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Serving the students end the University community since .1893:
Vc!urn3 C3, Izzuo o$f
Wcsfn-cdr, February 4, 1C31 Chrpe! Hii!, fcrth Carolina
NwcSprta;Aita S33-C24S
77
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...
Th.3 ERA dshsto'" between
Catty Friedan ' sad PhyAs
Schbsfly, Monday night he 3
been schd cut. Tha debeto is
being' sponsored by the
Carolina Forum and ths
Association for Women
Students. ; :
' - on
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J Li 11 viijjj.,
IT1-
O
Cy DAVID PCOI
Sport Li'dot
Before Virginia's 0-79 ovotinie victory
over North Carolina Tuesday night, the
Cevellers bed won crJy cr.ee in
Aiiditori'jsi since Vvbrid War II.
It took somethins close to a besketbeil
v version of World War III for Virginia to
st a victory in Chapel Hill as the unde
fcettd and No. 1 ranked Cavs caught
and overtook the Tar Heels with a
furious second half rally and some key
plays in the overtime.
' Virginia's biggest weapons were 7-foot-4
center Ralph Sampson and guard Jeff
Lamp, but a free throw by Terry Gates
was the winning margin. Sampson and
Lamp combined for 53 points, with Lamp
scoring the last 10 Virginia points of
regulation.
"There's not much I can say to add to
what you saw out there," Virginia coach
Terry Holland said. "Our kids just
refused to lose.
"Give our guys credit for coming back
in overtime after losing the lead in regu
lation," Dean Smith said. "And give
.Virginia credit for coming back. They
are a great basketball team. That was a
great basketball game between two great
basketball teams."
Turnovers, missed free throws and
some tough Virginia defense spelled
doom for Carolina down the stretch of
the intense game, in which there were
two near-brawls and a lot of contact
both on and away from the ball.
The Cavaliers are now 19-0 overall
and 9-0 in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Carolina fell to 16-5 overall, 7-2 in the
ACC.
The Tar Heels lost despite 29 points
after half time by Al Wood, who finished
with 33. Carolina led for most of the
game and was ; up by as many as 16. In
f ac t, it was after the Tar Heels had gone
ahead 51-35 on a scoop layout by Mike
Pepper with 11:53 left that Virginia be
gan its comeback. '
The Cavaliers took the momentum
.away with a pressure defense that forced'
12 turnovers from Carolina after the Tar
Heels had enjoyed a 33-27 halftime lead.
Virginia cut the lead down to 56-47
when Bobby Stokes made a layup after a
steal with 7:40 left. A Wood jumper
mads it 58-49 but Stokes and Othell Wil
son scored for Virginia to pull them
within seven. A Lee Raker jumper cut it
to five.
The score was 62-57 before Lamp hit a
baseline jumper and a three-point play
on a layup to tie the score 62-62 the
first time the Cavaliers had been even
since it as 17-17 with 9:12 left in the first
half.
James Worthy gave Carolina the lead
with 32 seconds left when his shot was
ruled good on a Sampson goaltending.
; But Lamp was there again and knocked
in another jumper from the baseline to
tie it with eight seconds left.
Jimmy Black took a 30-footer just be
fore the buzzer, but the shot rimmed out
and the game went into overtime.
Sampson took control in the overtime.
The towering center, who had kept Vir
ginia in the game for the first 30 minutes,
scored 8 points in the period before foul
ing out with 34 seconds left. Virginia led
by 6 points in the overtime at 77-71 before
the Tar Heels staged a comeback of their
own.
Doherty hit two free throws and Worthy
hit a jumper after a steal that made the
score 77-75. Othell' Wilson made both
ends of a one-and-one opportunity with
16 seconds left, but Wood's jumper with
6 seconds left brought the Tar Heels
back to within 2 points.
1 x k '
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See HEELS on page 5
DTHScott Sharpe
Virginia's Ralph Sampson battlas Sam Perkins for a' rebound
...despite Al Wood's 33 points, Heels lost 80-79
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Ma sj
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71
Dy ROANN CISIIO?
SUiff Writer
their less favorable economic
Eleanor Morris, director of student
Though black students at UNC compose only 7.9
percent of the student body, they received 1 1 percent
(or $333,404) of the total amount of financial aid awarded
in 1SC0, according to a December report.
The report is compiled annually through the UNC
institute of research for the Office of Civil Rights, a
national organization.
More than 12,700 UNC students received financial
assistance In 19S0, amounting to $41,777,561. Black
students made up 1,465 of this figure while 11, 034 white
students received aid totaling $34,799, 110. .
The aid awarded came from state, federal, private
and institutional sources covering athletic and academic
scholarships, grants, loans, work-study programs and
teaching assistantships. ,
"More minority students receive aid in the student
body in proportion to the number of white students
because of
backgrounds,'
aid, said.
Tim R. Sanford, UNC associate director of institu
tional research and chief compiler of the annual finan
cial aid report to the Civil Rights Office, held the same
view.
"Blacks receive equal, if not more, aid than white
students because of their generally lower socioeconomic
levels," Sanford said. "This is not preferential treat
ment. Whites on this campus come from more affluent
families and tend to need less financial support."
However, Hayden B. Ren wick, Associate Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences, took a different view
of the matter.
Renwick said that while financial aid funding from
the federal government seemed equal and adequate,
funding from private sources at the state and local
levels were unequally distributed between black and
white students on campus.
. "The federal funding is in reasonably adequate pro
portions between blacks and whites," Renwick said.
"But once you get outside the realm of the federal gov
ernment you can see a distinct difference in the dollar
amounts between blacks and whites."
Under the categories of student employment and tuition
waivers on the report, the figures, appeared unbalanced.
In 1930, UNC student employment numbered 531
blacks or 6.9 percent of the student body, while the
number of whites employed by the University was almost
7,000 or 90.6 percent of the student body.
Thus, blacks received $869,643 (or 5.3 percent) of
the total salary supplied by institutional employment,
while whites received $14,934,643 (or 91.2 percent) of
the total work dollars.
Institutional employment is controlled through a
variety of offices and departments on campus and in
cludes teaching assistantships, library and hospital jobs.
See AID on page 2
tT1 "1
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VyYFi) i j
"7 By KERRY DEROCIII
' Staff Writer
The proposal for a 1931 Chapel Thrill
Concert was approved Tuesday by the
Campus Governing Council.
In a 1 1-7-1 vote, the council approved
an $115,800 appropriation from the Gen-,
eral Surplus fund for the April 25 concert.
"CGC Finance Chairperson Dianne
Hubbard (District 9), said at the meeting
that she supported the concert because
of the number of students it reached.
. "If the concert is successful, it enables
Student Government to provide an activity
for the students Hubbard said. : '
Members of the council, however, dis
. agreed on whether the concert was worth
risking the dollars it might lose. CGC
member Wayne Rackoff (District 1) said
he did not favor the concert because of
its financial risk and because the concert
has been funded outside of the regular ,
budgetary process.
"If you remember the saying, 'April
Showers. bring May flowers'; what you.
are doing is flipping a coin for $46,000
and that's only if there's a 5050 chance
of rain," Rackoff said. "We are talking
about a social expenditure which is some
thing everyone on the council would
have cringed at if it had been brought up
at the budget process last year."
Last year's concert, which was held
Qyj3LaJsa!saLperjpd- had, an. estimated .
loss or $9,000. Because of last year V
losses, the CGC established the Chapel
Thrill Review committee to study the
possibility of holding a concert this year.
The committee recommended to the
council in November that a concert be
held. The proposal was referred to the
Finance Committee. The committee
reached a tie vote on the concert and
sent the bill to the full council.
CGC Minority Representative Bernard
Bell said he could not support the concert
partly because it waS an entertainment
, expenditure that appealed only to white
students.
"Unless blacks and whites could be
equally satisfied then the money should
not be spent at all," Bell said. "The
council ought to consider being totally
fair and if that can't be done then scratch
the whole thing."
Rackoff agreed with Bell that the
council should recognize the rights of
people on campus who might not want .
the concert. "
"When it rains and we have to raise
the fees it's going to be on your heads,
because I'm voting egainst this thing,"
Rackoff se:J. "American democracy
was not based on only rights of the ma
jority but also based on the recognition
of minority rights."
CGC member Betsy Jordan, also
chairman of the Chapel Thrill Review
Committee, disagreed and said she sup
ported the concert because it was some
thing that affected more students.
"The whole student body may not
attend Chapel Thrill, but the whole stu
dent body does not use all of the student
organizations," Jordan said. "This is a
chance to take something to them that is
very visible." "
Because of the financial risks, the
council approved an amendment requir
ing the Chairman of the Chapel Thrill
Committee to appear before the full
council before signing any contract with
a band. This motion puts a freeze on all
money except funds appropriated for
office supplies, postage, telephone, tra
vel and the costs of tickets. The amend
ment has given the council the right to
cancel the concert at any time and at a
loss o f approximately $ 1 ,300.
Because of the uncertainty of the
" bands;,a;baf4'aid he supported -the
amendment as a way for the council to
cut losses if a suitable band were not
contracted.
"Dammit, if you, the council, are will
ing to put this money on the line from
the general surplus, then you've (Chapel
Thrill committee members) got to be
willing to come in here and talk on the
program for five minutes and get the
hands up or the hands down," Rackoff
said. "
"Chapel Thrill. Committee Chairman
Bert Johnson, however, disagreed be
cause he said the bands might want a
direct answer and would sign somewhere
else if they were told to wait.
Johnson said the committee had just
begun to look at different band, and
hoped to hear from Santana and Jeffer
son Stanhip today.
ft
dehdLie abovtiiom issue.
hlkms9 MiudmeM questdmed
By CETSY RUSSZLL
Starf W riter
In response to Sen. Jesse Helms' proposed Human Life
Amendment which would ben abortion, pro- and anti-abortion
forces, including local groups, have organized and plan to lobby in
Washington to express their concerns.
Today, the National Organization for Women (NOW) is
sponsoring a Women's Rights Lobby Day to urge members of
Congress to stop the proposed amendment which Helms intro
duced two weeks ego. Thousands are ex- r -
p:-:i to gather on Capitol I L'A to show ?
the'r opposition.
Two weeks ego, 50,000 people partici- I
riei in a "March for Life" h Washington
to lobby far the passage of the proposed
.
On that same day. Helms end Hep.
Robert Doroan (R-Ca) introduced the
controversial Human Life Amendment
whieh would reverse the U.S. Suprems
Cc u r i s 1573 vortton ru2 .
T'f' et.v ft if M f t f V Wi-'vr
n-.runt fight to life is invest ei in each hu-
man t z frc-m the mement of fcrtlliea- ?
tlon v.hhout regard to cge, health cr i
ccr.di:;en of dependency." 1
In cr':r fcr the tmer.dmcr.t to t e rati-
fi:d. Congress muit approve it by a two- ,
I " r f rfify jf
-.
a II . i Life
..!hhx U" . v
Jess 5 H
said, "The so-called Human Life Amendment is, I think, the
greatest danger to human freedom that's currently on the hori
zon in the United States." She said the amendment was "very
vague and general."
"Futher, the amendment is not a civil rights action....
They're trying to impose their religious beliefs on every one else
in the country," she said. "When life begins Is strictly a religious
issue."
Ray Warren, publicity chairman for Carolina Students for
Life, said he viewed this amendment as a .
civil rights issue. He said the amendment
) would restrict an individual's freedom in
i some ways.
1 "There is no such thing as a civil rights
law that doesn't restrict choice in some
way,"' he said. "Choice is a meaningless
! term outside of the context in v,hieh it is
j ' used. As a civil rights group, we don't
recognize the choice to take innocent hu
man lives as one accorded to people in a
civilized society. Also, the legalization
I has prompted more people to have abor
tions," he said. .
1 le emphasized that Carolina Students
for Life and 1 Icims fdHhat the rights cf
the unborn could net be bargained in any
way. cf tl : 1 :al thrpter cf NOW, sa d th:s
vkjv "an i. .e at the very basis cf a
v , rr -. f.. i -;n. Many men end women
f . , 1 it's 'i i " f. '.ment on an t. 1. id aai's
fred .,' a ij.
K. r.nM..: r executive HAT! A?
.. .teaching cucpicious students provides chillcnsca fcr teaching cssistgnts
Baspiio student concor.
A O
C JONATHAN SMVUi:
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