as a joint
school system. The police and fire
departments for both towns share
districts, according to Porto. Both
towns cooperate in a joint land use plan,
he said.
Wallace said the merger would be
economical by eliminating the duplica
tion of departments such as the police
or fire department.
"I think the study would reveal the
economic or financial advantage of the
merger," Wallace said.
The towns differ in their attitudes
toward managing growth, Porto said.
In the recent Chapel Hill election of
town council , members, the main
concern was over controlling or limiting ,
growth in the town. . , ., !
"We (Carrboro) think that we're
managing growth," Porto said. Devel
opers who wish to build in Carrboro
must follow strict guidelines, according
to Porto.
"If they come into our community,
they have to be an improvement to our
community," he said.
Wallace said he felt that both towns
per month
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leak of letter
news in brief
more than 21,500 people were dead'
or missing from Armero and other
towns in the Armero Valley after a
wall of mud created by snow melted
by the Nevado del Ruiz volcano and
a swollen river buried the towns.
Defector bitter toward CIA
WASHINGTON Vitaly Yur
chenko, the Soviet KGB defector
who returned to the Soviet Union
earlier this month, was likely a
genuine defector who was disillusi
oned by the CIA, said Nicolae
Horodinca, a Romanian defector
who described his own bitter expe
rience with the CIA.
Horodinca said he felt betrayed by
broken CIA promises and turned up
at the Romanian Embassy after a
year as a defector, wanting to return
to Romania to obtain medical help
for his wife. He was convinced not
to return at the last minute by his
mother.
Women. Dorm collections will take
place Monday through Thursday from
7 p.m. until 9 p.m. Collections will also
be made Saturday from 9 a.m. until 1 1
a.m. On-campus drop sites will be
available for those who missed dorm
collections at Chase Cafeteria and the
Student Union.
town merger
were concerned about managing
growth, especially after the rapid
development in Carrboro within the last
few years.
"Today, Carrboro has seen the
negative affects of a large amount of
growth," he said.
According to Porto, Carrboro has
one of the best land use plans in the
country. The plan has been published
recently by the American Planning
Association as a model for other
communities, he said. Porto said he saw
the study as a way of "uncovering facts
about where we're similiar and where
we're different.
"I think it would be interesting to do
a comparison. I, in fact, encourage the
comparison," Porto said.
Once the study is completed, Porto
said he hoped that neither the consul
tants nor the citizens group would make
a stand in favor of or oppose to the
merger.
Wallace said Chapel Hill residents
did not have much to lose through the
merger with Carrboro, but felt that
Carroord "feside'nts migtil lose-tfieir ;
iaentifi&r'Chapel Hill ';
"There are many people in Carrboro
who feel that the historical aspect of
Carrboro would be compromised or
obliterated by a merger," he said. "Thus
they balance financial advantage by the
loss of recognition."
Chapel Hill Mayor Joe Nassif could
not be reached for comment on the
study.
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