2The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, April 1, 1986 oc&l foire may csunry poisoned drags By HELENE COOPER Staff Writer Local pharmacists have not removed certain A.H. Robins products from their shelves, although two incidents of contaminated bottles of the company's cough syrup were reported last week. A 2-year-old Stony Point boy was rushed to the hospital last Saturday after drinking some Dimetapp Elixir cough medicine laced with turpentine. "We haven't moved the cough syrup yet," said Wally Close, Revco pharma cist. He said he expected to receive notice to remove the Dimetapp soon, however. In another incident, a Richmond, Va. man took two teaspoons of Robitussin PE apparently laced with kerosene last Monday. Both Robitussin PE and Dimetapp Elixir are manufactured by A.H. Robins. Company officials say the two incidents are isolated. Researchers at the N.C. Food and Drug Protection Division of the Depart ment of Agriculture have tested samples of Dimetapp Elixir, but have not found any contaminated bottles yet. Robert Gordon, head of the division, said the division collected some Dime tapp from the Statesville area. He said he was fairly sure the tampering had not occurred at the manufacturing level. "The tampering probably occurred afterwards," Gordon said. "People will figure out ways to do it." He said the best protection for consumers was to check containers when purchasing them to make sure the safety seal was intact. "You can usually tell if something's been tampered with," Gordon said. Close said Revco has also removed Contac, Dietac and Telgrin from shelves, after traces of rat poisoning were found in five capsules in Houston, Texas and Orlando, Fla. The FDA has warned consumers not to use any of the SmithKline Beckman products purchased since mid-March, because the capsules may have been tampered with. Capsules are easier to tamper with than tablets, because capsules can be opened easily. Pharmacists said they expected people to move away from capsules as a whole, as a result of the recent tamperings, Close said. Gordon said the state had not tested any of the SmithKline Beckman pro ducts, because the company removed them from the market soon after the contamination incidents occurred. onallheFe Bell to to grade area facilities By LAURIE MARTIN Staff Writer Southern Bell will spend $289 million this year to improve and expand its facilities in North Carolina, according to the vice president of the phone company. Of that, $64 million has been allocated to the Raleigh district, which includes Chapel Hill and UNC. Gene Upchurch, manager of community relations for Southern Bell's Raleigh district, said that the 22 percent of the state budget given to the district will be used for modernizing or replacing present facilities, or building new ones. These facilities include switching equipment and new cable. "Chapel Hill's equipment is fairly modern, so this year more will be spent in other areas of the district," Upchurch said. Most of the funds will go toward work in Raleigh, Garner, and Apex. Southern Bell vice president Jere A. Drummond reported that the company's North Carolina budget is up about 2 percent from last year. State expenditures will cover central office equipment, outside plant facilities, station equipment and a portion for general equipment to improve operations. Drummond said the company also plans to install $7.2 million worth of fiber optic cable this year a 74 percent increase over the amount used last year. Fiber optics offers better transmission and greater capacity than copper with lower maintenance costs, Drummond said. Since federal deregulation, "Southern Bell has been forced to take a new perspective with revenue," Upchurch said. "Our business has changed dramat ically." Because of this customers might receive notice of a rate hike in the near future, Upchurch said. "Since Southern Bell no longer sells equipment or deals with interstate long distance, we have lost a large chunk of subsidies," Upchurch said. "This could mean that the trend will be for Bell rates to increase." In related news, Southern Bell said bills for its Chapel Hill customers will now have fewer pages and be easier to understand. Most of the new bills will have four parts: A "payment page" (showing total amount due) that should be returned with the customer's check or money order. A "summary page" which lists separately the current charges of Southern Bell and other companies for which it does billing. This page also lists telephone numbers to call if there are questions about the bill. A "current charges" section itemizing Southern Bell charges. An "other company charges" section that itemizes on separate pages the charges of any other long distance company the customer uses and for which Southern Bell handles billing. Southern Bell customers in Chapel Hill should see the redesigned bill in their March or April telephone bill. Marcos denigrates AqiamOj threatens to retumnm MANILA, Philippines (AP) Fer dinand E. Marcos said Monday that he was not corrupt, but that President Corazon Aquino was, and he might return from exile to rescue Filipinos LOOKING FOR A HORSE? WHY NOT ADOPT ONE? For details, write: Bureau of Land Management 350 S. Pickett Street Alexandria, VA 22304 from a "monster" bent on enslaving them. The former president, who fled Feb. 26, commented in a telephone message and handwritten letter, calling himself a victim of the "blackest of propa ganda." He accused "elements of the American government" of helping oust him. He said Aquino was the "No. 1 looter," a charge that has been made against Marcos. A source close to Marcos made a tape of the message and a copy of the letter available to the Associated Press. Presidential spokesman Rene Sagui sag said Aquino greeted the comments "with typical calm and equanimity." He said Marcos, 68, may be allowed to return "in the distant future, but not just now." "The greatest service Marcos has done to the Filipino nation is to leave it," Saguisag said. "He should not negate it by threatening to come back." In a telephone statement from Hono lulu, which the source said was taped Monday, Marcos said: "We must war against the monster who imposes slavery." The voice was clearly his, the source said. A postcript to an eight-page letter dated March 21 and addressed to "My beloved Filipino countrymen," in his home province, Ilocos Norte, said: "Death, yes, we will accept perhaps, but slavery never, never, never." Marcos told reporters in Honululu on Sunday that he still considered himself president. The letter was written on stationery of Malacanang Palace, which has become a museum to preserve what Aquino's government calls the excesses of Marcos and is wife, Imelda. The Carolina Union and the UNC Music Department present I " I LOUIE BELLSON on drums -Jh - with the V?--J Q UNC Jazz Band 2J Tuesday April 15 rlG 8:00 pm ' JS Memorial Hall Students tickets $3 feC4ROLINK General Public $5 SJ! Available at Union Box Office 6GTS3Tiri-. Soft Contoct Lenses tp) ...'vICe 1 IV J : ltv..,,,., . soft cpr:.. , - p "disirL ct;erv hits and Jfotcw-up core, fTint od or extended- l" weor lenses available at I nddirianal cost r Quality Eyccara ot an Affordable Price. ? Dr David L. Kroninqer, Optometrist 121 S. Estes Dr., Suite 106-A 942-8531 TOMENS TUDIE& FALL COURSES WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSES WMST 190 Supervised Internship WMST 199 Independent Study CROSS LISTED COURSES ANTH 141 The Anthropology of Gender, TBA TBA Staff Staff (WMST 141) ENGL 50 (WMST 150) HEED 160 (WMST 161) HIST 67 (WMST 67) HIST 222 Health, and Illness Topics in Gender and Literature Intro, to Women's Health & Health Ed. Women in Europe II (since 1750) Readings in Women's History (WMST 222) (Graduate Students Only) MHCH 103 Reproductive Physiology and Conception Control 12:30-1:45 TTh Finkley 9:30-10:45 TTh Davis 2:00-3:15 TTh Earp 9:30-10:45 TTh Bennett 2:00-4:50 Th Hall Bennett 1:00-2:50 M Hulka (WMST 103) PHIL 46 (WMST 46) SOCI 24 (WMST 24) Philosophical Issues in Feminism Sex and Gender in Society 2:00-4:30 W Staff 7:30-8:45 pm Staff TTh DEPARTMENTAL LISTINGS CMPL95 Women and Work (1850-1900) 2:00-3:15 TTh ALLIED COURSE partial focus on women andor gender MHCH 200 Issues in Maternal and Child 10:00-1 1:50 M Health Today PLAN 124 Urbanization & Planning in the 7:00-9:30 pm Third World (strong W component on women & the development process for juniors & seniors) REL1 84 Psychology of Religion SOCI 30 ' Family and Society Mona lisa specializes in cuts, perms and celophanes by Sebastian. Just call her at 929-1330. . gREDKEN Hi i m m m. mm mm T.M. 406 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC 27514 SEBASTIAN V7S4 Furst Howze Lacey 2:00-3:15 TTh (1) 8:00-9:15 TTh (2) 12-12:50 MWF (3) 9:30-10:45 TTh 11-12:15 TTh Peck Rindfuss Staff Entwisle Rindfuss SOCI 125 Family and Society (Seniors and juniors) Registration to be held at Women's Studies Office, 207 F Caldwell Hall for these courses only. Register for other courses in home department. is crt Carolina Prid 3 Tcntorrarj AQomcsn t EiicSt-Oil Cum On and "Ccp" into FKnooG . . . Cum Out T-Chlite are available now at Carolina Pride for only $8.00. Colors: Gold, Lt. Blue, and White. Buy a T-Shirt and you're automatically registered for a Free Miller Music Guitar and Miller Tour Jackets. "Cp" lro RSncss: The entire month of April, Carolina Pride will be promoting footwear. Just come in the store and try on a pair of athletic shoes and you will be registered for: D.P. Gympack 1500 1st Prize One-year Membership to the Gym 2nd Prize D.P. Rowing Machine 3rd Prize Weekly Prizes of Fitness Outfits: Shorts, T-Shirts, Sweatshirts, Sweatpants, and Shoes. During the Live Remote with 94Z Carolina Pride will be giving away T-Shirts Shoes and there will be special prices on selected merchandise. mm. ma3 lM East Franklin Street 4 Downtown Chapel Hill ' 9 North Carolina 27514 South African blacks defy ban to attend memorial for leader From Associated Press reports JOHANNESBURG, South Africa About 20,000 blacks defied a ban Monday to attend a memorial for a Communist Party leader who died in exile, and an activist announced resumption of a regional boycott of white business. The memorial for Moses Mab hida, a black nationalist who died March 8 in Mozambique, was held at a soccer stadium in Zwide, a black township outside the Indian Ocean city of Port Elizabeth. Mkhulesi Jack, a prominant anti apartheid activist, announced during the four-hour service that a black boycott of white-owned businesses in Port Elizabeth would resume April 1. A boycott last year, which severely affected white businesses, was sus pended after four months. Sfofa & Motional More than 1,250 people have been killed, nearly all of them black, during the 19 months of violence against apartheid. Third quake hits California FREMONT, Calif. Skyscrap ers swayed Monday as a strong earthquake, the third trembler in three days, hit Northern California. Damage was not serious, and only a few minor injuries were reported. The University of California esti mated the strength of the trembler, which hit at 3:56 a.m., at 5.3 on the Richter scale. Pacific Gas & Electric Co. said outages caused by the earthquake affected about 7,500 people in San Tose and about 1,800 in Fremont. Fire destroys Henry VIII palace south wing, kills general's widow LONDON (AP) Fire raged through the magnificent 16th-century Hampton Court Palace of Henry VIII Monday, burning out its south wing, damaging priceless royal art treasures and killing one person, believed to be the widow of a top British general. The four-hour blaze sent the leaded roof of the three-story south wing crashing through into art galleries on the two lower floors, causing millions of dollars worth of damage. Hampton Court, which contains hundreds of rooms, is Britain's second most popular tourist attraction after the Tower of London. Among the works damaged by smoke and water were two renowned Tudor paintings, the 1520 "Field of the Cloth of Gold" showing Henry VIII meeting with the King of France and the "Family Group" depicting the king and his family. Officials said the blaze probably started in a top-floor apartment in the south wing occupied by Lady Daphne Gale, the 86-year-old widow of Gen. Sir Richard Gale. She was thought to have died in the fire. The local member of Parliament, Conservative Toby Jessel, said Gale was incapable of taking care of herself and also "used candles to obtain light." The south wing was rebuilt by the famed 17th century architect Sir Chris topher Wren at the palace constructed in 1515 by Cardinal Thomas Wolsey and presented to Henry VIII. Queen Elizabeth II, who owns the palace set amid 50 acres of lawns overlooking the River Thames 12 miles west of London, later picked her way through the charred timbers to inspect what aides described as "a disaster." The queen was accompanied by her heir, Prince Charles, and her sister, Princess Margaret. She called the damage "dreadful," officials escorting her reported. Voter-registration drive planned By RACHEL ORR Staff Writer A voter-registration drive will be held today through Thursday by the exec utive branch of student government between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in the Union. Individuals must register to vote by April 7 to be eligible to vote in the May 6 primaries. . Joe Herzenberg, a special registration commissioner, said only those who . consider themselves Orange County residents can register. If a person registered to vote in the Orange County elections, their registra tion at any other location would be invalidated, Herzenberg said. He added that registering to vote in Orange County had no effect on a person's tax status. Kim McCombs, a Student Govern ment executive assistant, said individ uals must provide an ID and something showing their local address, like a check or letter, to register. McCombs said information about how to file an absentee vote and the addresses of election boards throughout North Carolina would be available as part of the campaign. Executive assistant Terence Healy said it would take about five minutes to register. "Our goal is to register as many people as we can," Healy said. "Students spend most of the year here. This is where issues affect them the most." He said he thought the Chapel Hill Town Council and the Carrboro Board of Aldermen would be more receptive to student needs if more students voted in Orange County elections Herzenberg" sauT vFryTew students were registered to vote" in Orange County, and South Campus residents generally showed more interest in voting in the county than North Campus residents. For til Record Friday's story "Martin recommends executive veto" incorrectly identified N.C. Student Legislature Gov. Billy Miller's first name as "Danny." The Daily Tar Heel regrets the reporting error. TAR HEEL SPECIAL LEADING EDGE Model D Computer $1495 Nota Bene $390 DATAWAY CarrMill Mall Carrboro, NC 967-7499 E X Our Full Service Includes Shampoo Conditioning Precision Cut ides: tyi lO J Blow Dry v No Hidden UJ 35 No Hidden Extras 'Ji'JnrL Fantastic Sam' 15-501 & Garrett Rd. (Across from Darryl's) 489-7191 Mon.-Sat 9-6. Tues. & Thurs. 9-8 EACH SALON INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED