Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 23, 1981, edition 1 / Page 1
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I 4 Spatter up - There wilt he a 60 percent chance of rain today with light breezes. The high will bs in the 60s and the low will reach the 40s. t , -- r .-1 ) H M S I : ! s ! ! Tuesday is the last day to drop a course or declare a course pass-fail. ; A H j i 1 1 1 I i. Li C. V Serving the students and the University community since 1 893 f Monday, February 23. 1801 Chape! Ht fJorth jCsrclina , NewsSports Arts 933 0245 BusinessAdvertising 933-1 163 r I li1 (BTOiM. (EMliI S t 1 f 1 777V CTT) I i 1 1 (D)MdM(D)ini .'. .'. I 1 SI f o j i I ; I I j Dy ELAINE McCLATCHEY Staff Writer Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham was able to spend a few hours at his office last Friday, law professor Daniel PoIliU said in a report on Fordham's condition made at a Faculty Council meeting Friday. Fordham had been unable to return to his office before Fri day due to a mild stroke he suffered Dec. 21. He has been undergoing rehabilitative therapy while on a temporary leave of absence. Pollitt also told council members about a favorable report he received at a meeting of the Board of Trustees on Feb. 13. The report on Fordham at that meeting indicated that he was recovering speedily, Pollitt said. Fordham is still under going therapy and i able to be in his office for only short periods of time. Student Body President-elect Scott Norberg said that he had also checked on the chancellor's condition Friday and that the chancellor was doing most of his work at home while he recovered. In other action, the Faculty-Council approved a resolution requesting that Vice Chancellor of Business and Finance John Temple investigate the possibility of a tax shelter for faculty contributions to the retirement plan. Council members also passed a resolution to form a special committee to took into the feasibility of a University sponsored day-care center on campus. The council defeated a resolution calling for a systematic re view of administrative reversals of departmental decisions on reappointments and promotions. After a report was made on a plan for group insurance by the faculty welfare committee, council members voted to post pone an endorsement of a group insurance plan until Temple could review the plan. The council considered the first plan it saw to be biased against women and decided to advertise to different insurance companies. " The administrative board of the library reported that the new library was a month behind schedule and that instead of opening in June 1932, it would open later that summer. mi 1L Dy MARK SCIIOEN Staff Writer Students living in Connor Residence Hall who were denied dorm changes in the preliminary drawing held last week were accidentally excluded from the general lottery held Thursday, The Daily Tar Heel has learned. Residents excluded from the Connor lottery may be guaran teed on-campus housing, according to sources who asked not to be identified. Henderson Residence College Area Director Mickey Sullivan and Connor residence assistants declined to comment on the reports. James D. Condic, director of university housing and Phyllis Graham, associate director, could not be reached for comment Sunday night. , An estimated 1,380 uppcrclassmen were closed out of University Housing Thursday, an increase of about 200 from IS 20. University Housing has reserved 2,409, spaces for an estimated 3, 2Q( incoming freshmen. I ' i Students who were closed out Thursday will be placed on a waiting list. The waiting list drawing will take place Tuesday in the Housing Contracts Office. The list will be posted in Carr Building on Thursday. A symposium to assist students searching for off-campus housing will be held March 4. Representatives from the Student Consumer Action Union, Student Legal Services, Chapel Hill Housing Authority and area apartment complexes will answer questions on rents, leases and other policies. "7 77 7TT7" "If GW0T , GsJJMDOUZy GQuioro go out ' im ' gurniol z$yi x 1 i J i i' HA ' '' ''"Of DTH'Jay Hyman Ey DAVID POOLE ' - Staff Writer - No doubt about it, North Carolina's 75-61 college basketball victory over Clemson in Carmichael Auditorium Saturday was a special game filled with special moments. The game was the last in Carmichael for four Carolina seniors Pete Budko, Mike Pepper, Eric Kenny and Al Wood and as is tradition, they stood at center court before the game and were showered with applause from the 10,000 fans. But in between that special moment and another one late in the game, when Wood and Pepper left the floor for the last time to yet another tumultuous standing ovation the game wasn't a whole lot dif ferent from any of the other 27 Clemson-Carolina games in Chapel Hill over the years. Clemson has come to Chapel Hill to play basket ball 28 times and the Tigers, after Saturday, are 0-28 here. This game wasn't as close as some of the others have been, largely because of the special play of Wood and two of his younger teammates Sam Perkins and James Worthy. The threesome of Wood, Worthy and Perkins, Carolina's starting front line since Budko suffered an ankle injury which kept him from playing in his final home game, combined for 58 points and 25 rebounds as the Tar Heels took a giant step toward a second place finish in the regular season Atlantic Coast Con ference race. "It was a big emotional thing, but sometimes you can get too emotional," Wood said after finishing with 23 points and 10 rebounds. "The main thing was for us to win the game." Winning the game wasn't all that easy. The Tigers, coming off an upset win at home over Wake Forest Wednesday night, made it tough and prevented the Tar Heels from blowing the game open. "We weren't shooting that well," Gemson coach Bill Foster said. "But we managed to stay with them in most of the first half. Good offensive rebounding had a lot to do with it." The Tigers scored 15 points directly off offensive rebounds in the first half and trailed only 29-27 with three minutes left. Then, however, an important Carolina rally gave the Tar Heels a 37-29 lead at the half, as Wood had eight points in the three-minute spurt. . "The key to the game was the last couple of minutes of the first half," Foster said. "When they made the run at the end of the half it really hurt." That rally gave the 13th-ranked Tar Heels momen tum that carried over into the second half and allow- ed Carolina to open a 17-point lead at 58-41 when Matt Doherty scored with 9:47 left. But then the Tar Heels hit a dry spell. "At one point in the second half Worthy missed a layup and then had another goal-tended and we didn't get any thing," UNC coach Smith said. "Then we missed about six shots in a row." Indeed, it wasn't until Worthy made it 59-50 with one of two free throws with 3:05 left after more than six and a half minutes that Carolina scored again, and the Tigers had clawed back into the game. The Heels had gone into the Four Corners delay at the 3:35 mark and, though the visitors got within seven at 59-52 seconds later, the Heels managed to hit key free throws and break loose for layups down the stretch and won going away. Sea BASKETBALL on paga 2 Above, Al Wood slam-dunks for a UNC basket. He was the game's high scorer with 23 points. At right, Wood, Mike Pepper, Pete Budko and Eric Kenny re ceive a standing ovation from the Carmichael Auditorium crowd. The seniors were introduced before the start of UNC's 75-61 win over Clemson on Saturday. All but Budko started their last home game. I t? L V i 4 -i i'W li OTHAndy Jm CD "1 Am T-k IS fm M'mAm lldp ii mi m mmmmm i ii -ail igvnn TCcBl '1 T! 71 B (P i(D The Associated Press ATLANTA It was another traumatic weekend for Atlantans, as two more black children one whose death eight months ago had been ruled accidental and one who disappeared Thursday were added to the official police investigation of missing and slain children in the Atlanta area. Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown announced the additions Friday, bringing to 20 the number of deaths and disappearances of black children being investigated by a special 35-member police task force. One new case involved Curtis Walker, a 13-ycar-o!d who disappeared Thursday after ' noon in northwest Atlanta. He was last seen . at a small shopping center, and Brown said an intensive 24-hour search by police and vol unteers failed to locate him. Also added to the task force investigation was the death of 10-year-old Aaron Darnell Wyche, whose body was found June 24 under a railroad trestle in DeKalb County inside Atlanta city limits. . Wyche's death had been ruled accidental by the DeKalb medical examiner, who listed asphyxiation as the cause of death. Authori ties had speculated that he died after falling and landing face down at the foot of the trestle. In another development Friday, DeKalb County Public Safety Director Dick Hand released a composite drawing of a white man wanted as a witness in the slayings of Patrick Baitazar, 11, whose body was found Feb. 13 behind an office complex in DeKalb County. He is the child found dead most recently in the string of 18 slayings dating from July 1979. The composite drawing shows a man about 27 years old with fair complexion, sandy, . collar-length hair and a mustache. Hand said he was believed to be driving a faded, light green 1969 Chevrolet. "I want to emphasize we want him for wit ness purposes only," Hand said, adding that the man may have been at the scene the morning before Baltazar's body was discovered. Also on Saturday, police checked out a possible resemblance between the composite drawing and a suicide victim, but found no connection. Hand said. The suicide victim, whose identity wai not released, died of carbon monoxide poisoning after he ran a hose from a car's exhaust through a window in the car, said medical examiner Dr. Salch Zaki, who ruled the death a suicide. Described as a white male in his mid-20s, the victim was found dead Saturday after noon near a car in northwest Atlanta. Police had said earlier the man resembled the composite drawing. "All we were looking at was whether it (the discovery of the dead man) had anything to do with our composite," Hand said. "It did not." But Hand said Atlanta police would follow up to see whether the apparent suicide had any possible connection with the string of slayirs. Hand sbo said that the. car found near the dead man Saturday did not match the des cription of the car believed to have been driven by the man in the composite drawing. IHllM(f 77 U W Li UJ By KIMDEHLY KLLMAN Sla.'f Wristr B'ck Greeks sponsor as many as two service projects a week, plan fundraisers and dances, zr.i now during p!d;e period can be seen studying together at the library or wear ing identical clothing while walking in a line. . Yet many students know 'very about UNC's three black fraternities Alpha Phi Alpha, Omega Psi Phi and Kr pr Alpha Psi and three tlack sororities, D.!ta S.ma Theta, Alpha Kappa Alpha and Zcta Phi Beta. "We're different from ether fraternities cn campus becauve we are tragically service fra ' i -v - l it - -;- s-!J Kd,la Harris, p.e iJ;..t ef Kappa A!; ha 1'J. L":.l., " rcrliirs a! s z:z i.rlce t sa'i A'p'-.a Kappa A!;!. a r::r.:l-r lei f 1 UNC's black undergraduate pepuhtion are members cf black fraternities and sororities. Clack Greeks alio strive to develop brother hood and sisterhood smons their members. "We are a strong brotherhood, and stress brotherhood more than other fraternities do. We are more personal with our brothers," said ftcpnie Sumner, president of Omepa W , Phi. "1 lopefy, aH of us should fc-c strM.13 for unity of the tlaak community." Delta r;ma Theta member Katrina I faward said, "We stms sisterhood and tcnhernevi. VicU:T black students cn thii cam-put a way ta ierp in touch." V : ri:. li cf tl r j r-- v! ra 1 frc:i fwar tit , t v.rli, ere .'...'".all de;-:-l to pre-' : :e t rt :1..:1. J ar.l tl ter -t a ! - r. T. ry t;t a 1 ' d In.', t: e ? ; 1 ! r v i t "i: i C V ' J f: : ... 1.. - ! r.i f . -. i tl .1 I - . ...4 't J ' '" -it - -i tV u i . . J I i - J . . .4 I.... 1 .'. ry cf th; : ' ! t f c r 'We stress academics because we feci we're here for an rducaticn and that that should come (Int. We try to keep a hi; h QPA among members," A!phn VU Alpha member Tree man Mocr? seid. "It's a joint venture among brothers, but it puts a lot cf rc.par.ib.lity on the individual." The Lbrary period teaches dhdp line, Jones laid. "It Is 3 way for some to develop the study habits they hae rrsxt learned before, is started me yz to the l brary." .M.rrii '! t! i u -liy t !r.-n l' -;- b lern n r I djrir, t) : r 1:-! '? t L "Daring ( r f';J;e peri'1-! ve 1 t-petherr.e-.t and un.:y, p:lr zr.i O.jirj. W l.n t ..: f . ! e f.. '., tl e 1 il :n f. h W h:n rr e -. rrea V. 1 1 1! zt .n J." 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 23, 1981, edition 1
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