tHhv Saito (Bar Heel Crowning Glory Homecoming ceremonies honor UNC's king and queen. See Page 3 www.dailytarheel.OMß Opposition Drives Taliban to Abandon Strongholds The Associated Press JABAL SARAJ, Afghanistan - Opposition forces claimed to have the Taliban on the run across much of north ern Afghanistan on Sunday, as ruling Taliban forces abandoned strong hold after strong hold in a with iKmerica r\ttacks drawal south toward the capital, Kabul. The foreign minister of the Northern Alliance, Abdullah, claimed the opposi tion had seized half the country in the past Flashy Goals Earn UNC 13th Straight ACC Title By Kelly Lusk Assistant Sports Editor WINSTON-SALEM - Sports Center really dropped the ball on this one. Yes, North Carolina won its 13th con secutive ACC tide in a typi cal and pre dictable fash ion against a Florida State team that had never even played in the Women’s Soccer Wake 0 UNC 3 Florida State 0 UNC 4 tide game before. Yes, the Tar Heels trounced the Seminoles 4-0, recording their 13th shutout of the season. UNC (19-0,8-0 in the ACC) has held its opponents score- less for 397 minutes, with its last goal allowed coming when the Tar Heels played Ramsey Motivated By First Team Conference Snub See Page 7 N.C. State on Nov. 1. Yes, the Friday night quarterfinal game that UNC won 3-0 against Wake Forest to send it to the tide match was essentially decided at the half. Yes, the Tar Heels dominated time of possession and made the locally tele vised game seem like a North Carolina ball-handling drill at times. Yes, it is true that none of that makes for very exciting television. But each time UNC found the back of the net Sunday at Wake Forest’s Spry Stadium, the goals were certainly worthy of an ESPN highlight reel - not merely a FoxSportsNet feature presentation. “The thing that thrilled me most was the quality of our goals,” said UNC coach Anson Dorrance. “All four goals were superb.” Midfielder Sara Randolph struck UNC Honors Chilean President By Mike Callahan Staff Writer While UNC celebrated its Homecoming weekend, Chilean President Ricardo Lagos Escobar also returned to the University - to receive an honorary degree Friday afternoon. After receiving the honorary doctor of laws degree, Lagos spoke to the students and faculty gathered in the Morehead Building banquet hall about the importance of security in the world after the tragedies of Sept. 11. Lagos said the terrorist attacks were the second time he has seen democracy challenged on the Sept. 11 date. On Sept. 11, 1973, General Augusto Pinochet overthrew JBE §*' 'ifm 5 - i\ Vf ' DTH/LAURA BERNARD Chilean President Ricardo Lagos Escobar gets applause after receiving an honorary doctor of laws degree. two days and dealt the Taliban a severe blow as a fighting force. U.S. officials warned that a counterattack was possible. As Taliban fighters fled south, President Bush urged the opposition not to take Kabul before anew, broad-based government could be formed. But Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld acknowledged Sunday that “we don’t have enough forces on the ground to stand in their way” if the Northern Alliance tries to seize the capital. At a press conference here, Abdullah said the opposition had recaptured its early and scored her first career goal in the third minute. Forward Alyssa Ramsey collected a deflected UNC shot and darted around two defenders to dish the ball to a waiting Randolph on the far post. Randolph knocked the ball past FSU goalkeeper Kerry York with the outside of her left foot to score. Only two minutes later, Ramsey, who earned tournament MVP honors, faked out one defender and nailed a floater inside the far post to put UNC up by two. Anne Remy added to the lead in the 55th minute when Ramsey scuffled with two defenders and FSU’s goalie just feet from the goal. Remy ran into the goal box just in time to settle the ball and slam a low shot into right side of the net. “We work on (combination plays) in practice,” Remy said. “We have drills, and we work on it, but for some reason it doesn’t transfer to the games. We try. Finally, after all this work, we had an opportunity, and we did it.” The scoring roll call would not be com plete without UNC’s third starting for ward, Anne Morrell, who chipped in dur ing the 58th minute. Morrell slid the ball over to Remy while on the run, and Remy completed the give-and-go combination, passing the ball back to Morrell so she could slip it past Seminole goalie Ali Mims for the Tar Heels’ fourth and final goal. “Just when you think you’ve solved the pressure, just when you think you’ve got a breath of fresh air, the next play er is there,” said FSU coach Patrick Baker. “It’s suffocating.” And UNC certainly isn’t planning on giving any opponent breathing room. “I consider this the best conference in the country,” Dorrance said. “It’s nice to go into the postseason with this champi onship.” The Sports Editor can be reached at sports@unc.edu. Chile’s democratic government, after which Lagos chose to live in exile in the United States. During that time, he spent three years at UNC as a visit ing professor in the Department of Latin American Studies. Lagos returned to his homeland in 1978 to help restore democracy and the kind of security that he said the world needs after Sept. 11. “We are not only fighting terrorism, we are fighting in favor of anew world,” he said. “We must improve security in every sense of the word.” Lagos said the entire world needs security, including the “more than 50 percent of mankind” that is living in cruel con ditions. Those people need security against the cruelty of star vation, among other things, he said. The role of university students is to think about how to solve these problems, Lagos said. “I strongly believe it is up to us to be able to change the world.” Lagos said his country is fully behind the United States and its coalition against terrorism. “We feel deeply sorry about the loss ofilife," he said. “Your pain is our pain, your resolve to fight terrorism is our resolve to fight terrorism." Lagos also reflected on his days in Chapel Hill, which he said helped him gready during his life in politics. “What I learned here, what I was able to think here, the discussion I was able to have here, has (influenced) my decisions for the better," he said. Earlier Friday afternoon, Lagos met with more than 100 students and faculty, many from the Latin American Studies department, for a question-and-answer session in the Commons Room of the Graham Memorial Building. During the session, Lagos joked about his affiliation with Duke University, where he received a doctorate in economics in 1966. “I have a tremendously difficult time going to a bas- See CHILE, Page 2 Serving the students and the University community since 1893 For the Kids Campus Y organizes a week to address children's rights. See Page 3 former headquarters, Taloqan, and three other northern provincial capitals since Mazar-e-Sharif, linchpin of the Taliban defenses in the north, fell to the alliance Friday. In Washington, however, Rumsfeld said that while the opposition had “effec tive control” of Mazar-e-Sharif, “there are pockets of resistance within the city.” “There could always be a counterat tack," he said. The city’s airport had not yet been secured, he added, though he thought it would be soon. Taliban officials acknowledged their P \ ■ -^p! ' PHOTO COURTESY OF CHRIS CARLSTROM/OLD BLACK AND GOLD Florida State midfielder Amber Tollefson's slide tackle does not bring down UNC midfielder Sara Randolph (10). Randolph scored the Tar Heels' first goal of their 4-0 victory to win the ACC Tournament. Ability is sexless. Christabel Pankhurst Unstoppable Men's soccer wins a narrow victory against USC, 1-0. See Page 12 Volume 109, Issue 112 forces were in a “strategic withdrawal,” apparently toward Kabul and the ethnic Pashtun strongholds to the south. The alliance is dominated by Tajiks and Uzbeks, while Pashtuns - the nation’s largest ethnic group - form the core of Taliban support. U.S. aircraft, including B-52 bombers, roamed the skies, blasting Taliban posi tions on the front line about 30 miles north of Kabul and seeking out retreat ing bands of Taliban fighters. The seizure of Mazar-e-Sharif, 45 miles south of the Uzbek border, after More Voters Head To Polls This Year By Lucy Bryan Staff Writer Twenty-six percent of Orange County’s 77,224 registered voters par ticipated in this year’s election, a 10 per cent increase since 1999, the last munic ipal election year. In 1997,22 percent of registered voters visited the polls. But 1999’s voter turnout was the lowest of the decade - only 16.5 percent of registered voters cast ballots. Carolyn Thomas, director of the Orange County Board of Elections, attributed the increase in voter turnout primarily to interest in a county bond referendum and nice weather on Election Day. But some Orange County voters who participated in last week’s election said they expected voter turnout to increase for other reasons. Chapel Hill resident Dorothy Mayer said she thinks Chapel Hill residents have long had the attitude of “let some body else vote as long as everything is going smoothly and the garbage is col lected." Vt f#* Weather Today: Sunny; H 61, L 29 Tuesday: Sunny; H 65, L 31 Wednesday: Cloudy; H 69, L 39 days of intensive U.S. bombing marked a turnaround in the opposition’s fortunes. Echoing Rumsfeld’s comments about enclaves of resistance, the Pakistan-based Afghan Islamic Press said pro-Taliban filters were still holding out in the city - including about 100 armed Pakistanis and Arabs holed up in a former girls’ school. Mazar-e-Sharif could serve as a stag ing area for the U.S.-led coalition to rush humanitarian supplies and weapons into the country. The airport could be used to launch attacks on Taliban positions. Along the Kabul front, opposition Voters on the Rise This year’s municipal elections saw an increase of almost 10 percent in voter turnout from the 1999 election. I 78,000 mm : ■s § 65,000 mam BS jr I 52,000 H z M 39,000 S | 26,000 ji g, 26% I 13.000 223% HM 16.5% 0 1997 1999 2001 DTH/COBIEDELSON SOURCE ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS But Mayer added that the recent ter rorist attacks might inspire people to be more civic-minded. “Since September 11, people have See VOTER TURNOUT, Page 2 -C* forces were eager to advance, said Gen. Alim Khan, a senior commander. “If we want to enter Kabul, we won’t care about U.S. willingness or unwillingness," he said. Bush wants the opposition to hold off on assaulting Kabul to avoid a repeat of factional fighting that destroyed the cap ital and killed 50,000 people from 1992 to 1996, when the opposition governed. “We will encourage our friends to head south ... but not into the city of Kabul itself,” Bush said at a news con ference in New York with Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. Greeks Hit Sprinkler Deadline Fraternities and sororities that were unable to have sprinkler systems installed have closed their houses. By Paige Ammons Staff Writer All Greek organizations with operat ing houses have met today’s deadline to comply with Chapel Hill’s sprinkler and fire alarm regulations. But a few fraternity houses have had to close their doors during the past year to renovate and install sprinkler and alarm systems. Because of a fire in the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house in 1996 that killed five UNC students, the town issued an ordinance requiring specific sprinkler and alarm systems to be installed in all fraternity and sorority houses. Most houses fulfilled the installation requirements, which were due by today, but five fraternity houses could not meet the regulations and had to close for renovations this year. “Other than the seven houses that were already closed this year, all of the houses met the sprinkler requirements,” said Jay Anhom, director of Greek Affairs. Anhom said the five houses closed for renovations this year are Lambda Chi Alpha, Delta Upsilon, St. Anthony’s Hall, Kappa Sigma and Pi Kappa Alpha. He said two other hous es, Pi Lambda Phi and Delta Sigma Pi, also are closed indefinitely. Most of the fraternities that have not met the ordinance requirements said financial concerns inhibited them. “We are still in the fund-raising process,” said Mark Hosemann, president of Lambda Chi Alpha. “We had to close because we couldn’t raise the money to put the sprinklers in before the deadline.” After discovering the cost of sprin kler installment, many houses decided to raise funds for other renovations to be completed at the same time. “We are doing other renovations to our house,” Hosemann said. “That is why it has been such a lengthy process.” Delta Upsilon President Nicholas Carr said his fraternity decided to entirely rebuild its house because the cost of installment was nearly two-thirds of the amount required to completely demolish and rebuild their house. “The sprinklers were almost as expensive as rebuilding the entire house,” he said. Anhom said because the expenses of installment are so high, he is pleased with the number of houses that com plied with the ordinance. “It is definite ly a big cost,” he said. “They were given five years to do it, and it took the groups that time to meet the cost.” The five fraternities closed for reno vations were not the only groups that struggled with funding the sprinkler installment. The Kappa Psi fraternity, a coed phar maceutical fraternity, had trouble raising the funds for the sprinkler ordinance. See SPRINKLERS, Page 2