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Serving the students and the University community since 1893
e . Copyright 1988 The Daily Tar Heel
Volume 96, Issue 49
Monday, September 26, 1988
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
Business Advertising 962-1163
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Dishing it out
UNC parent Phyllis Bare enjoys a banquet in the Pit sponsored by
Marriott Corp. for Parents Weekend. The picnic followed a Saturday
call poll
By ERIC GRIBBIN
and CHRIS LANDGRAFF
Staff Writers
Michael Dukakis scored a narrow
victory in Sunday night's presidential
debate in Winston-Salem, according
to a study of debate viewers directed
yitoomi
faculty ray, .Hardin says
By LYNN AINSWORTH
Staff Writer
UNC Chancellor Paul Hardin will
continue to push for a tuition increase
in order to raise faculty salaries and
deal with other University funding
problems, he said Friday at the first
meeting of the General Faculty and
Faculty Council.
Hardin said he would be a "per
sistent and quiet advocate" of a
tuition increase, but only if UNC were
Hospital employees arrested
in. connection with drag probe
From tafl reports
Two North Carolina Memorial
Hospital employees were arrested and
four others were suspended as a result
of an ongoing investigation of illicit
drug use at the hospital, a spokesman
said Sunday.
Augusta Alphonso Carson and
John Henderson Jones were arrested
Wednesday in an employee locker
room by hospital security officers and
State Bureau of Investigation agents,
said John Stokes, director of public
affairs at the hospital. Both were
dismissed from their jobs in the
Students offer alternatives to
By JAMES BENTON
Staff Writer
. Students are being expected to bear
the burden of UNC's parking prob
lems, and faculty and staff need to
share the load, student leaders said
in a parking counterproposal submit
ted to the Chancellor's Traffic and
Parking Services Committee Friday.
The counterproposal suggests 13
alternatives to the committee's seven
point proposal. The committee's
proposal includes the elimination of
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by Frank Biocca, UNC journalism
professor.
The study measured the reactions
of 100 people watching the debate on
TV at two-second intervals during the
debate. Audience members used
hand-held dials to rate the candidates
worn
allowed to keep all of the revenue
generated by such an increase. Uni
versities within the UNC system now
return all unspent money to the
General Assembly. Under the present
system, additional revenue from a
tuition increase would not necessarily
return to UNC.
Hardin did not say how much of
a tuition increase he favors.
"I am not a high tuition advocate,"
Hardin said. "I think that to achieve
hospital kitchens.
Carson, 28, of 310 Crest Dr. in
Chapel Hill, was charged with pos
session of cocaine with intent to sell.
Jones, 23, of 736 Pritchard Ave.
Extension, was charged with obstruc
tion of justice.
Four other employees were sus
pended from their jobs, but hospital
officials will not release their names
until the investigation continues.
The investigation began Aug. 30 in
response to a tip about cocaine and
marijuana use in the hospital from
resident sophomore parking and an
increase in student fees to pay for
public transportation.
The counterproposal will be dis
cussed at the Friday committee
meeting, and leaders said they
expected action to be taken on
campus parking policies.
The counterproposal makes 13
suggestions to ease the campus
parking crunch. The suggestions'
include the following:
B establishment of a test lot for use
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DTH Brian Foley
afternoon pep rally at Polk Place. This year's weekend was
moved to the fall in hopes of attracting more participants.
on a one to seven scale ranging from
strongly dislike to strongly like.
The audience, composed of unde
cided voters selected at random from
the Forsyth County area, gathered in
a large theater at Forsyth Hospital
in Winston-Salem.
d help
our vision we not only need to protect
our strength and our relatively
favored status, we need to maximize
our resources and private gifts."
UNC would remain a competitive
university for both in- and out-of-state
students if tuition were raised,
he said. The cost of a UNC education
would still be considered a bargain
when compared to other state uni-
See TUITION page 4
an anonymous source that may have
been a hospital employee, Stokes
said.
The investigation will continue, he
said. "It's very likely that other
dismissals or suspensions will happen
as a result of this investigation."
"The drugs involved were entirely
illegal street drugs," he said. "No
pharmaceuticals that might be used
in the hospital were involved."
None of the employees who are
being investigated are people who
care for patients, he added.
by faculty between 5 p.m. and 9 p.m.
Monday through Thursday; ;
H reallocation of transportation
fees among students, faculty and
staff;
B a return of the student allocation
of parking spaces to Student Govern
ment, which is similar to academic
departments' issuance of parking
permits among their members; and
' B including faculty and staff in the
2-mile radius parking restriction for
commuting students, which would
considerably helped by being dead. Robert
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Though viewer response fluctuated
during the debate, the audience
reacted positively toward both can
didates, giving Dukakis an average
rating of 4.74 and George Bush a 4.72
rating, Biocca said.
"Not trading arms for hostages was
a very high-scoring point for Duka
kis," Biocca said. "He scored about
six on this point. We are in the process
of breaking down the (absolute) high
and low points for each candidate and
at which point they occurred."
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Parental pointers
Professor Paul Brandes discusses parent-student
communication Saturday. His speech was a part
parking committee's
open up 560 spaces on campus. By
comparison, 311 spaces would be
recovered by elimination of resident
sophomore parking.
The counterproposal is in response
to the committee's seven-point pro
posal. The seven suggestions made by
the committee include elimination of
resident sophomore parking, a $2 fee
on parking in certain lots between 5
p.m. and 9 p.m. Monday through
Thursday and a $25 student trans
portation fee to pay for increased bus
amid d
take
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By SHARON KEBSCHULL
State and National Editor
With George Bush calling himself
"more in touch with mainstream .
America," and Michael Dukakis
saying "the best America is yet to
come," the 1988 presidential candi
dates debated for the first time
Sunday night at Wake Forest Uni
versity in Winston-Salem.
In the 90-minute debate, the can
didates addressed a wide range of
issues, from national health care to
defense issues.
Jim Lehrer of PBS's MacNeil
Lehrer Report moderated the debate,
which featured questions from Peter
Jennings of ABC News, John
Mashek of the Atlanta Constitution
and Anne Groer of the Orlando
Sentinel.
Lehrer began the forum by asking
the candidates what they would do
about the country's drug problem,
since polls have shown it to be the
No. 1 campaign issue.
"WeVe seen a deterioration of
values," the vice president said. "I
think we've condoned what we
Although all audience members
were undecided before the debate,
they were classified as Democratic,
Republican or Independent on the
basis of political "leanings," Biocca
said.
"Generally, the reactions were
positive for both candidates.?Among
Democrats, the average reaction to
Bush was 4.58, while Dukakis
received a 5.01 rating. Average
Republican reaction to Bush was
5.02, with Dukakis receiving 4.19.
of the Parents'
page 5).
service.
The student response said the
committee's findings were inaccurate
because of the ways information was
gathered from students last semester.
It also said the current proposal is
"systematically biased in favor of
faculty and staff interests" while
opposing the needs of resident and
commuter students.
Student Body President Kevin
Martin said the proposal was com
posed of ideas from student leaders,
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date
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shouldVe condemned."
Rather than legalizing drugs, he
said, the government should be
tougher on those who commit drug
related crimes, and schools should
instill values in young people through
the schools.
While Mass. Gov. Dukakis agreed
that values are most important, he
said those values should be demon
strated to children through the
nation's leaders, noting the Reagan
administration's dealings with Pana
manian strongman Manuel Noriega,
who has been indicted on U.S. drug
trafficking charges.
"WeVe been dealing with him and
he's dealing drugs to our kids," the
governor said. "Values began at the
top in the White House."
Seven previous administrations
dealt with Noriega, Bush said, and
it was not until Reagan's term that
solid proof of drug trafficking
allowed officials to indict him.
Bringing up the much-discussed
debate over the Pledge of Allegiance,
See DEBATE page 6
Among Independents, a, critical
group, Bush scored 4.82 and Dukakis
scored 4.64," Biocca said.
"Basically, neutrals (Independents)
made their decision on the basis of
the debate," he said. "Before the
debate, 20 percent of the audience
were neutral; after the debate, 5
percent were neutral."
The debate was a key point in the
campaign which formed a lasting
impression in the minds' of most
voters, Biocca said.
DTH Doug Habberstad
Weekend activities (see story,
proposa
students who were present at three
parking forums last week and discus
sions with Mary Clayton, director of
transportation and parking services.
Martin said the counterproposal is
better than the committee's proposal
because the counterproposal is drawn
to "spread the burden between faculty
and staff as well as students. The
needs of students were not being
taken into consideration, he said.
See PARKING page 2
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