Dig those groovy tunes,
Last Blast
1 -6 p.m.
Saturday
in,front of Stacy Dorm
Summertime's
calling me
Partly cloudy. High 68.
udesand dudettes-page8
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Copyright JPSSThe Daily Tar Heel
Volume 96, Issue 28
Friday, April 15, 1988
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1 163
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In remembrance
Demonstrators hold a vigil Thursday night in
honor of the second anniversary of the U.S. air
Chancellor should
By BARBARA LINN
Staff Writer
When student leaders discuss plans
for the arrival of newly-appointed
Chancellor Paul Hardin, one com
mon goal emerges: improving com
munication between administrators
and students.
Suggestions from establishing a
Student Advisory Board to taking the
new chancellor to He's Not Here for
a beer are as diverse as UNC's
Apple Chill festival:
a party in the street
or local conmroyimity
By KAREN BELL
News Editor
A chill is in the air.
The 17th annual Apple Chill street
fair, sponsored by Chapel Hill Parks
and Recreation, will fill Franklin
Street with crafts, food and entertain
ment Sunday.
The festival is scheduled from 1
p.m. to 6 p.m. and will feature local
artisans, entertainers and organiza
tions. In addition, a variety of foods
will spice up the street fair.
Lori Anderson, Apple Chill coor
dinator, said the festival originated
when a group of local teenagers
displayed crafts they made over the
summer. Although they did not sell
the crafts, the show on Henderson
Street was well received by the town,
she said.
"(Apple Chill) started out of a
community need," Anderson said.
"More people wanted to become
involved."
When the lair was developed on
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Franklin Street.
22,000 students.
But in recent interviews, student
leaders agreed that educating the
chancellor about important issues
and working together to find solu
a larger scale, it eventually became
too expansive, she said. Organizers
decided the festival needed to regain
a community focus.
"We've been consistent for the last
12 years on format, but it has been
scaled down in the last few years,"
Anderson said.
The scaling down of the festival
resulted in the formation of a restric
tion that requires booth operators to
be Chapel Hill residents and partic
ipants to register on a first-come, first
serve basis, she said.
Apple Chill's focus has been on
entertainment over the years, and this
year's festival is no different, An
derson said. A variety of acts will be
featured, including the Cane Creek
Cloggers, the Durham Dolls Baton
and Pompon Corps, and the medieval
combat of the Society for Creative
Anachronism.
Craft booths will contain various
See APPLE CHILL page 6
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DTH Elizabeth Morrah
in front of the post office on
improve communication, students say
tions are priorities.
Many of them said the biggest
problem is that students often don't
find out about administrative deci
sions until it's too late to change them.
The number of new faces that will
soon appear in the administration
a new chancellor, a new vice chan
cellor of business and finance, a new
Smith Center director and probably
a new provost will offer students
a rare opportunity to establish a
Forum focuses on campus racism
By LYNN AINSWORTH
Staff Writer
Greater understanding and
increased awareness of racism on
campus must be UNC students'
primary goals if the problem is
to be solved, according to par
ticipants in the Student Leaders
Forum held Thursday night.
About 60 students gathered in
the Pit to hear representatives
from six campus organizations
discuss the racial problems they
encountered while holding office.
The forum, moderated by civil
rights leader Reverend Robert
Seymour, was the last in a series
sponsored by RACIAL, an
organization created to address
racial problems at UNC.
Education is necessary if cam
pus racial problems are to be
solved, said Kenneth Perry, Black
Student Movement president.
Many white students falsely
believe the BSM is concerned
only with radical black issues, he
said.
"I try ... to help people to
understand, hey, this is what we're
See FORUM page 9
turn to be as great as he pleases. - Jeremy Collier
Campy Y may mioH:
Cm
By JUSTIN McGUIRE
Assistant University Editor
The Campus Y's budget request
may not be considered during Sun
day's Student Congress budget hear
ings, unless the Campus Y amends
its constitution to comply with
congress rules.
Gene Davis, Rules and Judiciary
Committee chairman, said the Cam
pus Y's constitution does not include
a necessary clause stating any amend
ment to the constitution must be
approved by congress.
This clause in any group's consti
tution is necessary to receive Student
Government recognition, which is a
prerequisite to receive congress
funding, Davis said.
To receive funding from congress,
a group must submit its constitution
for congress approval.
About 15 groups did not include
the necessary clause when they
originally submitted their constitu
Finance
romps''
By JENNY CLONINGER
Assistant University Editor
The Student Congress Finance
Committee slashed more than
$23,000 from budget requests of 24
groups during an emergency meeting
Wednesday to balance the budget bill
the committee will present Sunday to
the full congress.
The allocations the committee
recommended during budget hear
ings were about $22,000 over the
congress budget. Committee
members voted on motions for
further budget cuts at the meeting.
The committee recommended large
cuts in the budgets of Student Legal
Services and the Yackety Yack.
The committee made an $8,327 cut
in Student Legal Services (SLS)
relationship that could solve the
problem.
"Problems come up where we're
not informed early enough, and we're
put on the defensive," said Carol
Geer, Carolina Athletic Association
president. "Even though we haven't
been here 20 years, we do know what
is going on in student minds. (Hardin)
needs to be aware that when he finds
out about issues he needs to seek
active input from us."
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Carol Geer and Kenneth Perry
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tions, but only the Campus Y has not
added the clause, Davis said.
The budget committee has recom
mended allocating $1,705 to the
Campus Y this year, strictly for
summer funding. The group raises its
own funds during the regular school
year.
Brock Winslow, Campus Y co
president, said the group has not
complied with congress because it
believes the amendment would give
congress more power over campus
groups than groups would like
congress to have.
More importantly, Winslow said,
the congress has not given the group
sufficient time to review the possible
amending of its constitution.
"They've given us a month to
decide if we want to amend a doc
ument that's 128 years old," he said.
The Rules and Judiciary Commit
tee gave the Campus Y an extension
until 9 a.m. Sunday, when congress's
committee culls
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Budget requests 6
recommendations for staff salaries.
SLS is funded by Student Govern
ment and a special student activities
fee. The office offers free services to
all registered students, Ryke Longest,
SLS treasurer, said.
SLS salary allocations were raised
5 percent, but the committee had
prev iously recommended a 10 percent
increase. SLS was the only organi
zation whose salary allocations were
raised at all.
"These salaries are not in the same
category as the other groups' sti
pends," Donald Esposito (Dist. 12)
said. "These people are depending on
full-time salaries."
SLS salaries are becoming less and
But it is important that students
take the initiative to establish com
munication, Geer said.
"I'm not going to sit back and wait
for him to figure out what we're all
about," she said. "It is a two-way
street."
Several leaders agreed, saying
educating the chancellor about stu
dent issues is crucial.
Neil Riemann, speaker of the
Student Congress, said a body that
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participate in a forum discussing
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final budget hearings begin, for the
group to consider amending its
constitution.
The Campus Y has a 10-page
constitution and more than 500
members, which creates more admi
nistrative problems than many other
student groups, Winslow said.
"This poses a lot of problems from
an administrative point of view," he
said.
Davis said although the rule requir
ing the clause has not been strictly
enforced in the past, congress decided
to enforce it this year.
"I felt it was necessary to use the
requirement this year in order to
comply with the rules," he said.
Winslow said the group has never
had to worry about the rule before.
"They've never enforced it before, and
we've been receiving summer funding
as long as anyone can remember," he
See CAMPUS Y page 6
less comparable to attorneys' salaries
in other areas, and turnover may
become a serious problem, Longest
said.
"We're basically going to cross our
fingers and hope that no one decides
to leave SLS," he said.
The committee slashed the Yackety
Yack budget recommendation by
$2,600. The cuts came from the
group's printing, publicity and pho
tography supplies budgets.
If the recommendation passes, the
Yack may have problems working
within its reduced budget, Kelly
Sherrill, Yack business manager,
said.
The group will increase its push for
See BUDGET page 8
represents diverse interests, like the
congress does, can educate the
chancellor about student opinions.
"From the congress' point of view,
the change that needs to happen is
that the chancellor has to listen to
congress," Riemann said. "Any time
you rely on one person, you get a
very constrained view of what the
issues are. I see a lot of ways for
See CHANCELLOR page 8
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DTHElizabeth Morrah
race relations at the University
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