Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 19, 1982, edition 1 / Page 6
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M 6,The Daily Mr Her! 'Fririnv November 19. 1982 V Cam pus Ca Ij KNDAH Compiled by Janel Olson Public service announcements must be turned into the box outside DTtl oITkxs in the Carolina Union h I p.m. it ibcy arc w run the nexl day. Only announcements from UniuTMiy-iwotmied and campus Hl!amain)n will be primed. AH amtouixviHi-ni iiiii-j be limited to 25 words and can only run for two days. TODAY'S AcnvmKs Com five blood al aa upcoming Mood mo bile: noon to 5:30 p.m. today ai Morrison, and 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Monday in i he Great Hall. IVvrtopmmlftl Dkabiliiin Training Imtitale U presenting a workshop on "Serving Pmoro with Mental Retardation and Assaultive. Destructive, or Self-Injurious Behaviors, at the Civic Center in Raleigh. Tttr f avillrOrf-ainpiH CkapW of lainrvanity will hold a meeting in the parlor of the Chapel of the Cross. Ralph and Hilda Brillain will speak on spiritual gifts. COMING EVENTS Don't forget tht Wesley Found tioa'i annual Tbaaksjivtaj Pot luck Dianrr at 6 p.m. Sunday. There will be a L'NC CycDa Club rid at I p.m. Sunday. It leaves from Carr Mill. The Caroiina Uahw Forum Committee will meet at 6 p.m. Monday at Jordan's. The L'NC Womea'i VoOeybal dub will hold an important meeting for those interested in participating in USVBA spring tournaments at 7 p.m. Monday in the Carolina Union. The Order ol the Bel Tower will meet at 6; 30 p.m. Monday m 221 Greenlaw IMI AIKSIX' Pink Former will hold a meeting at 3 p.m. Mon day. Afterwards, there will be a brief general members meeting. Dr. Ford Range and Dr. Richard Andrews will speak on "Public Involvement in Hazardous Waste Facility Siting" at noon Monday in 207 Hamilton Hall. The Outing dub will hold a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. Monday in the Caroiina Union, followed by the regular meeting. This is the last chance to plan a trip for Thanksgiving' break. Di-PU wB bold elections at 7:30 p.m. Monday, convening in the Di Chamber. The Dialectic Society will caucus at 7:15 p.m. Required! Circle K will bold a potluck dinner Monday. Meet in the Union Lobby at 5:45 p.m. for a nde. Call 942-2521 to sign up. The Occupational aad Enviroamental Health Actio Croup will sponsor a panel discussion on "Legal aid Technical Lessons from Warren County PCB Disposal" at 1 p.m. Mon day in 249 Rosenau Hall. The Opera Theater will present Mainly Mozart, Viennese Coffeehouse Entertainment at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Com munity Church on Mason Farm and Purefoy Roads. Wrestlers hope to set lineup By BRIAN HANEY Slaff Writer Losing several close matches in the semifinals prevented the North , Carolina wrestling team from defending its Monarch Invitational title last weekend. The Tar Heels fell to ACC foe Clemson, 157-149 tin the 20-team field. Still, head coach Bill Lam was pleased. "Basically, I'm pleased with the efforts and the performances our guys had," Lam said. "We are still looking for improvement as .the. year goes on. We have had an ex cellent preseason." Indeed, . the Tar Heels looked ready for a tough season. Junior 190-pounder Bobby Shriner was the sole individual champion for UNC. Freshman Al Palaciq finish ed second in the 118 class while sophomore John Aumiller captured second at 126 pounds. Four wrestlers placed third. Junior co-captain Bill Gaffney . finished third in the 1 67-pound class. Freshmen Randy Lowery, Chip McArtle, and Tony Laslandra finished third in the 142, 118, and heavyweight divisions, respectively. This weekend also will be a test for Lam's young team. On Satur day at 7:30 p.m., the wrestlers will compete against each other in the annual Blue White meet. This intra-squad match will be impor tant, for determining a starting lineup. ... The match will pit Al Palacio against McArtle at 118 pounds. Bill Christie, a sophomore, will chal lenge Aumiller for the spot in the 126-pound class. At 134, junior Darren Phillips and freshman Kevin Jacoutot will battle it out. Lowery and fellow freshman Leo Palacio will wrestle for the opening at 142. Sophomore Scott Sanniota and freshman Tad Wilson will compete at 158. Tim Plott, a junior, and Matt King, a freshman, will wrestle in the 150 match. Freshman Geoff Cramer will challenge Gaffney for his starting spot. Freshmen Burke Cessna and Tracey Davis will wrestle at 177. Stacey Davis will wrestle Shriner. And, at the heavyweight class," junior Tommy Gorry will wrestle Lasalandra. "Academic pressure, and ad justing to the pressure of college life has really been tough," Lam said about his young performers. "We have had to hold out some wrestlers until second semester." In conjunction with the BlueWhite match, the Tar Heels will host the 10th annual Fall Wrestling Clinic. Approximately 200 children and 50 coaches from North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia are scheduled to attend. i r ,ifmt mmmmtmmi ) 'Injuries may be factor in early-season test I LATE SHOWS FFfi & SAT Quadrophcnia 12:00 Only $2.00 Richard Pryor Uve On Sunset Strip CAROLINA CLASSIC KATE HEPBURN & CARY GRANT 3:15 in 5:05 HOLIDAY 12:00 . f-H'' IBM rPMWWH ... : k k u. I n X v.; UV7 s f i wvO i ; , i j NX , X, - N , Sis s y: '. f -' HALH01ER00K 1 IfflHW I 7.nn . Q.i(- 'mmmm ""f"."M" J .'-uu 9-15 Jr. - miL, X X t - 1 1 i ' -:-.::.v:;:::.--.: . i ? v , I y " - ; j I I , I "' - i .. ,. ? 'Of ' - t ! . . . x.v ! x;j " v : j I ff.w- X x V-. rw f kx ? X , , ,., . -x ! : t ': . , ' . ".Sr - : . ' ' ' i X ' ' x ' , - ' N v I i . .v . ' x . .. MARK HAMILL- HARRISON FORD CARRIE FISHER BILLY DEE WILLIAMS ANTHONY DANIELS , DAVID PROWSe KENNY BAKER PETER MAYHEW FRMM OZ STARTS X east FnA::sui linn 2:30 4:45 7:15 9:30 By S.L. PRICE Sports Editor The hunt to dethrone 1982's national champion Tar Heels begins Saturday at 2 p.m., when North Carolina opens the '82-'83 collegiate basketball season in the Hall of Fame Tip Off Qassic against the St. John's Redmeru And if there is any time to go in fdr the kill, this is it. The Tar Heels have been limping through the last four weeks of prac tice, plagued by one injury after ancJther. Michael Jordan broke his wrist; Sam Perkins sprained his knee. Backup big man Warren Martin suffered a stress frac ture in his left foot, and no one knows when he'll be back. Freshmen Brad Daugherty and Curtis Hunter missed two weeks of practice because of pulled muscles; But besides causing a lot of groaning, the collective sprains and pulls also cut down on the team's practice time together. And coach Dean Smith has yet to say who'll be taking over the forward spot vacated by Los Angeles Laker James Worthy. After last week's Blue-White Game, though,. Smith said he wasn't sure whether Daugherty, sophomore John Brownlee, or junior Timo Makkonen have matured enough to contribute. It just might be that ,Smith will go with a smaller lineup to start the season. He could move junior Matt Doherty to big forward and Jordan to small forward, and start either Hunter or sophomore Buzz Peterson in the backcourt with point guard Jim Braddock. If the lineup is going to be small, it had better be tough. St. John's returned all five starters from the 21-9 scmad that lost crackdown to Alabama in last year's NCAA tournament. At 6-foot-6, pre-season All-American guard Chris Mullen comes back from a sparkling freshman campaign, where he sported a 16.6 points-per-game average and was named to the All-Big East second team. Senior guard Bobby Kelly tossed out 139 assists without him, coach Lou Carnesecca said, the Redmen would be in trouble. - - In the frontcourt, Carnesecca can brag all day about AH American candidate David Russell and sharpshooter Billy Goodwin. Russell led the Redmen in scoring last year with a ' 17.4 average, popping for 54 percent from the field and grab bing 6.9 rebounds. And Goodwin came out with a 14.7 ppg.f but always played better in the big games 26 points against Villanova, a last-second shot to beat Boston College. The only suspect spot in the St. John's lineup is at center, where 6-foo-10 Jeff Allen (4J ppg., 3.8 rebounds) and 7-foot Bill Wennington (3.2 ppg., 4.2 rebounds) are known for their non-aggressive style. ; Don't expect any run-and-gun affair: both teams are known for their many strategies, and St. John's runs as many pat terns as anyone in the country. There will be no shot clock, no three-point line. And Carnasecca, with a 294-1 10 record, is used to winning. St. John's is a tradition-laden basketball school. If the Tar Heels can't get it all together by Saturday injuries and all the Hall of Fame Classic might prove for the Tar Heels a most dangerous game. From page 5 Alan Briggs, General Counsel with the North Carolina Academy of Trial Lawyers, said the academy would be wary of some specific points in the recommendations. "We have some concerns about some of the specific concepts that are embodied," he said. "I think there are a lot of controversial pro posals, without any question the automatic confiscation of a license, for example." In addition to the immediate 10-day revoca tion for driving with a 0. 1 percent blood alcohol content, the task force proposed extending the period of license revocation from six to 12 months for refusing a Breathalyzer test, v XT Bored? Road the Daily Tar Hool and be rescued! CGC Briggs said the North Carolina Academy of Trial Lawyers would want to ensure that, "what we think are the fundamental rights of the in dividual are upheld." One controversial proposal recommended that tavern owners selling alcohol to under-age or drunken people be charged with civil liability, he said. Briggs said this would be like any case of negligence where there would have to be suffi cient proof that the tavern owner was negligent. "There are cases where I think we would agree that it is a valid question," he said, add ing,! "It's not an easy.thing to prove at all.".r , Rick Ghoens, state field coordinator with the North Carolina Beer Wholesalers Association, said the lobby group was unprepared to make a statement. "We're going to review the findings and decide then what we're going to do," he said. "There's no way we can evaluate something un til we have time to review it." Gov. Hunt a week ago said he would support the proposals in the 1983 General Assembly. He is expected to include his recommendations on . drunken driving in a special message on crime, probably in February. G From page 1 Under the Finance Committee's proposals, the paper would also return to the budgeting process. "It wouldn't be infringing on the responsibility of the DTH Board of Directors to ask them to come before us with the budget," Madison said. "The CGC won't be deciding on the budget, it's just approving it." Finance Committee member Dan Bryson (District 18) said the paper's budget was "filled with frills" such as salaries tor the editorial staff and parking stickers for some of the employees. But Drescher said the DTH budget was lean. "It's a myth if anyone thinks that our budget has any frills in it at all," he said Thursday. "We have six parking stickers. Four of them go to our full-time people, one goes to me and one goes to the photography editor, who has to have quick access in and out of the office." Drescher also disagreed about student salaries. "Twice as much student funding goes to pay three Student Government salaries as goes to pay for the salaries of the entire DTH editorial staff," he said. Although the CGC will have final approval of the. DTH budget, it will not be able to lower the amount of fees the DTH receives. "It wouldn't change the amount, but it could change the way that money's spent," Bryson said. . "They could get more than 16 percent." ( 600P A X HERE YOU ARE:.. A NICE CUP OF TEA ANP AN EN6U5H MUFFIN I ft-II I HATE THESE 'BEPAW? BREAKFAST' PLACES... j, DOONESEUHY by Gerry Ttvzzu iFZxm.vz MAJORS mippo SIP? 51 J AZ5 YOUKMViS? ufnv HM. X CALLS fm A CUECZAJai'. IFiOJ INSlSTi : rum txzzwns SZXXZCU'P US! TRIANGLE" GOMMUNITI in Chapel Hill V5' Townhouse luxury in a beautiful, residential setting. Optimum loca tion lor Chapel HM, Durham and ail the Research Triangle area. Featur ing two bedrooms, I'fe baths and dishwasher. Air conditioned, of coursa. Enjoy swimming and handy laundry facilities. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 19, 1982, edition 1
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