' c-'f Sin! fSw! Battb continues CGC Finance Committee budget hearings are covered on page 3. f I J tf Pertly cloudy and windy with 40 percent chance of shc.v ers. High today around CO, low around freezing. in if- 1 1 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Copyright The Daily Tar Heel Wtsm Che pel Hi!!, f.'crth Carolina NewsSports; Arts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 : , ij asm IX. JL "r"T" 1 T ir o.e ye ' to b: . r I 1 n) I t Hi 1 l y 1 ' . t i 4? f ' ' 'J.-; T ; r v .w'k' I ill , I J 0. i 1- f : ' y - S S , if migry ' - stop i ar Heels in jast iiiiais Ey SX. PniCE ft I' u 'V SYRACUSE, N,Y. Arid so it ends. Not in the sunkissed aridity of Albuquerque, but against the backdrop of a cold and wet city in upstate New York, the North Carolina basketball team finished another season, this time with a loss, this time just one step short of the Final Four. One hundred twenty-eight days after the Tar Heels opened their year with an overtime loss to St, John's, and almost one year to the day since they walked away with the national championship in New Orleans, North Carolina trooped out of the Carrier Dome Sunday on the short end of an 82-77 stick, vic tims in the East Regional finals of a too-quick, too hungry pack of Georgia Bulldogs. "It's hard to believe that the season is over so soon," UNC forward Matt Doherty said. "I'm not used to it, I don't like it. But it's something you've got to accept." Despite a 26-point, six-rebound effort by Michael Jordan and the fact that Georgia's tallest starter stood just 6-foot-7, the Tar Heels found themselves outrebounded 37-32, and fiat-out outplayed by a school making its first appearance ever in the NCAA Tournament. With 12:44 left in the game and the score 53-43, Georgia, UNC Coach Dean Smith called a time-out to reorganize. North Carolina center Brad Dauher ty's shot careened out of bounds, and the Bulldogs took possession. UGa's Gerald Crosby, 17 points on the day, popped a jumper to make it 55-43. Then guard Vern Homing followed with a fastbreak layup to raise the Bulldog lead to nine points. , ' North Carolina's Sam Perkins tipped in an off target Jim Braddock foul shot, but Georgia's Richard Corhen, subbing for Terry Fair, on the bench with four fouls, got behind the Tar Heel defense to lay up two more; 59-50, Georgta. James Banks, high scorer for Georgia with 20 points, converted two free throws to make it 61-50. After Perkins sank two at the line, Corhen eaia came through for the Dawgs, driving the right side and sinking a layup to make it 63-52 with S:35 left. The two teams exchanged baskets for the next five minutes, with the Tar Heels never cornmj closer than nine points. '- With 3:03 teft, North Carolina started fo;:::r.3 h:avi!y, but Banks hit both his shots, Fbmirg hit two, Crosby hit four strabht, and when the CuV.dcgs finally started to miss at the line, it was too late for the Tar Heels to make a run. Sco HEELS cn pco 4 43 5 11 7 r '1 J 4 f v. ' ,4y f : i i i ' i I J ' II ' ' " ' - - Ine Associated P?ess About 25 fans (top) we're on hand in front of Carrr.:chr.:l Audilcriurn Sunday night to greet Michael Jordan and the rest of the Tar Heels after their 82-77 loss to Georgia. In Syracuse UGa's Derrick Floyd (bottom) shows his happiness on top of the goal as teammates cut down the net. , involuted as season concludes By FETE AUSTIN Siarf VV:!er Ct.. j. :nt reaction, tiie players faces trie we all read the thing Franklin Street locked more like a I'-.z A tr.vn Sunday than the main street cf a major university town. Only a hand ful cf studits could be spotted alorg tir.z -!ks follow! L. v Iocs to Ceorgta in the Ea'.t ivCs.cn..l Fu... ..3. Poor turnout dovv-ntown cf:er the f -jr.e and for. the team's arrivd in Chr.pd IO served as a g:vj;: fcr over;;! ti'.:izrX re:::l:cn. "I'm redly i:-,:Trd-'.:cJ (v.di t!.; ! : :), but I don't thid; it was r rer.s. fault," said Jeanrue Stockard, a At 3 p.m. there were two couples, besides the bartenders, at Linda's Bar cn Columbia Street, and they were too preoccupied with each other to want to comment on the game. A bigger crowd convened at TroTs, but only two femde graduate students of the 30 patrons locked up from the Houston-Vilianova game to ccmmer.t cn Carolina's loss. "It (the loss) is too bad, tut we'll g:t them next year," one student said. :fct. "I'm surprised that smdl.r team cf Cctwe;:! 2: 45 p.m. and 2:55 p.m. Sun- Georgia could outrebcur.d the Tar treshman ironi uraham. t'it's just one of thor.e things." "It was the worst game I have ever seen in my v.hole life," said Lauren "We dli't vent it bad enough," said freshman Ercrda Gain en. "I tL'r.k we wanted it too bad," said arx--h:r frechman. "We just couldn't get everything tcget!.;r," she sdd. Ar; arcr.rly t:u-:nts preferred not to drown their sorrows following the d'y, c cr.i l:.zy er red the Happy :z cn Fr:r.'.I!n Street. ; i : J ; if ivrre students went to I.'l::r)' rf;:r the game than went Heels," said Mike Finegan, a freshman from Hickory. "Th:Lr s:cc-d-cl:ac? shots are what turned the game arcu.'.d." Despite interrd'.tcat rain ar.. i a !:e tu j arrivd, 25 loyd fans mat the team whan It arrived at Carmichaei Auditorium at 6:30 p.m. "I think the team was a little nervous, but they could have played better," said Nancy Lee, a senior from Lillington. "I came (to welcome the team . back) because Fm proud of them no matter what." , "I think we were riding last year's reputation," sdd Alice Marshbanks, a sophomore ako from Lillington. "Peo ple just naturally assume that since we are Carolina, we'll do great." "Other teams celebrate winning their first-round game, while we don't go spastic until the Final Four or eight," Lee said. Sco CRYING on page 3 1 UIUU msQ cision By JOSEPH BERRYHILL Staff Writer - A UNC professor of political sdence said Friday that he planned to challenge a decision not to reappoint him to the facul ty when his term expires in 1984. Assistant Professor David J. Garrow, who teaches courses in constitutional law and civil liberties, said he was notified of the decision not to rehire him in letter dated March 23 and sent to him by James W. Prothro, chairman of the political science department. In the letter, Prothro said that Garrow's colleagues felt his work "does not repre sent a sufficiently high level of scholarship and that it is not in the subfield of public law Prothro also said in the letter that Gar row's colleagues felt that Garrow had not made a contribution to the ''general quali ty and reputation of the department." Garrow's undergraduate teaching "was assessed quite favorably," according to the letter. Garrow said that he was surprised that he was not reappointed to the faculty and said the reasons for his dismissal were puzzling. "Some people have what is to my taste a very narrow definition of political science," he said. Garrow has written several works on the subject of civil rights, including two books about Martin Luther King Jr. Garrow's Protest at Selma; Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 won the 1978 Chastain Award of the Southern Political Science Associa tion for the best book on the politics, government or public administration in the South. His latest book, 77z? FBI and Martin Luther King, Jr.: From "Solo" to Mem phis investigates the FBI's spying on King. In Prothro's letter to Garrow, Prothro sdd that there were some faculty judg ments that Garrow's work "has been closer to investigative journalism than to basic scholarship." Garrow said he disagreed. "My notion of political science is that you are writing about political behavior and political ac tion," he said. "I think anyone with any common sense can recognize that writing about the civil rights movement and the FBI and why the FBI has gone after people is clearly political analysis." Garrow also said the political science department should consider the value of his work to the University as a whole. "I think there is a question as to whether the department's judgment of what is political sdence is in the best in terest of the University," he said. Garrow said he intended to apped the department's dedsion with the College of Arts and Sdences. "I'm going to follow through with that process with the hope that the administra tion will give very careful consideration to what Prothro is recommending," he sdd. Neither Prothro nor David H. Moreau, David J. Garrow . acting dean for the College of Arts and Sdences, would comment Saturday on Garrow's case, diing state statutes which prohibit discussion of confidentid person nd matters. But Prothro did expldn his depart ment's guidelines for reappointing faculty members. He sdd that assistant professors were hired with a four-year probationary term, during which the assistant professor ' was evduated by full and associate pro fessors for reappointment in the third year of the term. Prothro sdd the politicd sdence depart ment used three criteria to dedde whether or not to reappoint faculty members. The criteria are teaching, research and service to the department and academic com munity. The probationary term has been used by the politicd science department for five years, Prothro sdd. "During the five years, Garrow's is the first, case in which .we've had to make a recommendation for non-reappoint-ment," Prothro sdd. . The decision on Garrow's case was made Monday, March 21, after a secret ballot vote by the department's full and assodate professors which resulted in nine votes for reappointment and 10 votes against, Prothro's letter stated. A two thirds majority is necessary for the vote to be considered a recommendation for reap pointment, Prothro sdd in the letter. The faculty vote is considered a recom mendation to the department chairman, who makes the find dedsion .whether to reappoint, Prothro sdd. Garrow sdd that if he won his apped, he would stay at the University. "My basic feelings about Chapel Hill and UNC are very positive," he sdd. "The centrd issue is that they (politicd sdence faculty) are using a definition of politicd sdence which is just astoundingly narrow," Garrow was appointed to the faculty in 1980. He received his Ph.D. from Duke University in 1981. . L, U.S. must cut spending By TOM CONLON Staff Writer Speaking before the , N.C. Student Legislature Saturday night in downtown Rdeigh, U.S. Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., sdd that while the short-term economic outlook was excellent, the long term outlook showed future .recessions unless spending cuts were made. The speech rounded up the four-day an nud NCSL ; conference, which was then followed with a dance and a traditiond roasting of the outgoing NCSL governor, Jos D'Amico, a UNC student. Mark Lewis of UNC-Charlotte is the incoming governor. Approximately 30 UNC students took part in the conference. "Interest rates have come down and an nud inflation has decreased from 13.3 per cent in 1979 to 3.9 percent in 1933," Prox mire told the group. "Interest rates are the ' one factor that push us into recession more than any other factor." Interest rates have dropped from 18.8 percent in 1931 to 10.5 percent today, Proxmire added. "However, the recession of 1QS1-1932 is likely to be repeated again because the federd government has to borrow every penny for deficits," Proxmire said. "We've had to borrow S100 billion this year, which has been our largest federd .deficit' to date. Next year we'll top that with $200 billion." While inflation should stay down in 1533 and 1934, unemployment is still the most ' serious problem, Proxmire said. However, Proxmire said that one advan tage of high unemployment was that wages have been kept down and people are will ing to work for less and less with greater productivity. , . "The key to recovery is to get the leaerai aencu aown, froxmire saia. 10 do that we have to take the two and most difficdt actions hold down - popular tin.. u fied," Proxmire sdd. "No one wants a tax increase, and politicd action committees IftUVV JUVil UtllUViiWV lA.Ut- fcl.VJ vm.. ; legislation," Proxmire sdd. "To do away with tax loopholes we need to have a pro gressive federd income tax which would .eliminate 'the Nelson Rockefellers - who escape taxes through legd means." Proxmire dso sdd that the military could, be better by improving leadership and pride within the services instead of in creasing unnecessary equipment, and that spending for two aircraft earners was too costly. "We already have enough to wipe out the Soviet Union over and over agdn even if they hit us first," Proxmire sdd. Hedth program costs have risen because insurance, companies rather than in dividuds pay the bills, Proxmire sdd. "Medicare began in 1966 with a $3.4 billion budget," Proxmire sdd. " In 1 932 it was $50.7 billion and will double every four years. Fifteen years from now the costs will be greater than the entire federal budget." Six million jobs could be provided if the nation resorted to a seven-hour workday and 35-hour. workweek with double time for all overtime work, Proxmire sdd. "Employers would be agdnst this because they'd have to pay more fringe benefits, but it would cut unemployment in hdf," he said. Proxmire is known for his Golden Fleece Awards, awarded periodically to recognize wasteful government spending. One award went to a U.S. Navy captain at Camp l.ejeune who spent a large amount to redecorate his office.