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High in the mid-50s.
Copyright 1986 77ie Daily Tar Heel
Volume 94, Issue 110
"Reagan
From Associated Press reports
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan ordered his National Secur
ity Council staff Monday not to
conduct diplomatic, military or
intelligence operations while a review
board investigates the agency's role
in the secret sale of arms to Iran and
the diversion of profits to Nicara
guan rebels.
Asserting that "I want all the facts
Study aisle
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Marie Nash, a freshman English major from Tarboro, is lost in the
stacks oa the eighth floor of Davis Library reading up for a French
Student collaboration charged
Comrt rales 6not
By JEAN LUTES
Assistant University Editor
and GRANT PARSONS
University Editor
Undergraduate Honor Court
members returned a verdict of not
guilty early Tuesday in a case
involving two students charged with
collaborating on a Computer
Science 14 program.
The two students, who requested
that the court session be open,
pleaded not guilty to the charge of
giving or receiving unauthorized aid
while writing their programs. If
found guilty, they face penalties
ranging from probation to suspen
sion and an automatic F in the
course.
Court hearings are usually closed
to the public, but sophomore Ste
phanie Idol and freshman Noelle
Fries, both of Raleigh, said they
wanted their hearing to be public
RHA adviser change
improves relation
of Housing, students
By RACHEL ORR
Staff Writer
The Residence Hall Associa
tion enjoyc more freedom during
its meetings . ' s getting more
work done since Housing Direc
tor Wayne Kuncl was replaced as
RHA adviser, President Ray
Jones said Monday.
"The difference this semester
has been tremendous," Jones
said. "We're able to accomplish
more."
Jones said last spring he
realized K unci's presence ham
pered RHA business, so he asked
"I'm
ski N.C
Page 5
Wht lailg
vows to
to come out," the president also said
he would welcome the appointment
of a special prosecutor if recom
mended by the Justice Department
to investigate possible wrongdoing.
And he reiterated that he had
known nothing about the secret
transfer of up to $30 million to the
Nicaraguan rebels, known as Con
tras. In a statement to his press
spokesman in response to questions
because they had nothing to hide.
"Everyone always seems afraid of
the Honor Court," Fries said during
a break in the trial. "No one really
understands it."
Idol said she was overwhelmed
when she received a letter from the
student attorney general, but by
talking to members of the Court she
began to understand how the process
worked.
"We thought we'd use ourselves
as an example, that circumstantial
and coincidental evidence can get
you up here," Idol said. "And if we're
found innocent, we can show stu
dents that the Honor Court is really
there for them."
Both students said they were doing
well in the class, and asserted that
they worked on their programs
independently.
The programs in question were the
fourth assignment for the class, one
William Chamberlin, associate
professor of journalism, to be the
faculty adviser beginning with the
fall semester.
RHA is independent of the
Housing Department, he Said,
and with Kuncl as adviser RHA
members felt they were inhibited
in expressing themselves.
Jones said Kuncl, or anyone
else in the Housing Department,
is incapable of being an objective
adviser to RHA.
"If we're supposed to advise
See RHA page 3
Mr. Green Christmas; I'm Mr.
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Tuesday, December 2, 1986
dig mp facts of Irairi-Contra deals
from reporters, Reagan said: "You
can tell them flat out that I had no
knowledge whatsoever of it until
(Attorney General) Ed Meese briefed
me on it Monday afternoon" Nov.
24.
Gripped in the gravest crisis of his
administration, Reagan met with a
three-member review board headed
by former Republican Sen. John
Tower of Texas, which he charged
51 presentation ort Paris. The library wasn't overcrowded
Monday, but should be filling up as students prepare for exams.
guilty
of seven programs. Together with
two exams and a final, the programs
would determine the grade in the
course.
Stephen Weiss, the computer
science professor who taught the
class, said he explicitly told his
students not to collaborate on the
fourth program assignment,
although he allowed unrestricted
collaboration on the first three
programs.
Undergraduate Court chairman
Tory Johnston began the hearing by
reading the charge: that Idol and
Fries had given or received unauth
orized aid on a Comp 14 program
submitted Oct. 7.
Investigator Randy Gordon said
Jim Lattanzi, a Comp 14 teaching
assistant, was grading programs of
the students in his recitation when
See HONOR COURT page 3
Liszt Centennial crescendos to
By ROB SHERMAN
Staff Writer
The Music Department's year
long Liszt Centennial celebration
ends tonight with the Gala Scholar
ship Benefit, a concert that has been
called by some "the finale of finales."
An 1841 concert that starred piano
virtuoso Franz Liszt will be recreated
by the UNC Symphony and Music
Department faculty and will con
clude a series of events commemo
rating Liszt's death in 1886.
The original concert in Leipzig,
Germany, was a benefit performance
for the pension fund for aged and
invalid musicians.
Following Liszt's lead, tonight's
concert will also be a fund raiser,
said the Music Department's acting
chairman Thomas Warburton in a
letter to the faculty. "Money that will
be raised . . . will make it possible
to attract talented musicians to study
oes for gusto Page 6
s
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
with the task of investigating NSC
staff operations.
Meanwhile, the Senate Intelli
gence Committee went behind closed
doors to begin its own investigation
of the Iran-Contra affair.
Committee member Sen. Thomas
Eagleton, D-Mo., said former
national security adviser Robert
McFarlane testified under oath
DTH Larry Childress
1
i X
Jeff Reichard
(music at UNC)," the letter stated.
The replica concert will feature a
wide variety of Romantic music,
including standard repertoire as well
as pieces rarely or never heard before
in the Southeast, said pianist Bar
bara Rowan.
The concert will end with a
virtuoso piano composition called
"Hexameron," written by six 19th
century composers. The entire UNC
piano faculty will perform the piece
on two pianos.
"Hexameron," which was written
after an eccentric princess requested
it for a charity concert, was intended
to be a social coup.
Working from a theme from
Bellini's opera "I Puritani," Liszt
wrote an introduction. Frederic
Chopin, Karl Czerny, Sigismond
Thalberg, Johann Pixis, Henri Herz
and Liszt himself composed varia
tions on the theme.
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during the afternoon. Earlier, the
panel's incoming chairman, Sen.
David Boren, D-Okla., told repor
ters, "I have not been surprised so
far by what I've heard" from
witnesses.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the administration "has
raised no objection" to key figures
in the case testifying before Con
gress. However, he said information
UNC falls to
UCLA.
By BOB YOUNG
Assistant Sports Editor
LOS ANGELES The scouting
report on UCLA's Reggie Miller
warned against letting the 6-7 senior
take an open shot from anywhere,
especially outside the three-point
line.
Well, Miller only got off two of
those long-rangers last night at
Pauley Pavillion, but he put up 16
attempts inside the zone (hitting 10)
and 14 more from the foul line
(hitting 1 1) to amass 32 points and
lead the Bruins to an 89-84 victory
over the top-ranked (for the time
being) UNC Tar Heels.
"I've thought that we were over
rated anyway," UNC head coach
Dean Smith said after the game.
"Maybe now people will start to
believe me."
UNC looked like anything but the
best team in the nation Monday. The
team shot 43.2 percent from the field.
This from a squad which was among
the nation's best shooting teams last
year. This was also from a team
which walloped the Bruins 107-70
last year in Chapel Hill.
But UCLA head coach Walt
Hazzard refused to recall that bitter
memory. "Do I have to go back to
a year ago?" he asked. "What
happened then is not important.
What's important is that we played
a fine game tonight and got the win."
(top, center) reads the statement
At the original concert, Liszt
performed the piece as a piano solo.
"While Liszt did this to roars of
adulation, it takes four of us to do
it," Rowan said.
The faculty pianists will play on
two nested pianos. When one ends
a section, another begins the next
variation without a break, Rowan
said. Toward the end, the rotation
becomes faster, and during the finale
all four will play at the same time,
she said.
"The 'Hexameron' will end the
concert and the centennial at the
same moment," Rowan said.
"It's very different," said pianist
Duke Miles of "Hexameron." "We
are used to playing, finishing and
getting up to bow. It feels strange
to play, then sit on stage and watch
someone else play."
Pianist Michael Zenge said the
stage "turns into a game of musical
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Today, 4:15 p.m.
News Sports Arts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1163
that constitutes advice to the pres
ident "could come under the claim
of executive privilege" and might be
withheld.
White House and congressional
leaders debated a proposal from
Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole
of Kansas for the president to call
Congress back to town to form a
Watergate-style investigative
committee.
To pull out the victory, the Bruins
took a chapter from the UNC
playbook. It was the chapter titled
"Precision Passing." Point guard
Pooh Richardson and backup center
Greg Foster dished out six and four
assists, respectively.
Many of the Bruin passes were
threaded inside to Miller in the first
half. The silky forward would make
a fake toward three-point range,
which Tar Heel defenders were
forced to respect. He then snuck
back inside for some easy baskets.
Still, Miller had just 1 1 points in
the opening half, which ended with
the Bruins leading 47-39. Bruin
scoring was well-balanced in the first
20 minutes. Montel Hatcher went 4-for-5
from the field with a three
pointer for nine of the first 15 UCLA
points, while Foster played eight
minutes and picked up six points on
3-for-3 shooting.
Meanwhile, the Tar Heels were
suffering periodic shooting droughts.
Three times in the first half, UNC
went over a minute and a half
without scoring.
Perhaps the most important lapse
occurred in the last 2:22 before
intermission. The Tar Heels scored
only two points on a Kenny Smith
jump shot while UCLA put in six
foul shots and a spread-eagle jumper
See UCLA page 6
III
ir
DTH Dan Charlson
for the defense
final forte
chairs because we are up and down
See LISZT page 5
The listing for the foreign
language and Journalism 53
exams in the exam schedule
printed in Monday's Daily Tar
Heel was incorrect.
These exams are to be given
on Saturday, Dec. 6. The source
for the schedule, "Carolina
Week by Week," also lists it
incorrectly.
A full, corrected reprint of the
final exam schedule is on page
4.
The Daily Tar Heel regrets
any inconvenience the error may
have caused.
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For the Record 1