The countdown continues: seven days left after today oxw Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volumo 97, Issue 31 Tuesday, April 18, 1939 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 Business Advertising 962-1163 liniiTOirsMes react 30 chance of rain, high of 80 today continued warm with some clouds Wednesday f -. X-r if $1T u vr to ctmt Negative impact predicted at UNC By MARK FOLK Staff Writer A $3 million budget cut from non personnel state funding at UNC could have a severe negative effect on the University's academic departments, administrators and department chair men said Monday. The cut is . part of the Office of Management and Budget's 5 percent across-the-board withholding of budgeted appropriations for all state institutions and agencies. State Other system schools assess effects By AMY WAJDA Assistant University Editor Advanced planning will help some UNC-system schools survive a 5 percent fourth-quarter budget cut, but others will need more state money to last until the end of the fiscal year, UNC-system university officials said Monday. East Carolina University (ECU) will not be able to pay faculty salaries if it does not receive additional state allotments, said ECU Comptroller Stadeimt By RHETA LOGAN Staff kVnfer A UNC student has filed a libel suit against The News and Observer Publishing Co. in Raleigh, claiming that an April 3, 1988, article in The .News and Observer, portrayed her as . a racist. Sophomore Christine Nashick filed a complaint March 31 in Craven County Superior Court, regarding an article written on race relations at UNC. The article, which focused on SETA president ireportts death threat, By JAMES BURROUGHS Assistant University Editor The president of Students for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (SETA) received a death threat and several harassing phone calls on Friday and Monday because of his involvement with animal rights. Christopher Smith, a graduate student in the School of Social Work, discovered the first messages on his home answering machine Friday afternoon and reported the threats to the Carrboro Police Department Friday night. Police let Smith keep the tape and told him to contact them if further threats occurred, Smith said. DTH judged region's best college daily From staff rtports The Daily Tar Heel (DTH) was selected the best student daily news paper in the region by the Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ) Saturday. Two UNC students also won Mark of Excellence Awards presented by SPJ. The region comprises North Caro lina, Virginia, Maryland, Washing ton, D.C., and Delaware. Pete Corson, a sophomore political science major from Raleigh, won first place in the cartoon category. Corson submitted three cartoons focusing on campus issues that appeared in the DTH last semester. Jeanna Baxter, a junior journalism and political science major from High Point, received second place for sports writing for a feature story that appeared in the High Point Enterprise. Susan Summey, president of UNC's SPJ chapter, said the awards were a great reflection qn the Uni versity. "We probably could have won many more awards if more people had submitted material." The winners in each category will now compete in a national compe tition in Houston. A Sim ftmoidDini officials say the cut was the result of unexpected expenditures by some state organizations and a decline in the state's revenue. UNC Controller Neal Berryman said these cuts had the potential to do a lot of harm to the University. "They are going to be severe, unless some budget corrections are made. We're hoping that it (the state) will be able to increase the allotment before the quarter is over." The University first learned of Dan Bishop. "We could reserve money for salaries, but we would have to cut off expenditures for everything else." The cuts will mostly affect ECU's summer program, making it impos sible for the university to pay summer faculty salaries, Bishop said. ECU's health sciences division will also suffer without additional allot ments. If salaries are paid, the operating budget will be hurt, espe cially the purchase of medical equip fife Dnfod y 3 i asai nsl R& sophomore Julie Haizlip, Nashick's roommate at the time, did not name Nashick, but according to the com plaint, did "assault ... the plaintiff . . . and maliciously and without just cause attempted to convey to the readers . ... that the plaintiff was a racist." The complaint cited a part of the article that said Haizlip's roommate "moved in with Julie after discovering her assigned freshman roommate to be a 'big black girl' a description she gave with a grimace. To the Another message was left on Smith's answering machine Monday. The threats followed SETA's advertisement of a workshop to be held at UNC by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PET A), a Washington-based group. Smith's phone number was on the poster advertising the event and was also listed on more than 300 fliers distrib uted to area lab technicians, Smith said. Veldt it out Daniel Chavis, lead singer of. band The Veldt, belts out some great many open v . s i . ; 4 1 - J i "Vh l-J .1 . "fi y a y A possible cuts when the state sent out a memo in December saying that the third quarter, which ended in March, and fourth quarter, which runs from April to June 30, would be tight. Despite knowing about the possi ble cuts, the University had no idea that they would come so soon, Berryman said. Some administrators are now making appeals to the state because of this short notice, he said. See IMPACT page 6 ment, he said. William Bloodworth, ECU's vice chancellor for academic affairs, said ECU was trying not to cut academic programs. "We are doing careful planning of expenditures during the final quarter in hopes we will avoid severe damage to academic programs. "Hopefully the cuts will not affect salaries and educational supplies and equipment, but we may have to cut See SYSTEM SCHOOLS page 6 roommate, having a black roommate was intimidating and was not some thing a person should be subjected to." The newspaper refused to publish a retraction even though Nashick asked it to do so two times, according to the complaint. Attorneys for the plaintiff and the defense will soon begin the discovery process, a pre-trial procedure of information-gathering, said Hugh Stevens, attorney for the publishing Students involved with SETA, an organization officially recognized last year, have never received threats of any kind until now, Smith said. . "This (phone) number had been a public number before. It's a little unnerving when you get a threat. What I'd like to believe is that these are researchers who are angry, a little desperate and who were blowing off a little steam." The first message left on the ( X the Chapel Hill late Monday afternoon. Police stopped the concert tunes in the Pit because the band did not have a permit. minds should be ' - -" if " ' ' :.:: : : v ' ' - - i -' - J. - A He's gotta have it Award-winning actor and director Spike Lee listens to a question from the audience during company. Both Nashick and Haizlip declined to comment on the lawsuit Monday. Nashick's attorney, Raymond Dunn, could not be reached for comment Monday. News and. Observer editor Claude. Sitton said: "We have no doubts about the truth and accuracy of our story. It's up to the courts now to decide this matter." Even though Nashick was not named in the article, a judge could still rule that she was libeled, said answering machine was a man's deep voice, which was cut off at the beginning by the machine. ". . . never mind just wanted to f your organization over," the caller said. A later message, presumably the same man, said, "We know where you are, so you better watch out we're gonna kill your ass." A third message contained a voice and background similar to the first two messages. DTH Todd Scott . i I closed for repairs. Toledo Blade fx V.' X4, : :-x jp' fc NIT f r in miewsoairjxe'ir Ruth Walden, a professor of media law in the UNC School of Journalism. But this ruling would only come if Nashick proved that "a reasonable number of people knew it was her (in the article)," Walden saidV To win the case, Nashick would also have to prove that the newspaper intended the article's words to be racist and that readers interpreted the words as racist, she said. Nashick's victory in the case is phone harassment "You guys are really aholes," the caller said. "I suppose you don't wear leather belts, leather wallets, shoes, anything like that. I can't believe you idiots. What's wrong with you? You want people to become extinct? Let's be real. "I mean, uh, you guys are asinine the way you go about things. The University of Arizona you fire bombed the place. Come on, you know you don't get your point across Protest questions chancellors status By CRYSTAL BERNSTEIN Staff Writer Controversy surrounding the resig nation of the chancellor of the N.C. School of the Arts in Winston-Salem led to a protest on the school's campus and throughout' Winston Salem Monday. UNC-system President CD. Spangler announced the resignation of Chancellor Jane Milley on April 13. Milley was givqn a six-month leave of absence at her present salary and a faculty position in the School of Music for three years with a salary of $58,600, said Nancy Dawson Sauser, director of publications at the school. 'Demands for Milley's resignation were voiced in the form of a letter written by eight of the nine top administrators at the school in November. The administrators chided Milley for her discouragement of advice and input from the administration, reluc tance to let others exercise leadership, contradictory approach to commun ication, inability to delegate minor responsibilities to others, abrasive relationships with the immediate staff and insensitive attitudes toward the supporters of the school, Dawson Sauser said. . On Nov. 30, the faculty council voted that it had no confidence in Milley's leadership, and in December and January, Spangler sent a fact finding team to the school. He announced Milley would resign after DTHEvan Eile his Monday night Memorial Hall appearance. See story, page 5. u doubtful because a plaintiff has not won a libel action in North Carolina in 50 years, Walden said. The case may never go to trial, with the two sides settling through a summary judgment, Walden said. A nummary judgment is granted when ' one side "produces enough proof during the discovery period to de monstrate that its victory in a trial would be inevitable. A large percentage of libel cases in the state are, settled by summary judgment, Walden said. like that. You're scum." The caller referred to the raiding of two laboratories at the University of 'Arizona at Tuscon on April 7, when $150,000 worth of damage was done to two labs, threats were left for researchers and 1,300 lab animals were set free. The Animal Liberation Front, an animal rights group that uses such tactics in their cause, See DEATH THREAT page 2 faculty and students at the school asked for her immediate resignation in March. Milley will leave on June 30 unless students, faculty and alumni can force her to leave earlier. Many feel that Milley's leadership style conflicts with the aims of the school and that she could further damage the school's reputation if she does not leave See ART SCHOOL page 6 NCMH name may undergo surgery with merger 3 Eliminating ugly space on Franklin Street... 4 Speaker calls for journalistic freedom fight 5 Planning committee to plan foundation of new BCC ...:5 Aria ready for this? Opera outdoors! 6 UNC quelches invasion of Soviet baseball team 7 X ii cfe