MTiteTJ''tr''''Hr''i'"" ynf ii" """j" """ 'u ' "i""'tijrJ'f"'"' 1 4U '" ""UJ U" " "4 T i NCAA (19) Duke 79 (4) Houston 74 (2) Georgetown 59 (11) Purdue 67 (9) Oklahoma 93 Stanford 75 (13) Wake Forest 77 Virginia 65 Providence 38 Michigan 64 Colorado 80 UCLA' 64 Maryland 66 Dayton 72 Louisville 85 (12) Tulsa 102 (14) Arkansas 59 fib) Texas El Paso 73 Clemson 65 (3)DePaul 71 (8) Memphis State 78 WichitaState 97 Texas 41 Wyoming . 66 I . ,- .. . '.' .- , ' " .'. ... .. ... '". 1 J11 . . . . """ '". ...!.'!' "" ........ .. . ' ". . ., """ . , 11111111 . - : 'J ' " J.. . .. Ill l.lll.lll Ml.. . ...I. INI. . ,1.1. ...1,1111111.11. ..HJIII .. I I I .1. . .'ill . ,' , , h i in ' 1m Weather Showers likely this morning, clearing with partly cloudy skies this afternoon with a high near 60. Low tonight near 30. Deadline nears Tuesday is the last day to drop a class or to declare it passfail. Time's running out! Copyright 1984 The Daily Tar Hed. All rights reserved. Volume 91, Issue 136 Heels takeoff after technical stop Terps By MICHAEL DeSISTI . Sports Editor N.C. State's Jim Valvano lamented Saturday about having been the first team to play North Carolina since its only loss of the season six days before. Lefty Driesell should have been lamenting about being team No. 2 post-Arkansas, but the Maryland coach was a little less eager to speak and not only about un enviable scheduling circumstances. North Carolina survived its rebounding blues and returned to early first-half form Sunday, breaking open the game and handing Maryland a 78-63 loss before a capacity Carrnichael Auditorium crowd and a national TV audience. The Tar Heels turned a one-point deficit midway through the second half into an insurmountable lead with 15 un answered points following a technical foul called on the Terps' Ben Coleman. Based on the 5:23 without a Maryland basket that followed, the foul seemed to be the emotional turning point of the game. Except perhaps to Driesell, who wouldn't say. Was it a legitimate technical? "No comment." The key to the game? "No comment." Two minutes after Maryland took the lead for the first time Sunday, Coleman elbowed North Carolina's Matt Doherty in the back at midcourt, drawing the . technical and putting Sam Perkins at the line for one shot. Perkins' conversion tied the game at 53, and then the show began. After Steve Hale chased an errant Ter rapin pass into the stands and fed Michael Jordan for a rock-a-baby dunk with 8:23 to play, the lead stood at six. And after Jordan slipped past the Terps' Jeff Adkins four minutes later, crammed one in over Coleman and cann ed the free throw, it was 70-55. "This was a good ballgame up until the last four or five minutes," Driesell said. If not understandably partisan, Driesell's watch seemed to be a few minutes slow. North Carolina, coming off a 95-71 Vietnam intervention interpreted By KEITH BRADSHER SUff Writer Almost every military intervention of the past decade has sparked worries that the United States faced "another Viet nam," but few people have accurately ap plied the lessons of the American war there, a panel of UNC and Duke Univer sity professors said in a seminar Satur day. "When someone gets up and says, History proves...,' be careful," said James Leutze, Bowman and Gordon Gray professor of history. Herbert Bodman, professor of history, Federico Gil, Kenan professor of political science emeritus, and Timothy Lomperis, a Duke visiting professor of political science, joined Leutze on the panel. One Exum, Parker debate UNC housing, phones; runoff set for Tuesday i s :. ' '. j; -1 --,111 I .1,..,. - 11 " ' Paul Pcrtccr thrashing of N.C. State Saturday in Chapel Hill, clinched the ACC regular season championship with the win. The Tar Heels are 23-1 overall and fl-0 in the conference. Maryland, which needed three over times to defeat the Tigers at Clemson Saturday, didn't improve its chances of moving back into the Associated Press top 20 and fell to 16-7 overall, 5-5 in the ACC. "I think it fired us up," Jordan said of Coleman's technical. "We just wanted to play a good, fair ballgame, and cheap shots don't seem fair to us. It got our in tensity up and we started playing." Jordan finished with 25 points to ex tend his string of indescribable perfor mances another game "It's pretty hard to give rankings," coach Dean Smith said. But perhaps more important for North Carolina was the play of sophomore Brad Daugherty, who was coming off an 18-point game against State. Daugherty bettered Saturday's point total by two on nine-of-12 shooting from the field and picked up a team-high five rebounds, a valuable commodity for the Tar Heels these days. North Carolina was outrebounded by Maryland, 28-20, but offset its board play with 64 percent shooting from the field and 100 percent shooting from the line. The type of defensive intensity that forc ed 18 turnovers didn't hurt, either, j. Paugherjty. said, while the Tar Heels did hveRTjusfify their No? 1 ranking, which held even after the one-point loss to the Razorbacks Feb. 12, it wasn't the public that wanted the ranking justified. "We didn't really want to show the people we were No. 1," he said. "We had something to prove to ourselves." Not to mention Maryland. North Carolina established itself early in the game, virtually ignoring the Ter rapins' man-to-man defense while capitalizing on the errors produced by its own. The Tar Heels ran off 10 straight points in 3:26 to take an 18-6 lead just 7:48 into the game. See HEELS on page 2 of a series sponsored by the Program in the Humanities, the seven-hour seminar in Beard Hall dealt with "American Foreign Policy and the Lessons of Viet nam." Each panelist drew different, specific lessons within his specialty, while warning against the formation of general conclu sions about U.S. military interventions. "There are lessons in the parts," Lomperis said. "There are not in the whole." ' Lack of detennination and conviction among national leaders, combined with low levels of popular support for regimes, doomed South Vietnam to collapse, the panelists agreed, put in Lebanon and El Salvador the United States is now sup porting oligarchies afflicted with the same flaws, Bodman and Gil said. In Vietnam and now in El Salvador thoughts of withdrawal were too readi ly dismissed, Gil said. Certifications of progress in building popular support and curbing human rights violations, have been awarded too readily. "Only cosmetic measures are required on their part," he said. In Vietnam and now in Lebanon, U.S. foreign policy makers are too reluctant to See VIETNAM on page 2 By DICK ANDERSON Staff Writer Disagreements over dormitory integration, telephone service and other issues sparked a lively debate between student body presidential candidates James Exum and Paul Parker Sunday night. During the debate, sponsored by Henderson Residence College and held in Conner dorm, Exum said he supported Student Government's proposed housing plan. By expanding the roommate questionnaire current ly sent to all incoming students by the department of housing, he said racial barriers would be broken down and responses would reflect students personal tastes, rather than whether a person is black or white. ; Dorm integration, Exum said, "is going to happen, and this plan is going to help it. We don't have a MasonDixon line here. We have one united campus." "In theory and in goals, 1 think the Student Govern ment plan is good," Parker said, "but it's like the United Nations. What good does it do?" Parker said task force reports had indicated that 16 percent across-the-board integration of blacks in dor mitories was not favoicd. He recommended more con Serving the students and the Monday, February 20, 1934 ; $ ,..V kow ... f'Y V-' " 4tt V's i 7 .9 "-.v.-.-.-; . --.s.-w . xr. Sr.-.-'--- : :c.- - vs. :'-, y a N;, f z v.' -Cv f) a : -vJ ' ' mm-. Y- , w" - i 't- WlttV ' r-yr t vv h ili- ' r? - , i i i; iihy. . . Michael Jordan hangs ten and his tongue on way to two of his 25 points Sunday in UNC's 78-63 win over Maryland. UNC women's swim team wins fourth consecutive ACC title By GLENN PETERSON SUff Writer The UNC women's swimming team had to invent a new way to celebrate the winning of yet another ACC champion ship Saturday at the Duke Aquatic Center. UNC's senior class of swimmers has won the ACC championship every year, and this time every member of the team, along with coach Frank Comfort, dived from top of the 10-meter diving platform in a victory leap. The celebration was well earned as the Tar Heels won 12 of the 20 events and went on to score 590 points in topping Virginia, which scored 501 points, Clem son, N.C. State, Maryland and Duke. Comfort and Sue Walsh picked up in dividual honors to go along with the team's victory, as Comfort was named coach of the year in the ACC and Walsh was named swimmer of the year in the' conference. crete measures be taken before a decision is made. The future of telephone service in dormitories,; an issue that had widely divided Exum and Parker, was also raised. Parker, as he has stated throughout the campaign, said the University must own its own phone System. While he acknowledged that the initial expense involved in implementing the system may be more expensive than other alternatives, Parker said that "Centrex, in the long run, may very well solve our problem." Exum, consistent with his previous statements, disagreed. "I think there are times when we have to listen to the experts," he said. "Of all the options we have right now, Centrex is the most expensive. "For right now, let's be pragmatic. Let's get a little common sense. Let's not have a quick fix that's going to win a lot of votes," Exum said. Parker and Exum also were at odds with each other over on-campus construction. Exum said the construction was a necessity a "catch up" program to meet the needs of the increased student population over the last decade. "1 think it's not catching up," Parker said. "Catching lipTs putting big buildings on campus fields." Additional University community since 1893 Chapel Hill, North Carolina UIHJett Neuville "Being named coactf of the year is an honor for our entire staff and our entire program," Comfort said. "The honor does not just belong to myself. I also thought it was justified that Sue was nam ed swimmer of the year." - Justified indeed. Walsh participated in six of UNC's 12 victories with three individual wins and three relay wins. She won the 100-yard backstroke in 56.33, the 200-yard back stroke in 2:01.68 and the 100-yard free style in 51.45. Walsh also swam in vic tories in the 200-yard freestyle relay, the 200-yard medley relay and the 400-yard freestyle relay. "I didn't expect to be named swimmer of the year," Walsh said. "I didn't think that I had s,wum that well, but I guess somebody did. I was just happy to win the award with my parents at the meet." The team's victory was expected, Walsh said, but many of the swimmers were trying to meet NCAA qualification See SWIMMING on page 7 Court sets for Hiday appea By MARK STINNEFORD Staff Writer Chief Justice J.B. Kelly said Sunday that the Student Supreme Court would probably set Friday as the date to hear an appeal from Daily Tar Heel editor can didate Jeff Hiday, who was disqualified from the race by the Elections Board for submitting a compaign spending report late. Kelly said the hearing could not be held any sooner because the Elections Board, which has been named as defendant in the case, is busy organizing runoff elections to be held Tuesday. The court will probably hold a pre-trial hearing on Wednesday to determine the questions to be settled in the case, Kelly said. "We're moving as fast as we can," he said. Hiday expressed concern Sunday that the lateness of the hearing would give him little time to campaign for a runoff if his disqualification was overturned. But Kelly said any runoff in the DTH race would not have to be held on the Tuesday after the hearing. "I would be inclined, if there was a runoff, to give it a week," he said, adding that the scheduling of a runoff would also depend on the time required by the board to set it up. Elections Board Chairman Andy Sutherland said the board considered ask ingjhejaffirilo delay all runoffs until the DTHcase "could be settled, but decided against it. "We are concerned with our obligation to the student body, and the student body expects the runoffs Tuesday," Sutherland said. "By law, the elections are Tuesday." On Tuesday runoffs will be held bet ween James Exum and Paul Parker in the student body president race, between the ticket of Scott Wierman and Sally Pistole and the ticket of Steve Fetter and Laquet ta Robinson in the senior class president race. Runoffs will also be held between Barbara Mason and Thomas Kepley in the senior class treasurer race, between JHlHVMMIr' ' ' 'iWHMKv ' T"1-Til mi(iriTll"A'Tw- -------J- flw .Carolina swimmers celebrate at Duke Saturday, and for good reason, as UNC women won fourth straight ACC championship. construction could be done on the outskirts of campus, he said. Exum questioned the necessity of restructuring Stu dent Government into the "project specific" committees Parker advocated. "Those committees have not been set up arbitrarily; they've been set up very well," Exum said. "They work ed with Mike Vandenbergh. They didn't work with Kevin Monroe. (The problem) is not the structure." "That's not true," Parker said. "It certainly is," Exum replied. . Parker and Exum agreed that each would ask the other candidate to be a member of his cabinet if elected. Both also advocated reaching greater "numbers of students on issues through forums. The question of eliminating Student Government also surfaced. "Student Government is vitally important," Exum said. "If you take away Student Government, you take away the opportunity to deal with the administration." Parker said: "I can understand the apathy, 'If I felt that I had to vote for another executive branch likt we had this year, I wouldn't vote to spend $50,000 on it." NewsSports Arts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 Steve Reihard and Doug Berger in the District 1 Campus Governing Council race, and between John Reed and Beth McPherson in the District 6 CGC race. Hiday said Sunday he would contend ' that the Elections Board misinterpreted the portion of the General Elections Laws dealing with the submission of financial statements. The portion of the laws in question reads: "Any candidate who fails to sub mit a financial statement within the specified amount of time, including ex tensions, if granted, shall be disqualified . from that race or from participation in a runoff election, if necessary, by the Elec " tions Board." ; Hiday said the words "if necessary" gave the board the power to decide whether a candidate's late submission of a financial statement warranted dis qualification. In disqualifying Hiday, several board members said the law left no room for interpretation. In a complaint submitted to the court, Hiday also contended' that, according to the Elections Laws, a candidate may not be disqualified unless he committed a violation that materially affected the out come of the race. But Assistant Student Attorney General David Maslia, counsel for tm; defendants in the case, said the board acted according to the law in disqualify ing Hiday. "It's unfortunate that the Elections . ;Iws don't offer the board or iis chair marra bit more .latitude' in mteipretation of the laws," Maslia said. "That (the law) is probably the culprit here, not the board. "If Jeff has fallen victim to anything here, it's the laws, not the board. They did their job." Hiday's complaint also charges that the Elections Board did not live up to its responsibility to ensure that each person voting in Tuesday's election was a registered fee-paying student.. The re quirement that each voter show his stu dent ID was not enough to ensure the stu dent was registered at UNC, Hiday said. See COURT on page 3 DTHLarry Childress V Jd.nes Exum

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