' 1 111 2The Daily Tar Heel Wednesday, April 1, 1987 Qnsunige proposed! for jmdlndsil Dy NEIL VATSON Staff Writer A bill that would require non partisan election of judges in North Carolina was introduced in the N.C. General Assembly last week. If the bill passes, the current system of statewide elections would be replaced with elections held by judicial districts. No party affiliation would be shown on the ballot, said Sen. Larry Cobb, R-Meck., the bill's sponsor. The change would bring the system more in line with the U.S. Constitution, Cobb said, adding that Volnmteeirs tenmcli Dy PAUL CORY Staff Writer "Clean Sweep," a statewide anti litter campaign, begins today with special emphasis on Orange, Vance, Wake, Durham and Guilford counties. More volunteers and N.C. Department of Transportation maintenance crews will work in these counties because of the upcoming U.S. Olympic Festival, said Jean Dodd of the Keep North Carolina Clean and Beautiful branch of the N.C. Senate approves By SHARON KEDSCHULL Staff Writer The N.C. Senate voted to ban the use of phosphates in laundry deter gents after only IS minutes of debate Monday. The bill goes next to the N.C. House of Representatives. The House passed two phosphate bills before, but both died in Senate committees. The Senate debated seven amend ments to the bill for 90 minutes Friday. This is the third bill of its type to go before the Senate. The most recent one was voted down in Tenants fear loss off hoimes wittln town takeover off pimlbMc tooMsiini By HUNTER LAMBETH Staff Writer Public housing tenants at a public hearing March 23 told Chapel Hill Town Council members that they feared a proposed town takeover of the Housing Authority would mean they would be forced from their homes. Annie Freeman said she and her family have been public housing tenants for 15 years. We. believe we .'will, .be evicted because they (the town) don't have anything to show us differently," she GicaiicoA n OCiyL FOODS X .jry ..j I nil GENERAL INFORMATION General Foods is the largest food processing manufacturer in the world. You will accomplish sales objectives on such well-known brands as Jell-O, Post Cereals, Stove Top, Minute Rice, Bakers, and Log Cabin. Position can based either in Raleigh or Charlotte. Interns will learn basic sales skillsresponsibilities and be introduced to transportation, distribution, and marketing principles. REQUIREMENTS Candidates should have completed three years of school by May 1987. Business majors and Liberal Arts candidates in English, Speech, and Economics will be considered. Candidates must have personal automobile, valid license and insurance. A desire to seek a career in consumer product salesmanagement is preferred. SALARY AND BENEFITS General Foods offers a competitive salary, benefits, mileage allowance, and expenses. The primary benefit is the opportunity to learn sales responsibilities, structure, and execution of marketing strategies. REPLY Qualified and interested candidates should contact the Career Planning and Placement Office and drop resumes by April 10. On campus interviews will be conducted on April 14. GEPffiKAl FOODS COKPOISATIIORI AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER a federal court trial now pending could result in last year's judicial elections being invalidated. The method of statewide elections has led voters to make uninformed decisions, Cobb said. The Democratic Party has used the system to ensure the election of Democratic judges, said Paul Shu maker, the state Republican Party press secretary. People often have no idea who most of the candidates are and know little about their creden tials. And because the overwhelming majority of voters in the state are DOT. The month-long campaign involves recruiting volunteers to help with litter collection. Almost 15,000 volunteers participated in the pro gram last spring, Dodd said. Dodd said the campaign is designed to hefp educate people about litter by getting them to pick it up. "We believe that if we get volun teers out there, they will realize we have a littering problem," Dodd said. 1985,, and environmental groups criticized the Senate for not support ing environmental causes. "We feel like the bill won't do any good for the environment," said Lawrence Davis, an attorney and legislative counsel for Proctor and Gamble. "It will cost consumers lots of money." Only 6 percent of the phosphates in water come from detergents, Davis said. Sen. Russell Walker, D Randolph, who sponsored the bill, used a parliamentary move to cut said. The Housing Authority has been independent of the town since 1962 but is now seeking financial assis tance. Rosemarie Waldorf, a Hous ing Authority board member, said the town has given the Authority a gift of about $63,000, but more funds are still needed. The bulk of Housing Authority funding comes from rental income, she said. Tenants at the public hearing said they feared that if the town takes over public housing, it will renovate the Housing Authority's 312 apart INTERNSHIP OPPORTUNITY WITH General Foods Corporatio Groceru S1ps Division registered Democratic, they simply vote for the Democratic candidate, he said. This bill would force the public to become more informed about who the candidates are, Shumaker said. It would also ensure that people in Winston-Salem arenH electing Wake County judges and vice versa, he said. But Ken Eudy, the state Demo cratic Party press secretary, said the issue needed more study. We think something as funda mental as changing the way justice is handled in the state deserves a deararo campaign "People will think twice about littering after they have had to work to pick it up." Dodd said that while North Carol ina's litter problem is less severe than that of other states, there is still more litter than maintenance crews can possibly pick up. North Carolina spent $2 million on litter collection last year, she said. - Gov. Jim Martin supports the effort and has declared April "The Month of the Clean Sweep," said Tim Pittman, Martin's press secre bam om plnospMtes off debate Monday night before more amendments could be proposed. Sen. William Barker, D-Pamlico, withdrew a final amendment after Walker told him debate on the amendment would hurt chances of passing the bill. Barker said he planned to intro duce the amendment again as a separate bill, which would apply stricter anti-pollution standards to the lower Neuse River in the Piedmont. Cost to remove three-fourths of ments in Chapel Hill and Carrboro and sell them in the private market. Council member R.D. Smith told them that federal regulations would prohibit the town from selling public housing. Town manager David Taylor agreed. "There's no truth to that. It does not matter who manages (the public housing units), tenants would not be evicted, he said. Tina Vaughn, Chapel Hill human services coordinator, also said the tenants have not been told they electloinis pretty in-depth look," he said. The argument that the voters are making uninformed choices can be carried to "ridiculous degrees,'' Eudy said. "Very few people know who the state auditor-general is, but he's elected statewide." Eudy said he thought that the Democratic Party would not support the bill and that it would not pass. But Shumaker and Cobb dis agreed. "Given the pressure put on (the legislature) by the governor and the public, I think it stands a good chance of passage," Shumaker said. tary. Martin has also designated April 26 to May 2 as "Keep America Beautiful Week in North Carolina." Dodd said that Martin's wife, Dottie, has also supported the "Clean Sweep" program by writing letters and speaking to committees and groups across the state. "She (Mrs. Martin) is very concerned with how the state looks." On April 16, Mrs. Martin will take a plane trip across North Carolina to support the "Clean Sweep" program, Dodd said. the phosphorous would be $9.35 per household of four per year, Davis said, while with the ban, the cost to the detergent industry would be passed on to consumers, costing them an extra $42 per year. He said lobbyists were "rather amazed" at how fast the bill was passed. They said that if amend ments had been allowed, proponents of the bill may have turned against it Associated Press contributed to this story. would be evicted. The nine Housing Authority board members, who are appointed by Mayor Jim Wallace, agreed that public housing needs financial assis tance, but they disagreed on whether public housing should remain inde pendent or become a town agency. Tornado Mast damages Jhomes9 irajimres 4 on N.C. Ouiter Bae&s From Aisocitad Prcn reports Four people were injured and mobile homes and boats were flat tened when a tornado hit without warning and "blindsidecT two Outer Bank communities Tuesday, but officials said it could have been worse if the tourist season was in full force. "There's just total devastation on Buxton Harbor," said Wally DeMaurice, head of the National Weather Service office in Buxton, about 50 miles south of Manteo on Hatteras Island. A Buxton mobile home housing a couple and their daughter "was literally destroyed, completely flat tened," when the twister touched down around 6:30 a.m., DeMaurice said. "It looks like a bomb went off in it. It literally just blew it apart." Michael Rak, 31, was treated for a shoulder injury, and Pam Rak, 27, was treated at Albemarle Hospital in Elizabeth City for a hip injury, officials said. Their daughter, whose Father wins custody rights in landmark Baby M case From Associated Prss reports HACKENSACK, N.J. A judge awarded custody of Baby M to her father Tuesday and stripped surrogate mother Mary Beth Whitehead of all parental rights to the child she bore under a $10,000 contract. In the nation's first judicial ruling on surrogate parenting, a Superior Court judge said the contract was valid because just as men have a constitutional right to sell their sperm, women can decide what to do with their wombs. Guerrilla attack kills American SAN SALVADOR, EL Salva dor Leftist rebels raided a major army base Tuesday, killing at least 43 soldiers and a U.S. military adviser, the first Amer ican to die during battle in the 7-year-old civil war. El Salvador's military com mander said Staff Sgt. Gregory Fronius, 27, was killed by mortar fire near a command post. Officials said seven guerrillas died in the attack on the 4th Infantry Brigade garrison at El Paraiso in Chalatenango pro vince, a rebel stronghold. Marine scandal continues WASHINGTON A third man has been arrested in a burgeoning sex-and-spy scandal in the ranks of the Marine Corps' security guard force at the U.S. embassy in Moscow, the Pen tagon said Tuesday. Staff Sgt. Robert Stanley Stuf flebeam, 24, of Bloomington, 111., was taken into custody on sus picion of failing to report contacts with Soviet women while working in Moscow from May 1985 to May 1986. He was arrested Sun day at Camp Pendleton, Calif., but has not been accused of The board voted 5 4 in favor of becoming dependent on the town March 23. Taylor said the proposal is an "alternative," not a takeover. He said the Authority requested a joint study with the town in October 1986. The study was to find alternatives to the name and age were not available, was unhurt. At least two other people were treated at the scene in Buxton for cuts and bruises. Four mobile homes in Buxton were destroyed, DeMaurice said. A total of about 15 homes were dam aged in the community, said Bryan Meekins, communications director for Dare County. The tornado destroyed or dam aged about 17 boats in Scott's Marina in Buxton, Meekins said. DeMaurice estimated the damage to boats in the harbor area ranged from $200,000 to $1 million. "About two-thirds of those boats down there belong to fishermen who normally cannot afford insurance," said Vance Kee of the state division of emergency management. In Avon, five miles north of Buxton, three mobile homes were destroyed and one home was lifted off its foundation when the tornado touched down eight minutes later, BROADWAY'S 1985 TONY AWARD WIlIIffllG BEST PLAY! "Neil Simon has done the seemingly impossible: he has topped himself with this sequel to BRIGHTON BEACH MEMOIRS. BiLQXI BLUES is an uproarious, deeply affecting, extraordinary comedy hit-with a-hearL"-Gem Sham, nbctvtocmy show V1 fif I v. 3f I I 1111 - m l a Gene Saks?: COMING TO DUKE UNIVERSITY Saturday, April 11 and Sunday, April 12, 8:15 pm Matinee Sunday, April 12, 3 pm Page Auditorium Tickets $22 and $1 8 - Page Box Office MasterCard and VISA 684-4059 News in Brief espionage. , House overrides highway veto WASHINGTON The Democratic-controlled House voted 350-73 Tuesday to override President Reagan's veto of an $88 billion highway bill, while admin- : istration officials scrambled for support to sustain the veto in a . coming Senate showdown. "''.'- Senate Republican sources said the president was still shy of the votes needed to sustain the veto . ' in the Senate, and Democratic majority leader Robert Byrd refused to say when he would call for the vote. The bill includes a provision to raise the speed limit from 55 mph to 65, which Reagan said he supported, but called the $88 billion spending "pork barrel politics." Bird causes car mishap MIDLAND, Mich. It started when Auburn Donald Hudson noticed his morning paper was moving. It seems that a bird had nestled into Hudson's paper before he picked it up from his lawn and put it on the car seat beside him. So he stopped his car and put it in neutral to let the bird go. He had one leg in the car and one leg out when the gear slipped and the car began to move. Hudson tried hopping down the road to keep up with the car because his foot was stuck under the seat. Then his pants fell down, and so did he when his foot came loose. He hit his head on cement, but the car kept going onto a neighbor's lawn. The bird got away. independent Housing Authority. A report of the study was pres ented to the council March 9, and the proposal to make public housing a dependent town agency was sug gested as an alternative. The council will probably make a decision in its April 13 meeting, Taylor said. DeMaurice said. A total of seven to 15 houses were damaged, Meekins5 said. .; IVe never heard nothing come up like that. My God, it was terrible," said George Gray of Avon. He said his home was damaged but his family, was unhurt. For the Record In Tuesday's article, " 'Koala Week' focuses on substance abuse," the Daily Tar Heel incorrectly reported that the event was being sponsored in part by WGNCG105, and that G105 would broadcast live from the Pit Thursday. The radio stations WDNC and. WDCG 105 are helping to sponsor the event. WDCG 105 will broadcast Thursday from 1 1 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.; and WDNC will broadcast from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. The Daily Tar Heel regrets the reporting errors. V