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ciasring during the day. High
in the upper 40s and low
tonight in the upper 20s. Rain
chance is 20 percent.
king's birthday
Tomorrow is the anniversary of
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s
birthday. Several campus
organizations have planned
activities to commemorate this
day. See the story on page 3.
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Cy SCOTT PETERSON
Assistant Sports Editor
With 6:12 left in the first half of
Carolina's Atlantic Coast Conference
basketball game with North Carolina
State Wednesday night, senior Al Wood
left the floor with his left arm hanging
limply.
Wood injured the shoulder going up
for a shot against Kenny Matthews and
sat out the remainder of the first half.
Cut with less than four minutes gone in .
the second half. Wood returned to the
lineup and played a key role in leading
UNC to a 73-70 win over the Wolfpack.
The clincher for the Heels was Wood's
two foul shots with nine seconds remain
ing after State had pulled within one .
point on a Scott Parzych jumper with 10
seconds left.
While it was Wood's shots combined
with a charging foul by State's Sidney
Lowe that sealed the Tar Heel win,
strong inside play by James Worthy and
playmaking by Jimmy Black held off a
furious second-half comeback by State
after the Wolfpack had trailed by as
much as 14 points in the first half.
"At the end Worthy was just great
when the game was on the line," N.C.
State coach Jim Valvano said. "We just
tried to keep him out of the middle at the
end, but that's very difficult, because he
is so strong.
"Our kids did a hellavua job coming
back in the second half. It seems like in
the four games that we've played, we've
fallen behind in the first half only to
come back strong in the second half,"
Valvano said.
State battled back in the second half
to take a 62-61 lead with 5:29 left on two
annuel.
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Ey ELIZAEETI1 DANIEL
Staff Writer
Jim Hummel, a junior journalism and
political science major from Grafton,
Mass., announced his candidacy for
Daily Tar Heel editor Wednesday.
"I am basing my campaign on the
overall experience I've had at The Daily
Tar Heel and my concern over the
importance of communication between
the paper and its readers," Hummel
said. '
The major points of Hummel's
campaign include opening lines of
communication between the newspaper
staff and its readers, moving the
classified advertisements to page two of
the newspaper and solicting a wider
iz?.z of opinions on the editorial page,
. he said.
. Hummel plans to have an open
telephone line three days a week during
the campaign to encourage comments on
his campaign and the newspaper.
"Many readers feel the DTH is shut
off from them, appearing inaccessible
and uninteresting," he said.
The classified advertisements will be
moved from the sports page to the
second page of the newspaper to allow
additional sports coverage, Hummel
said.
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Craig Watts free throws after center Thurl
, Bailey, who finished with 21 points, tied
it at 60-60.
m But Worthy hit a baseline jumper to
give UNC the lead back and two short
jumpers by Elack gave UNC a five-point
advantage with 4:17 left, 67-62. A Worthy
jumper increased the lead to seven with
two minutes left before baskets by Lowet
Kenny Matthews and Parzych pulled State
within one point.
"' i ' .
"We feel very good about winning
over a well-prepared State team," said
UNC coach Dean Smith, whose Tar
Heels improved their record to 11-4
overall and 2-1 in the ACC. "1 guess we
-had. about a 12-point lead when Al was
injured in the first half. It's tough to
play without him. And, it was tough to
play without Perkins in the second half."
Smith praised Worthy and Black, who
led the Tar Heels in scoring with 22 and
15 points, including 13 second-half points ;
by Worthy. "Black played superbly
throughout the game," Smith said of the
play-making guard. "Worthy rebounded
with more enthusiasm in the second half
and that was a big factor.
"We would have gone to four corners
in the end if Perkins had been in the,
game and if I was sure Al was okay. You
know, we threw the ball away twice
down the stretch but no one will talk
about it because we weren't in the four
corners."
Perkins fouled out with 7:34 left when
he was whistled for a blocking foul
against Lowe. The 6-9 center, who finished
with 17 points hitting 8-of-9 shots, suf
fered a slightly sprained ankle on the
play, but like Wood should be ready for
Saturday's matchup with Duke.
See HEELS on page 6
v.-
Jim Hummel
The DTH will encourage professors
and students to contribute columns and
letters by letting them have a good
chance of being published, giving the
editorial page a wider range of
viewpoints, he said.
"I feel like the editor has to be a
newspaperman, a businessman, a
personnel manager and an opinion
leader and I've had experience in each of
these areas," Hummel said. "The DTH
is such a large operation you need
sbmebody who can step right in with the
knowledge of what goes on in all areas."
Hummel has worked on The Daily
Tar Heel as state and national editor,
editorial assistant, staff writer, part-time
business staffer and assistant office
manager working with circulation and
distribution. He also has worked as a
writer for the Associated Press and
United Press International.
massages contributed to the stsrt cf massage
parlors. He says those restrictions were relaxed
when nurses begn massaging wounded soldiers
during Wteild V.'ar II.
. Massage parlors sppeiied ca the. West Coast
during the izi: 1950s. T.!ese report and by the
almost every irujor U.S. city had at least
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They were often locstci alongside medical end
psychiatric offices, and minuses were white
unifenns similar to curves uniforms.
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James Worthy hooks over Scott Parzych 140) and Thurl Bailey (41)
sophomore hit 22 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in UNC's win
.candidate'
(' ' . : a.
By WILLIAM PESCHEL
Staff Writer '
Scott Norberg, a junior English major
from Washington, ri.C, announced his
candidacy Wednesday for student body
president.
Norberg said he thought Student
Government should work closer with
student groups. He said that many
student groups worked on similar
projects, but "they! are not aware of
what the others are doing." Student
Government should jback these groups,
which, in turn, "will make Student
Government more visible and a lot more
effective," he said.
Norberg, who was executive assistant
and chancellor committee coordinator
under Student Body President Bob
Saunders, said minority affairs was his
most pressing concern. "The situation
here is a lot more critical than people
realize. A lot more needs to be done,
especially with the! office of student
affairs." '
He also said he would work against
Chapel Hill's proposed noise ordinance
and for the introduction of limited book
rental for introductory courses. He said
he would work with the office of student
affairs in determining student health
needs. j
Norberg said the student body
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Scott Norberg
president must be an advocate and an
educator. "Advocacy starts here on
campus," he said, "but plays a vital role
in town affairs. We have the potential to
affect decisions. The state legislature
considers bills that would affect us on
campus, Southern Bell also. . I also
include national issues like racism. I
think we are past the quiet period of the
'70s." ;
He said he would not be quiet on
controversial issues. "If I am elected, it
' is an affirmation for the policies I
.support," he said. "I am not going to
hesitate to speak my mind just because
of some substantial disagreement with
other people."
In addition to his work with Saunders,
Norberg was special assistant for
minority affairs under J.B. Kelly during
1979-19S0. He is a member of Chi Psi
fraternity.
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WASHINGTON (AP) President
Carter bid farewell to the nation Wed-
nesday night with a solemn warning that
the danger of nuclear annihilation is
growing and the selfish desires of special
interests are assuming strong influence
over American political life.
In his last scheduled speech as presi
dent. Carter said he "can't predict yet
what will happen" to the American hos
tages whose Iranian captivity dominated
the last 14 months of his administration.
In quiet voice, he said that during his
last days in office he would work and
pray for their safe release.
Carter's speech was delivered from
the Oval Office. Seated before the desk
he is giving up there next Tuesday, he
described democracy as "an unfinished
creation," and offered his updated inter
pretation of the most oft-quoted passage
from the Declaration of Independence:
"For this generation," Carter said,
- "life is nuclear survival; liberty is human
rights; the pursuit of happiness is a planet
whose resources are devoted to the phy
sical and spiritual nourishment of its
inhabitants."
Without rekindling the debate that
marked his campaign against Ronald
Reagan, Carter said the American people
must never shrink from the struggle for
human rights, to protect the environ
ment and to control nuclear weapons
all areas where he generally differs from
Reagan.
. After the speech. Carter attended a
private vhite House reception for his
top administration officials, who had
gathered in the ' East Room and State'
Dining Room to watch the address on ,
television.
Carter departed from the text of his
speech only once at the end of his
20-minute nationally broadcast address
to speak of the hostages, who had
been conspicuously absent from his
remarks. He shed no new light on the
( negotiations that continue abroad.
In the waning days of his term, Carter
said, "I will continue as I have during
the past 14 months to work hard and to
pray for the lives and the well-being of
the American hostages held in Iran." He
added, "I can't predict yet what will
happen, but I hope you will join me in
my constant prayer for their freedom."
He did not mention the economy. ,
Another key issue that helped to bring
down his presidency.
Garter said of Reagan, his successor at
noon next Tuesday: "To the very limits
of conscience and conviction, I pledge to
support him." He wished Reagan "suc
cess and Godspeed."
Speaking in a near-monotone, devoid
of emotion. Carter expressed gratitude
to the American people "because you
gave me this extraordinary opportunity
to serve." He never mentioned their
overwhelming rejection of his leadership
at the polls last Nov. 4.
"The president b the only elected
official charged with the primary respon
sibility of representing all the people,"
Carter said. "In the moments of decision
... it is the president who then must
speak to the nation and for the nation. 1
understand after four years in this office
as few others can, how formidable is the
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9
Jimmy Carter
task the new president-elect is about to
undertake."
Carter continued to address the threat
of nuclear war, the issue of human rights
and concern over the earth's resources.
"The danger of nuclear annihilation is
becoming greater," he said. "It may
only be a matter of time before madness,
desperation, greed or miscalculation lets
loose this terrible force.
'National weakness, real or perceived,
can tempt aggression. That is why the
United States can never neglect its mili
tary 'strength. 'We must and we will remain
strong."
Carter also stressed that there must be a
concern for the environment.
"There art real and growing dangers to
our simple and most precious possessions
the air we breathe, the water we drink
and the land which sustains us," he said.
"If we do not act, the world of the year
2000 will be much less able to sustain life
than it is now."
The president also accented his familiar
concern for human rights throughout the
world.
"I believe with all my heart that
America must always stand for these basic
human rights at home and abroad," he
said. "That is both our history and our
destiny. The battle for human rights at
home and abroad is far from over.
"We live in a time of transition an
uneasy era, which is likely to endure for
the rest of this century. It will be a period
of tensions, both within nations and
between nations."
Carter warned that single-issue and
special interest groups could divide the
American people if they lose confidence in
government. .
"The national Interest is not always the
sum cf all our sbgtc or special tn!crc-:,t.it"
he M. "We are 3 Americans together
and we must not forget that the common
good is our common interest and our indi
vidual responsibility. :
The speech was the b.4 cffichJ cdJrcvs
Carter b to make over tcievhkm. 1 1 is to
send a more detailed State of the Union
address to Congress on Friday.
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