ON THE RHODE AGAIN: Senior named Rhodes scholar CAMPUS, page 3 BARCELONA BOUND?: Perroni to train for Olympics SPORTS page 14 ON CAMPUS Sliced Bread, a campus satirical maga zine, will meet at 8 p.m. in 226 Union. All interested are welcome. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 C 1992 OTH Publishing Corp. All rights reserved. Volume 99, Issue 129 Wednesday, January 8, 1992 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962 024 Business Advertising 962-1163 WEATHER TODAY: Cloudy; high upper 50s THURSDAY: Cloudy; high 55-60 3 rapes reported diiriiig Winter Ashley Fogle Assistant University Editor Two incidents of rape occurring within 24 hours of each other in area apartment complexes were reported to Carrboro police during Winter Break. University Police also made an arrest Dec. 1 1 in connection with a November rape on the steps of Lenoir Dining Hall. Carrboro police Capt. Carolyn Hutchison said a 19-year-old woman Police nab downtown drug dealers By Amber N knocks City Editor Chapel Hill Police rearrested on Monday night a woman charged with conspiracy to sell and deliver crack cocaine in the latest of a string of drug related arrests in the downtown area. Lonice Sherrell Peterson, 27, of 403 W. Club Blvd., Durham, and Lawrence Derick Smalls, 27, of 5 1 7 E. Club Blvd., Durham, were arrested downtown Thursday. Peterson and Smalls were charged with conspiracy to sell and deliver crack cocaine, but Peterson was released be cause information on the warrant for her arrest was incomplete, Chapel Hill police Capt. Ralph Pendergraph said Tuesday. "We inadvertently omitted the name of the person she was conspiring with," Pendergraph said. Peterson was arrested after police officers resubmitted the warrant. Peterson was among several suspects to be arrested in the last month for drug related crimes downtown. An 1 1 -year-old boy and a 13-year-old boy were charged twoday s before Christmas with the sale and delivery of crack cocaine. Police found six double-rocks of crack cocaine, worth about $ 1 20 to $ 1 SO, in the boys' possession. Double-rocks are twice the size of normal crack co caine rocks. Pendergraph said there was another 1 3-year-old boy arrested along with the two boys who were charged Dec. 23, but police lacked sufficient evidence to charge him. "There are anywhere between five and seven kids working in the Graham Street area," Pendergraph said. 'They are all part of the same operation." The children are working with a drug operation that Chapel Hill police think is based in Durham, Pendergraph said. The children are supplied with crack cocaine, dropped off in downtown Chapel Hill in the afternoon and picked up around 2 a.m. the following morn ing, he said. Pendergraph said the children had been operating downtown for at least 1 l2monthsbeforethe arrests were made. "We knew beforehand," he said. "So we were looking for these kids." Drug dealers are drawn to the Gra ham Street area because it has a reputa tion as an open-air drug market, Pendergraph said. "Dealers can also get as much as 1 1 2 to two times the (regular) price for drugs as they do anywhere else," he said. More children are becoming involved in drug dealing across the nation, Pendergraph said. 'This is not unusual nationally," he said. "Kids are being used all sorts of ways because the penalty is less severe for them than it is for adults. A lot of these kids don't even know who they are working for." While most of the children involved in the drug trade are not drug users, they are street-smart. "When the children were arrested they did not seem to be terribly con cerned," Pendergraph said. "They didn't communicate a lot, but they didn't seem to be worried about their plight." The children, who have been released into the custody of "aresponsible adult," will be charged through the juvenile process, Pendergraph said. He would not say if the children's parents were involved in supplying the cocaine. ' Police are continuing their drug op eration investigation and hope to arrest the adults involved, Pendergraph said. Other recent police action related to See DRUGS, page 11 GS, page 11 A sagging level of American confi- See GOUDIE, page 11 turned toward Pendergrass, who diately. The only thing that goes faster than vacation time is vacation money. said a man she knew raped her in her Royal Park apartment early in the morn ing Jan. 1. The woman is not a UNC student. Police arrested Thomas Brandon Stephens, a 19-year-old UNC sopho more, of Q-1 Royal Park Apartments, at 2 p.m. Jan. 1 and charged him with the rape. The woman reported the incident at noon that day, Hutchison said. The man used physical force but had no weapon. 5 i ii - i J-1 " x & : J 1 I , - n it :' ' ' ' '''31 Qi Helping hand Tracey Rasnake, right, of Greensboro helps fellow senior Janet Tuesday afternoon. The Pugh, left, of Cibsonville move back into joyner Residence Hall weather that welcomed Republican to challenge Price for 4th District U.S. Congressional seat By Eric Lusk State and National Editor Vicky Goudie, a Raleigh Republi can, recently announced plans to chal lenge for the 4th District Congressional seat, vowing to endorse term limits for federal lawmakers, support a national health care plan and oppose tax in creases. Goudie, who will face present U.S. Rep. David Price in her bid for a seat on Capitol Hill, said she wanted to bring respectability back to a faltering Con gress. "I feel like there is a general loss of confidence in Congress. We're all frus trated by that," Goudie, 52, said Tues day in a telephone interview. "I think I can bring better representation for the families of the 4th District. At least two other people were in the apartment at the time of the attack, according to the police report. Stephens was charged with second degree rape, which is defined as forced vaginal intercourse without the use of a weapon. His first appearance in court was on Jan. 3. A second, unrelated incident took place Dec. 3 1 . A 22-year-old resident of Ramsgate Apartments in Carrboro told police she was raped in her apartment. dence in national government should be counteracted with term limits for fed eral lawmakers, Goudie said. Too many legislators have made a career out of politics a move which often leads to corruption in government, she said. As an example, Goudie cited Con gress' decision to give its members a 40-percent pay raise over the past two years. Representatives serving a lim ited number of terms would tend to concentrate on more relevant issues, she said. "If you think about how many fami lies in the 4th District have had that kind of salary increase, it wouldn't be that many," Goudie said. "I was shocked to see that." Legislation which would limit U.S. senators to two six-year terms and The woman, who is not a UNC stu dent, said that she was raped at 5 a.m. and that she knew her attacker, Hutchison said. The man did not have a weapon, she said. Hutchison said the victim's room mate was in the apartment at the time of the incident but did not know what was happening. The woman and her room mate drqve to the Fast Fare on N.C. 54 to report the incident to police at 5: 10 a.m. OTHEvie Sandlin women seemed to be enjoying the sunny students returning from Winter Break. DA determines Pendergrass justified in shooting suspect By Chris Goodson Staff Writer Orange County Sheriff Lindy Pendergrass was justified in using deadly force when he shot and killed a robbery suspect Nov. 16, Orange Chatham District Attorney Carl Fox said Tuesday. Pendergrass shot Orange County resident Albert Owen Brandon six times after Brandon attempted to rob Liner's Red and White grocery store in Efland with what authorities later discovered was a toy gun. Brandon entered the store with a bag over his head, carrying the plastic gun, Fox said. Fox said that Pendergrass, who was shopping in the store, approached Brandon from behind and asked him what he was doing. Holding the toy gun, Brandon No arrest had been made in connec tion with the incident, Hutchison said. "She is not interested (in pressing charges) at this time," she said. University police also made an arrest Dec. 1 1 in connection with a November rape case when Larry Donnel Peoples, 30, of Pittsboro turned himself in fol lowing a warrant for his arrest. A UNC student told police Nov. 21 that she was raped early in the morning Nov. 15 on the north steps of Lenoir Health buildings evacuated after threat of bombs By Shea Rlggsbee Staff Writer University Police officers evacuated five South Campus buildings Friday after an anonymous caller to Chancel lor Paul Hardin's office said bombs were in the buildings. Lt. Marcus Perry of University Po lice said no explosive devices were found in the buildings named by the caller, which were MacNider Hall, Brinkhous-Bullitt Building, Beard Hall, Lineberger Cancer Research Building and the Faculty Laboratory Office Building-More than 500 employees typically work in the buildings, but the number of employees at work Friday may have been lower because of the semester break, Perry said. The bomb threat was made at 10:35 a.m. by an unidentified female caller. Hardin authorized the evacuation. Master's student dies in plane crash in South Carolina Staff Report Melena "Lynn" Weinhold, a Univer sity graduate student, and three mem bers of her immediate family died Dec. 26 when their private airplane crashed near Hilton Head, S.C. Weinhold, 23, was pursuing her master's degree in mathematical edu cation. She graduated from N.C. State University and Salisbury High School before coming to UNC last spring. Hunter Ballew, her adviser at UNC, said Weinhold signed up to take one of his classes this spring. "She was a very hard-working, intel ligent young woman," Ballew said. "She thought Brandon's gun was real and shot Brandon three times with his .357 revolver. When Brandon did not fall, Pendergrass fired three more shots, emptying the weapon and killing Bran don, Fox said. Fox said Tuesday that Pendergrass was justified in shooting Brandon be cause he thought Brandon was armed. Pendergrass did not know Brandon's gun was fake at the time of the shooting Therefore believed that he and the oth ers in the store were in danger, Fox said. The fact that Brandon's weapon was not real does not matter, Fox said. Police officers have a legal right to use deadly force to protect themselves and others from bodily harm, Fox said. Fox said it was necessary for Pendergrass to shoot Brandon six times because an autopsy revealed that not one of the shots by itself would have ; rendered Brandon unconscious imme Break Dining Hall. No weapon was used in the attack, according to police reports. Officers said they could not say if the woman was acquainted with her attacker. University Police Lt. Marcus Perry said a warrant was taken out in the case on Dec. 9. Peoples was charged with second degree rape. Peoples was placed under $10,000 secured bond and had his first appear ance in court Dec. 1 2. which began at 12:10 p.m., Perry said. The buildings were reopened individu ally beginning at 5 p.m., he said. The buildings are all parts of the Division of Health Affairs. Beard Hall houses the School of Pharmacy and the other four buildings house the School of Medicine. A motive has not been determined, and the case is under University Police investigation. Perry said. The State Bureau of Investigation was contacted Friday to analyze the caller's credibility, but that agency is not involved in the current investiga tion, he said. George Cocolas, associate dean of the School of Pharmacy, said the bomb threat was unusual because it occurred at a time when students were on break. "Bomb scares come sometimes dur ing exams," Cocolas said. "I can't imag- See BOMB, page 11 would have been a good teacher. I was looking forward to working with her." Weinhold was a student teacher at Athens Drive High School in Raleigh before coming to UNC, Ballew said. She was working on a practicum deal ing with a new algebra program devel oped in Hawaii. Her father, mother and brother also died in the crash. Donald Leroy Weinhold Jr., 45, was a former mayor of Salisbury. Patricia Lynn Weinhold, 44, was the owner of a dance school for 1 8 years. Donald "Brandt" Weinhold, 1 9, was a straight-A sophomore at NCSU. Capt. Ben Cal lahan of the Carrboro Police Department said people have misconceptions! about the number of shots needed to disable a person. It is not unusual for a person to be shot several times without falling, Callahan said. "It's not like T.V." Fox said it would have been legal for anyone in the store to use deadly force to defend themselves because they thought the gun was real. "The clerk could have shot the suspect," Fox said. Fox called claims made by Brandon's relatives that the shooting was racially motivated "totally un founded." Pendergrass did not make the deci sion to shoot Brandon because of his race, but because he was threatening others with a weapon. Fox said. "This particular victim happened to be black," Fox said. "But he also happened to be perpetrating a crime." happened to be perpetrating a c Anonymous