Newspapers / The daily Tar Heel. / Nov. 24, 1986, edition 1 / Page 1
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.y Couple penis history Field hocEcey fsmislhes vorkchop SSSSSsk of UNC, sudents-Page4 flhiird in She nation -page6 CaT2" 1 1 ; 3:30 p.m., 210 Hanes .- if- ""V 1 ' " "" frr Wllllll """"N 1 Copyright 1986 The Daiy Tar Heel Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 94, Issue 107 Monday, November 24, 1936 Chapel Hill, North Carolina Gronip to plan fcrtMire use of oldest dorms By JUSTIN McGUIRE Staff Writer A task force reviewing possible changes in Old East and Old West residence halls will decide the future of the halls in its meeting today, according to Housing Department officials. The task force, made up of students and adminis trators, must decide what the residence halls will be used for after renovations. Housing Director Wayne Kuncl said. Kuncl said some committee members would like to see the residence halls remain all-male, while others advocated the set-up of some sort of special program. One of the proposals for change is to make Old East and Old West into "honors dorms" for outstanding seniors. Under this proposal, originally submitted by Gillian Cell, dean of arts and sciences, seniors who have excelled in academics and in other areas of campus life would be selected for residence by a student committee. Cell said Old East and Old West would be appropriate for these honors dorms because of their historical nature. The residents of Old East and members of the Residence Hall Association have expressed the desire to keep the halls as they are, he said. The RH A opposes the proposal for two main reasons, said Anne Mcintosh, executive assistant for special projects. "We would like to keep the tradition of Old East and Old West being male-only dorms alive," she said. "Some guys are living in the same rooms their fathers and grandfathers lived in, and we don't want to see that end." Also, because Old East and Old West occupy an area that already has four all-female dorms, the RHA fears that a change to co-ed would upset the ratio on that part of campus, she said. The committee must reach a decision soon, so it can report to the Board of -Trustees and get its-proposal approved, Kuncl said. Then the committee will contact Dodge and Associates of Raleigh, the architectural firm handling the renovations, and get a cost estimate, he said. So far, the only funds available for restorations come from student rents, he said. "We will most likely try to go for private contributions and have some sort of a fund drive," he said. The committee must also decide if the renovations will leave the buildings historically accurate. The outside will definitely keep with the buildings' tradition, Kuncl said. But some would like to see the interiors represented accurately as well. Marc Leuthold, a Student Congress representative (Dist. 9), has sent a letter to the committee See OLD EAST page 3 P: I ,rlvH if ( (Ma ) lb ?- s if a ft . tf . ' x rrA -v' - . -j. r! IW fey " m DTHDan Charlson UNC's April Heinrichs, Marcia McDermott and Annie McNeill celebrate NCAA title eels score way into Aloha Bowl. By SCOTT FOWLER Sports Editor DURHAM UNC lei-ed to rest any thoughts of not getting to a bowl game Saturday, outracing Duke 42 35 in a weird, wonderful scorefest to clinch a bid to the Aloha Bowl against Arizona on Dec. 27. The final touchdown in a game that produced 10 six-pointers came with 2:43 left, UNC down 35-34 and the ball on the Tar Heel 49. The play called was "81 dig," where quarter back Mark Maye has an option to throw deep on a post pattern or look to a receiver running a shorter route. "Just before we went out of the huddle, Mark told me to just bust it," said wide receiver Eric Lewis, who streaked past Blue Devil cor nerback De Wayne Terry and hauled in Maye's bullet at the Duke 20. Terry fell down, Lewis scooted into the end zone with his only catch of Maye-to-Lewis play 6 4 Tar Heels AII-ACC 6 Arizona's big win 7 the day and the Tar Heels took the lead, 40-35. Eric Streater caught a two-point conversion from Maye to produce the final margin. Duke had one more chance to win, but quarterback Steve Slayden tried to force the ball into tight coverage and UNC cornerback Derrick Donald made his second intercep tion of the game to seal the win. The Tar Heels blitzkrieged the Blue Devils with four scoring plays that covered more than 50 yards, and made a misnomer of the term "touchdown drive." Two of the Tar Heel scoring drives lasted 13 and 18 seconds apiece, or about as much time as it takes to say "Honolulu sunshine" three times rapidly. The three other UNC TD marches were under three minutes, as all five Tar Heel touchdown plays covered more than 30 yards before a near-capacity crowd at Duke's Wallace Wade Stadium. , Meanwhile, the Blue Devils made sure they took advantage of the Tar Heels' defense return to its normal porous form, as Duke rattled off five touchdown drives of its own in a game that produced 1,001 total yards. . "What a game," said UNC coach Dick Crum, who saw his team improve to 7-3-1 overall and 5-2 in the conference despite the loss of tailback Derrick Fenner, who played only one quarter before leaving with a sprained right knee. "Our guys really hung in there." The Blue Devils dropped to 4-7 and 2-5. North Carolina didn't miss its star tailback Fenner much against a tissue-like Duke defense that gave up 605 yards, the fourth-highest total in Tar Heel history. UNC used the familiar rent-a-star-tailback pro gram where the team substitutes in a back that immediately pounds for more than 100 yards. The Tar Heels found more than ample replacement for Fenner Saturday in the aptly-named Eric Starr. It was Starr who as a defensive back took some of the heat in last season's 23-2 1 loss to the Blue Devils. This time he burned his way to 184 yards in only 17 carries, including touchdown gallops of 67 and 57 yards. The other game star was UNC's Maye, who for the third time this season set the school single-game passing yardage record, hitting for 319 yards, including an 82-yard See FOOTBALL page 8 News Sports Arts 962-0245 Business Advertising 962-1163 UNC wnrais socceir time for 5th Mm By EDDY LANDRETH Staff Writer FAIRFAX, Va. After being dethroned one year ago, the UNC women's soccer team regained the NCAA crown Sunday, defeating Colorado College 2-0 for the national championship. UNC won four championships in row before losing 2-0 last year to George Mason in the finals, and now have won five of the last six national titles. The Tar Heels, who ended the season 24-0-1, came out attacking in the first half. They outshot the Tigers 26-2 and scored the game's only two goals before the break. UNC forward April Heinrichs explained the Tar Heels' game plan: "Colorado College likes to slow the ball down and keep it in the goalie's hands and slow down the tempo of the game. We tried to pressure the goalkeeper a lot and made her punt. Doing that kept us in our game and kept Colorado College from control ling the game." The pressure paid off when at about the 10:45 mark, midfielder Tracy Bates scored the first goal on a shot from about 25 yards out. "It came in from the left side and just kind of deflected off somebody," Bates said. "I ran in and shot it with my left foot." UNC continued its relentless assault on the Tigers, keeping the ball for almost the entire half. "What it looked like to me they wanted to do, was to hang on early and then make a surge in the second half," UNC coach Anson Dorrance said. "Our strategy was to put on as much pressure as possible, as long as possible and try to crack Colorado College. To their credit, they didn't crack." The Tigers didn't crack, but they appeared to' be losing their grip late in the first half. At about 3 1 :25 in the half, forward April Heinrichs took the ball from just beyond the midfield stripe and booted a perfect pass about 35 yards across field, leading center-forward Wendy Gebauer perfectly. Gebauer chipped it over the keeper for the second goal. "April saw me on the run and she just laid the ball right up there," Gebauer said. "I just got it on my chest, then I saw the goalie coming out and I just touched it over her." Colorado head coach Dang Pibul vech said his team had a case of the nerves in the first half. "In the first half, we came out and were a little bit scared of the Carolina myth," Pibulvech said. "It showed. Everybody gets that feeling against the Carolina myth. "Once we got over the nervous ness, jitters and the intimidation factor, we came on and played pretty good." UNC came out in the second half and continued to apply pressure. The Tigers managed to control the ball in the latter stages of the second half, but could not score . UNC really won the title on Saturday, avenging last year's loss over host George Mason 3-2 in overtime. This game turned into an endu rance match, with many of the participants leaving the field bat tered, bruised and bleeding. Heinrichs scored the winning goal at 5:50 in the first overtime period on a brilliant assist from midfielder Marcia McDermott. McDermott dribbled the ball about 45 yards and forced the defender on Heinrichs to leave her post. She then passed the See SOCCER page 6 Fewer code violations brought to honor court By NANCY HARRINGTON Staff Writer Reported honor and campus code violations have dropped roughly 35 percent during each of the last two years, according to a report of judicial action in 1985-86 by the Undergraduate Honor Court. And a committee of faculty and students is trying to find out what the decrease in cases says about the honor system. According to the report, in the 1983-84 academic year, 197 cases were reported. In the 1984-85 school year 136 cases were reported, and in the 1985-86 school year 87 reports were made. "There's no established reason (for the drop)," said Tory John ston, Undergraduate Honor Court chairman. "Two of the hypotheses that the committee's looking at are whether students are not cheating as much and are more committed to learning, or whether students are becoming more crafty (at cheating)." Violations of the honor code include lying, cheating and steal ing, while violations of the cam pus code include vandalism and trespassing. The Committee on Student Conduct, consisting of faculty and students, will release its report soon, Johnston said. Elizabeth Furr, assistant dean of students and judicial programs See HONOR COURT page 5 11 " 1 "'- mi i win iMiwiij ii ii n. ii i .in. i u-.mii wiw ., yywww mumuiuLniiiii .minium iii i.i iii iniiiinu -nr : fit. ' . .: : : II Ms ; J . V v : AS i ) Ik r 'L? Mvf ,J ' - 1 d iPltrfv mm! h - rnwrFtriTtfTi , - -.-a(ri ng-ma um mwmum 'u fif UNC officials, students pleased with shanty protest DTHDan Charlson Members of Anti-Apartheid Support Group await deadline to vacate By JEAN LUTES Assistant University Editor University administrators said they were proud of the spirit and commitment of the more than 400 students who held hands, chanted and sang Friday as UNC Physical Plant workers tore down a shanty built to protest UNC's investments in companies with South African holdings. The students gathered in Polk Place and watched as University police arrested 13 students who refused to leave the shanty when the noon deadline, set Monday by Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Donald Boulton, arrived. The arrests brought the number of student protesters arrested last week to 21. The end of the UNC Anti- Apartheid Support Group's shanty marked the end of a week of protest by the group to force UNC's Endow ment Board to vote for full divestment. The protests began when the shanty was built Monday and con tinued after the Endowment Board's meeting Thursday, when eight stu dents and one University employee were arrested and charged with disorderly conduct. Five of the students had chained themselves to furniture in South Building. The students arrested Friday were charged with disorderly conduct, and a $100 secured bond was set for each of them. The trial will be Dec. 1 1 at 9 a.m. None of the eight students arrested Thursday night were also arrested Friday. The University does not intend to press charges against the students, administrators said Friday. Chancellor Christopher Fordham said Friday he had only good feelings for the student protesters. "I have no doubt that they're sincere in their conviction, and I respect them for that," he said. Fordham, a member of UNC's Endowment Board, made a motion at Thursday's board meeting calling for full divestment. It was not seconded. Before police arrived Friday, group members reaffirmed their belief that the shanty was an effective means of protest. "The shanty is a symbol we cannot afford to abandon," said Eric Walker, group member and vice president of UNC's Black Student Movement, shortly before the noon deadline. Student Body President Bryan Hassel told students that supporters of divestment had to try something new to convince the board to divest. Moral and factual arguments have not worked, he said, nor have Student Congress resolutions and referendums. Walker said group members were willing to be arrested because they saw no other way to show their commitment to divestment. "Emo tional pleas are all we have left," he said. Led by about 15 members of the Black Student Movement Gospel Choir, the protesters held hands and sang "We Shall Overcome" before See SHANTY page 4 Other people are always trying to recruit you into their version of what is real Ken Kesey
Nov. 24, 1986, edition 1
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