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B-4 The Daily Tar Heel Thursday, April 24, 1980
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Ups and downs
Carolina's rising star, the basketball, was picked up by its
women's team and carried to London, where the Tar Heels f
won the London International Tournament. The team also I
placed second in the National Women's Invitational Tourna
ment in Amarillo, Texas. Some things around Chapel Hill
changed: A city zoning ordinance led to a ruling that the
familiar pink pig above Crook's Corner Barbecue had to
come down, and UNC's new student infirmary was com
pleted and opened for business.
Graduate students scored a major triumph in a February
referendum victory which guaranteed them 15 percent of all
graduate student fees in the future. The decision stood up in a
lengthy Student Supreme Court case, the graduate side of
which was led by Roy Rocklin and Wayne Rackoff.
Other things, though, remained the same, as freshman
James Worthy got in several crowd-pleasing slam dunks V
before being sidelined just after midseason with a broken
ankle. Despite player illness and injuries, the Tar Heel men's
basketball team compiled a 20-6 regular-season record and
stood at 21-7 after the 1980 ACC Tournament; the team lost
its first game of the NCAA tourney to Texas A&M, though,
and saw its hopes for a top national finish dashed for the
third year in a row.
DTK Scott Sharpe
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DTK'Arden Dowdy
Hello, sunshine
Spring sunshine arrived in Chapel Hill with all of its
accoutrements baseball, a cheerful mascot and
rambunctious youngsters to enjoy the warm weather. The
University community said a not-so-fond farewell to the
Servomation food service company, which will be replaced
by ARA Inc. May 19.
Debate over curriculum changes for the General College,
proposed in a committee report headed by Professor Weldon
Thornton, was carried to every corner of Carolina's
academic community, although many students ignored the
commotion and remained unfamiliar with the basic
proposals of the Thornton report.
The tenure process at UNC drew fire in the fall of 1979
when African and Afro-American Studies Curriculum
Director Sonja Stone was denied tenure and again in the
spring when geology Assistant Professor Judith Moody was
denied tenure.
Students welcomed back the sun during an April 19
concert in Kenan Stadium, soaking up rays and beverage
blissfully to the sounds of Bonnie Raitt, the Atlanta Rhythm
Section and those eternal teenyboppers, the Beach Boys.
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