i WV - -V. ... . ,V,W. . . . .V. . . .V.W.V.V.-.W. A v . . . .V . - W . Wtf V. .V. . WWW ASA -W', -V.V. .V. A A.AV. .'WMy. AVAJA WWXvW . . .
Chicago
Tampa Bay
Green Bay
Detroit
27 New England 20
19 Cleveland 24
43 Philadelphia 21
10 New Orleans 23
San Francisco 38
Atlanta 1 7
Cincinnati 20
N.Y. Jets 29
LA Raiders 19
Kansas City 10
Minnesota
LA. Rams
Denver
Houston
10 Seattle
13 San Diego
31 Dallas
20 N.Y. Giants
26
21
30
29
WFL Football
Indianapolis 49
Buffalo 17
Miami
Pittsburgh
24
20
Cool out
Sunny today with a high of
68. Tonight will be fair with
a low of 42
Copyright 1 985 The Daily Tar Heel
Volume 93, Issue 76
DopDemmaft
to soDdcM
AiMca
By GRANT PARSONS
Staff Writer
A State Department official will visit
UNC today to solicit opinion on U.S.
policy toward South Africa from a
group of university representatives.
The luncheon meeting, scheduled for
12:30 p.m. in the Club Room of the
Carolina Inn, will feature Richard Viets,
former U.S. ambassador to Jordan and
Tanzania and now a career minister in
the Foreign Service.
The State Department is soliciting
opinions nationwide from student
leaders, University administration and
faculty, businessmen, religious and
labor leaders, and state and local
government officials. The meeting is
closed to the general public.
"It's to be an exchange of ideas, a
dialogue," said Jo Collinge, a State
Department spokeswoman.
Viets will make opening remarks
about the U.S. government's policy in
South Africa and then allow for
discussion.
"What we are looking for is input
from concerned individuals that might
be useful to us to make a positive change
in South Africa," as opposed to the
sanctioning sought by Congress, Col
linge said.
James R. Leutze, history professor
and departmental chairman for UNC's
curriculum in peace, war and defense,
organized the meeting and is in charge-
of inviting the students.
" We have tried to see that represen
tatives from a variety of campus groups
are present so that Ambassador Viets
can get an accurate reading of our
views," Leutze said in a prepared
statement.
Students invited include Student
Body President Patricia Wallace, Black
Student Movement President Sibby
Anderson, Daily Tar Heel Co-editors
Arne Rickert and Dave Schmidt, and
UNC Anti-apartheid Support Group
member Herman Bennett.
Leutze also said that although there
would be strong feelings about South
Africa, the meeting was to be an
See VIETS page 7
Georgia Tech slaughters
Black Watch
By LEE ROBERTS
Sports Editor
ATLANTA Rarely has a North Carolina football team
been so totally dominated. Rarely has a Georgia Tech football
team been so totally dominant.
The Yellow Jackets, on a crisp autumn afternoon, tarred
and feathered the Tar Heels 31-0 Saturday before a Grant
Field faithful of 35,625 and a regional television audience.
The domination went farther than just the score. Tech
amassed 451 yards total offense to North Carolina's 129;
had 21 first downs to UNC's eight; had control of the ball
for 18 minutes longer than the Tar Heels did; and ran, passed,
kicked and tackled their way to a 3-1 record and the first
shutout in coach Bill Curry's six-year tenure.
The shutout was the first against North Carolina, now
2-2 on the year, since a 21-0 loss to Kentucky in the 1976
Peach Bowl, also held in Atlanta.
"I'm thrilled and happy, as happy as IVe ever been of
my team," Curry said from an elated Georgia Tech side
of the stadium. "We can't play much better than that. I
can't think of anything off the top of my head we could
have done better."
While Curry and his crew were celebrating, North Carolina
coach Dick Crum quietly answered questions from a circle
of reporters on the other side of the stadium.
"We thought we had some things going offensively, but
they just didnt materialize," he said. "We just had no offensive
rhythm. I'm not sure what happened defensively."
I
Can ci"iIhiB
afi E-Snaans;...
4 DirojjtLiiired
mm
life ends at 40
V
V - h ,
J; ' x o
rt t j t
f I x c rl I -
f J V S S v
"-;:::: :';( V y..:::-:W$ Vv&ww.v
i s ' : -
I 1 f '- j
J ( a , V1
DTH Charles Ledford
UNC Field Hockey coach Karen Shelton gets a after the Tar Heels beat No. 1 ranked Old Dominion,
victory ride on the shoulders of her team Saturday ending ODU's40-game win streak. See story page 6.
strikes 31-0 domination
By LORETTA GRANTHAM
City Editor
Two UNC students and two
passengers from Raleigh were
injured when their car flipped after
running off Ridge Road on South
Campus early Saturday morning.
. The car smashed into the Ehringh
aus dormitory sign and two han
drails before landing upside down on
the driver's side next to a tree, said
Officer Joe Layton of the Chapel Hill
Police Department.
Samuel C. Walden and Greg
Stewart, both of Teague dormitory,
were injured along with Mitchael
David Grissom Jr. and David
Public opinion
TfO
o
t W W
1 A '
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Monday, October 7, 1985
Carolina
0
9
The tone of North Carolina's day was set by its first two
possessions. UNC fumbled on third-and-three on its first
drive. They recovered, but had to punt. The Tar Heels were
an abysmal two-for-15 in third-down conversions, while
Georgia Tech was 10 for 18.
North Carolina quarterback Kevin Anthony (12 for 26
passing for 66 yards), two plays after being slammed by
Tech defensive end Pat Swilling, threw a hurried pass that
resulted in an interception by Mark Hogan and the end
of drive number two.
The Yellow Jackets had the ball on UNCs 36 and
quarterback John Dewberry (9 for 14, 143 yds., two TDs).
drove them to the 10. On a third-and-seven play, UNC's
Reuben Davis burst through the line and sacked Dewberry
but was called for a face mask penalty. First down. Three
plays later Dewberry dove in from the one, Thomas Palmer
kicked the conversion and it was 7-0.
On its next possession, Georgia Tech drove 69 yards (58
of them on a wild cross-field scamper by 5-8 freshman Jerry
Mays) and Palmer kicked a 19-yard field goal for a 10
0 lead.
Palmer missed a 42-yard effort after a 12-play Yellow
Jacket drive, and then with 7:43 left in the half Dewberry
led the Jackets on a four-play, 73-yard drive. The scoring
play was a 59-yard bomb to a' wide-open Gary Lee on a
post pattern for the 17-0 lead.
See SLAUGHTER page 7
Booker of Raleigh, Layton said. He
said he could not identify the driver
without the police report, which will
be available today. '
Layton also said that he did not
know the extent of their injuries and
that he thought Grissom and Booker
were N.C. State students.
The car, a light-colored Datsun
280-Z, was traveling uphill on Ridge
Road toward the dormitory when
the accident occurred around 1:50
a.m.
Calling the accident a "one-car
collision," Layton said the charges
were pending an investigation.
in this country is
U
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Festifall '85 displays colors
JowMown comes
By KATHERINE WOOD
Staff Writer
Music filled the air, voices inter
mingled, and exhibits beckoned to
passersby as Festifall 85, sponsored by
the Chapel Hill Parks and Recreation
Department, took over parts of Frank
lin and Henderson streets Sunday. .
Onlookers browsed through exhibits
of jewelry, pottery, leather and woven,
items, stained glass displays, wood
crafts, floral arrangements, baked
goods and a variety of other displays
and crafts.
Janet Resnik, who exhibited her
hand-crafted pottery, said she had set
up displays in the last 10 Festifalls.
Having turned her pottery-making
hobby into a career, Resnik said she
goes to other street fairs such as Apple
Chill each year. "Festifall has a very
receptive audience, and it is the best
single place in the whole state of North
Carolina to make the most money per
minute," Resnik said.
Sara Peach, who has set up craft
displays for two years at Festifall, said
the event was the "best show for one
afternoon in a limited time." Peach said
she attended Penlahd Craft School in
Penland where she learned how to
transfer photocopy imagery from paper
to fabric. This technique makes decor
ative designs for pillows, pillow shams
and wallhangings that are unusual
enough to be eyecatching and conven
tional enough to appeal to customers,
Peach said.
Elizabeth White and her daughter,
Kimberly Glasser, displayed various
types of home-baked breads. They also
sold copies of "A Beverage Collection
from A to Z," their own publication
filled with many of their original
beverage recipes as well as others they
have collected through the years. The
book is scheduled to be advertised in
See FESTIFALL page 7
everything Abraham Lincoln
o
aodlso Dnlffts eirdleir
o
By KATHY NANNEY
Staff Writer
A Wake County superior court judge
lifted a temporary restraining order
against the state's new pornography law
Friday, allowing the law to be fully
enforced while reinforcing its
constitutionality.
' Dismayed remarks could be heard
from video store owners seated through
out the courtroom as Judge Henry V.
Barnette Jr. lifted the temporary
restraining order, first dissolving the
order against the obscenity statutes and
later dissolving the order against the
statutes relating to minors.
Possible threats to the rights of video
store owners were outweighed by the
need to protect society from obscenity
and minors from sexual exploitation,
Barnette ruled. Any possible infringe
ment on a store owner's rights could
be dealt with in court on a case-by-case
basis, he said.
The temporary restraining order had
been issued to prevent enforcement of
the law against approximately 50 video
store owners who filed lawsuits Monday
and Thursday, contesting the constitu
tionality of the new law.
. The law, which went into effect last
Tuesday, makes the sale and distribu
tion of obscene materials a felony. It
also includes a "harmful to minors"
'statutue requiring that sexually explicit
and obscene materials be inaccessible
to minors in businesses serving minors.
David F. Kirby, attorney for the
video store operators, attacked a
portion of the new law which makes
illegal the creation or distribution of
material containing a "visual represen
tation of a minor engaged in sexual
activity."
, Sexual activity as defined in the new
law, includes "touching, in an act of
apparent sexual stimulation or sexual
abuse, of the clothed or unclothed
genitals, pubic area, or buttocks of
another person or the clothed or
unclothed breasts of a human female."
Kirby and attorney Robert E. Zay
toun showed clips of six films, including
Endless Love, National Lampoon's
Animal House, and Summer of '42 in
an attempt to prove that the new law
was too broad. In each clip, actors
portraying minors were engaged in
sexual activity.
"In addition to these films, there are
other R-rated films in which there are
jj
agaoirosft pem law
.tits. : f
DTH Larry Childress
Chapel Hill's Festifall provided fun for all ages including this youngster who
wasn't about to let go of her balloon., Festifall hosted an array of exhibits.
A big blank
That's what the four teams
that played UNC's women's
soccer team drew over the
weekend. UNC ousted its
opponents 27-0. See page 6
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 862-1163
actors depicting minors engaged in
sexual conduct," Kirby said. "I hope the
court gets some indication that the
restriction imposed by this statute is
substantial." .
The state does not plan to censor
material because it deals with minors
and sexual themes, said Thomas J,
Ziko, associate attorney general. The
state wants to protect actual minors
from being filmed in real sexual acts,
not preventing actors from portraying
minors, he said.
"What is prohibited is the use of
minors to add whatever reality the
producer wants," Ziko said. "It is not
the state's intent to deal with the
portrayal of themes."
In dissolving the injunction against
the statutes dealing with minors,
Barnette said he was concerned how the
law would be interpreted in cases
regarding actors who were under 18,
but that the threat of exploitation of
minors outweighed his concerns.
"Even if I don't like some of the things
that might happen with this statute, I
don't know if they will," Barnette said.
In trying to prove the obscenity
statutes of the new law unconstitutional,
Zaytoun said he was not trying to prove
that obscenity was protected by the First
Amendment, but that the new law was
too broad. '
Because the new law does not say that
a work must be taken as a whole to ,
be judged obscene, it means a work of
literary value may be declared obscene
on the basis of a small section of that
work, Zaytoun argued.
... . Edwin M. Speas, attorney for the
" state, argued that the 17. S. Supreme
Court as well as state courts had already
declared that a work must be judged
in its entirety when determining obs
cenity. Even though specific language
was not in the new law, the courts
protect works from being judged in
part, he said.
The new law eliminated the adversary
hearing, in which a judge would have
to declare a specific work obscene and
order that the work not be sold before
a person could be charged with selling
obscene material. Attorneys for the
plaintiffs also said that the elimination
of a hearing to determine whether
material was obscene meant that
operators can be prevented from selling
See HEARING page 7
aDowe
mm
x