ytD 6 1 Election reactions j Local Filipinos react to controversial elections j tallies coming out of the j Phillippines. See page 2. The whirling winter vortex casts us under an appalling 35 degree high today. Northerners! have a heyday. Copyright 1986 The Daily Tar Heel Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 93, Issua 139 Thursday, February 13, 1S8S Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 862-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 O Straw Out on a limb " FT ' jp i 4 2 7 V V Composite of rape suspect released Police composite of rape suspect Carrboro police are searching for a black man, believed to have raped a 20-year-old UNC student in her Estes Park apartment Sunday, who resembles the man in this drawing. The composite is not a photograph, police said. It was based on witnesses' descriptions of the assailant. The assailant and an accomplice, also said to be a black man, knocked on the student's apartment door about 1 1:30 p.m. and forced their way in, said Lt. Ben Callahan of the Carrboro Police Department Tuesday. The men then tied up the two women inside. A third women entered the apartment and was also tied up, police said. One of the students was later taken into a separate room and raped, Callahan said. She was examined at N.C. Memorial Hospital and released. The men stole money, jewelry and a small television from the apartment, he said. Anyone with information concerning the suspect portrayed in the composite is asked to call the Carrboro Police Department at 942-854 1 . - LORETTA GRANTHAM Search on for kidnapper A statewide search is under way for a white man in his 30s believed to have sexually assaulted a 16-year-old white woman after kidnapping her from East Franklin Street on Feb. 5, Chapel Hill police said. The assailant, armed with a handgun, approached the teen-ager near Univer sity Presbyterian Church around 1:15 p.m. and directed her into a red vehicle, according to police reports. He then drove her to another location, possibly Cobb Terrace, investigators said, and sexually assaulted her. The kidnapper, described as being about six feet tall wth brown hair and a small mustache, is probably not in the Chapel Hill area now, police said. LORETTA GRANTHAM By TERESA KRIEGSMAN Staff Writer Few students have voiced their concerns about problems in the Division of Student Affairs, Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham III said Wednesday. There is "not an overwhelming majority of students concerned with the division, Fordham said, adding that students generally were in good spirits. But Fordham said there was enough concern for him to be involved. "As long as any students are concerned, I'm concerned." Fordham was responding to a list of grievances against the division presented to him by Students for a Student Voice (SSV) two weeks ago. The list had little specificity and documentation, Fordham said, although he said he appreciated that the list was issue oriented rather than person-oriented. Fordham said he was looking for new ways to meet with students in addition to keeping his office open to them. As one way to get student input, he formed a student-faculty panel to review the quality of the division's work. The panel will examine the six reports of a division self-study but will not complete the task until next fall. SSV spokesman Joel Katzenstein said he was pleased with Fordham's response, but added that the panel might not give seniors a chance to participate in finding solutions to the division's problems. Seniors could "leave bitter and unhappy," he said. Although some parts of the self-study will not be ready for review by the panel until the fall, Fordham said he planned to give students progress reports on the panel's actions. . ' He said he wanted seniors to have faith in the panel and keep in touch with its progress. Fordham said he did not feel the seniors lost their influence when they graduated. He said he expected their influence as alumni to be "powerful and growing." Katzenstein said he hoped the panel would do something "active, not passive." He said he had faith that Fordham would do the right thing. CGC e Hdk to SyinraposSiinirini By SUZANNE JEFFRIES Staff Writer The Campus Governing Council voted Wednesday to give the Carolina Symposium a $3,504 grant and to match 38 cents per dollar of the $9,200 the Symposium organizers expect to raise from, corporations arid -University departments. Carolina Symposium co-chairs Mike Deimler and John Taylor had asked the Council for $7,000 to enable the program to meet its $35,541 budget. Frank Whitney, Dist. 3, proposed that the Council appropriate $3,504 and match the money the Symposium expects to raise as an incentive. He said the Symposium still could get the $7,000 without the entire amount coming out of the CGC budget. Deimler said the Council's incentive was unnecessary, because he and the other co-chairs had been working on the Symposium for a year and had raised a considerable sum. Taylor said that after receiving $8,38 1 from the CGC last spring, the Sympo sium was responsible for raising the additional $27,160 from outside sour ces. The co-chairs have raised $11,000, and much of that r has come from the diahrei&iiy, hsiis&iZ. ' -yZ.Z-' ; The idea of us needing an incentive to raise money is a joke," Taylor said. "Saving money influences . . . (CGC members') decisions too much." Student Body Treasurer John Wil liams said the CGC had enough money in the general surplus to fund the $7,000. He cannot estimate the amount CGC has in general surplus, he said, because some bills have not come through yet. In an interview after the meeting, Michael Nelson, Dist. 17, said, "It's a crime not to give them the money." He said the UNC was considered one of the top 10 research institutions and programs like the Symposium bring attention to the University. "At a major research University like UNC, students should expect to have a quality Symposium," Deimler said after the meeting. "The CGC seems to think the Symposium is a luxury . . . , (but) it is an integral part of any educational experience.' Deimler said the University was supportive of the Symposium and was funding 47 percent of its cost. He said that funding should send signals to the CGC that the program is one of the most important on campus. The Symposium lecture series is titled "Technology, Society and the Individ ual," and it deals with the effects of living with technology on people. Also Wednesday, the 68th session of the CGC renamed the Student Congress met and elected officers. The new officers are: sophomore Jaye Sitton, Dist. II, speaker; sophomore Ben Burroughs, Dist. 20, speaker pro tein; freshman Jody Beasley, Dist. 16, Finance Committee chairman; sopho more Rob Friedman, Dist. 16, Rules and Judiciary Committee- chairman; first-year law student David Edquist, Dist. 1, Student Affairs Committee .chairman..--'';; '.. r:::-;.:.. In other action, the CGC allocated $852.59 to' The Cellar Door to meet publication costs for the semester. Also, the Council voted to put a referendum on Tuesday's runoff ballot to delete sections from the Student Constitution that incorporate the Association for Women Students, the Interfraternity Council, the Panhellenic Council and the Craige Graduate Center Council. Student Body Presi dent Patricia Wallace, who introduced the bill, said the sections were incon sistent, because other student groups are not incorporated in the constitution. home ifoafe to BinUse $6-79 By B. A. VELLIQUETTE Staff Writer For Pam Leake it was a rotten way to end her career at Carmichael. Playing their last home game of the season, the Tar Heels fell to Duke for the second time this year. Final score: 86-79. "There is no reason we should ever lose to Duke," Leake said after the game. But in a physical game that was marked by tentative play by UNC, that is exactly what happened. Revenge was on the Tar Heels minds when they went into the game. Early in January. North Carolina was beaten 79-78 at Duke when Carolyn Sbnzogni hit a jumper at the buzzer. Since that game, the Tar Heels went on a 10-1 tear and reached their highest ranking ever in the basketball polls this week when they were voted in at 13. Duke was ranked 20. The game started out even with each team unable to get more than a few points ahead. But with just over four minutes left in the first half, the Blue Devils finally broke the two-point lead barrier when they went up 33-30. From that moment until the end of the half, Duke continued to score in much the same way it had in the first 16 minutes. But the Tar Heels did not. The drought, caused not by poor shooting but by numerous turnovers by the Tar Heels, was mercifully cut short when the half ended with Duke leading 43 34. , Duke coach Debbie Leonard attributed the Tar Heel dry spell to the Blue Devil's man-to-man defense. "It's almost like we caught them by surprise with our defense," Leonard said. "You could just feel the confidence in our kids going up." , f 1 The second half started with the Tar Heels making a couple of quick baskets, but Duke quickly got back on track and again caused the Tar Heels to stumble. - With about 12 minutes to go the Blue Devils led by 19. Nevertheless, the Tar Heels, led by a determined Leake, made a valiant attempt to overcome the deficit. ' But despite missed shots and turnovers; by Duke, the Tar Heels were unable to capitalize on their opportunities. For example with seven minutes left, Leake and Marlene List missed back-to-back layups that would have cut Duke's lead to 11. "We have people who normally score and didn't y ( 111 : Jllilllit V i w-x f .N V if" i ' 4 OTHDan Cnarison Senior Pam Leake moving upcourt against Duke's Connie Goins in her final Carmichael game . .::: , ' ' ' - V If V mm- i n '- I a -, V ,ivtv' ;t"' v 4 v i tlt ft Z f t , - f X ill a 2' 4 V DTHCharlotte Cannon Elizabeth Morrah, a freshman industrial relations major from Morganton, studies economics in her pursuit of higher education. Hlceel Mhop Togeirs contribute tonight," Leake said. i was one of them." Eventually the Tar Heels cut the lead to six, and for awhile it looked as though they might make a miracle comeback. By quickly fouling Duke, they tried to regain possession of the ball, but Duke would have none of it arid made most of their foul shots in the last minute. "Well bounce back from this," Leake said. "Of course it hurts me, but I am not going to cry about it. It's over. There's nothing more 1 can do." Ouk 86, North Carofina 7t Duke (86) Andersen 4-9 3-4 11, Moreland 4-9 8-10 16. Sullivan 1-3 0-0 2. Hunter 2-6 1-4 5. Goina 9-13 7-11 25, Meier 2-8 0-0 4. Christopher 3-3 1-2 7. Kalinowski 0-0 0-0 0. Sonzogni 1-6 4-4 6. Langhi 4-8 2-2 10. Totals 30-65 26-37 86. UNC (79) Poindexter 5-9 6-6 16. Matthews 2-4 3-6 7. Oden 1-1 0-1 2. Cannon 3-5 0-2 6. Leake 10-21 0-0 20. List 0-2 0-1 0. Wilson 6-9 7-8 19. Oonneil 0 1 0-1 0. Watts 1-3 2-2 4. Royster 1-5 3-4 5. Totals 29-60 21-31 79 From Staff and Wir Reports CLEMSON, S.C. North Carolina more than made up for a lackluster first half to explode on offense in the second period and defeat Clemson 79-64 before 1 1 ,3 1 1 at Littlejohn Coliseum, Center Brad Daugherty erupted for 13 points in the first 10 minutes of the second half and guard Kenny Smith scored all 16 of his points in the latter stanza to extend a three-point halftime lead into the final 15-point differential. Daugherty finished with a game-high 23 points. Freshman forward Michael Best, getting his first start for Clemson, scored 20 points and forward Horace Grant added 18 points and 12 rebounds for the Tigers. Best had never scored more than five points in a collegiate game. The Tar Heels are now 25-1, and 9 1 in sole possession of first place in the ACC Clemson dropped to 14-10 overall, 2-8 in conference play. "Basically we're very happy to have won against a very aggressive Clemson team," UNC coach Dean Smith said. "I think (Clemson coach) Cliff (Ellis) had a very fine game plan and our defense was the only thing that kept us in the game in the first half." That game plan was the same one the Tigers had used Feb. 1 in Chapel Hill in their 85-67 loss: use a spread offense, penetrate and see what happens. The spread, deliberate offense kept UNC's possessions to a minimum and propelled the Tigers to a 17-1 1 lead with 7:51 left in the first half. North Carolina countered as Warren Martin (13 points, eight rebounds in 15 minutes) came off the bench to score six straight points and tie the score. Kevin Madden gave the Tar Heels the lead for good at 23-21 with 3:52 to play; in the half. UNC took a 29-26 lead into; intermission. j The game remained close in thes beginning of the second half. Bestj scored on a layup moments into play,; but UN.C went low to Daugherty for1 two baskets and a free throw. Best! scored again and Grant added one for) Clemson and UNC led by two, 34-32. I Then the trapping, half-court Tarj Heel defense cranked up with two steals; and a forced jump ball and North! Carolina built a 40-32 lead with 16:27j to play. j North Carolina extended its lead to! 5945 with 10:21 to play, but then Bestj scored eight points to lead a comeback; that brought Clemson within seven at; 65-58 with 3:30 to play. j That was as close as it would get,! however, as Clemson missed five shots! in a row and fouled. The Tar Heels hit; 14 of 17 free throws in the final 2:50- to bury the Tigers. j UNC shot 56 percent from the floor for the game and Clemson hit only 37 percent. "We played very fine offensively in the second half," coach Smith said. "We're really getting the ball inside." North CaroRna 79, Ctemson 64 UNC (79) Wolf 3-9 0-0 6, Hale 1-4 4-4 6, Daugherty ' 10-13 3-5 23. Lebo 3-7 2-4 8, K. Smith 5-8 6-8 16. Popscm 0-0 0-0 0. Martin 4-4 5-7 13, Hunter 0-0 0-0 0, Maddwi 2-5 3-3 7. Totals 28-50 23-32 79. Clemson (64) CorbH 3-4 1-2 7, Grant 8-13 8-9 18. McCants 0-4 0-0 a Marshall 2-6 0-0 4, Bast 10-20 0-1 20. Michael 2-4 0-0 4. Tait 0-2 0-0 a Middieton 2-9 2 3 6, Pry or 2-7 1-2 5. Holstein 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 26-69 12 1764. Turnovers UNC 18, Ciemson 13 Technical fouls Clemson bench Rebounds Clemson 37 (Grant 12), UNC 36 (Daughrty 10) Assists UNC 21 (Lebo 8), Clemson 16 (Marshall 6) Anatomy is destiny Sigmund Freud

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