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Various and Sun-dry
Partly cloudy with a 50 per
cent chance of rain, possibly
thundershowers. Winds
light with a high in the 70s.
Phone fraud
The People's Telephome
Kompany boasts access to
the phone numbers of CIA,
the Pentagon and Alevander
Haig. Read aoout its
"Phorne Kode" guide orT
page 5.
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Th Daily Tar Hl
Volume 90, Issue Zf (
Wednesday, March 31, 1982
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
NewsSports Arts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1163,
'fit
Minor post-game damage to campus reported
r Aftermath
If
By LISA PULLEN
Staff Writer
One day after the Tar Heels' victory
in New Orleans, UNC began recuper
ating from the wave of Carolina Fever
which spread over the campus Monday
night.
Damage to University property as a
result of Monday's celebration was only
minor, "more toilet paper than any
thing else," Major Charles Mauer of
the University police said.
All 37 officers in his department were
on duty Monday night and were kept
"more than busy" by the celebration,
Mauer said.
He said the behavior of this year's
crowd was friendlier than that exhibited
after last year's loss to Indiana in the
NCAA finals.
"We were really impressed with the
small amount of damage that was
done," said Russell Perry, associate
director of housing for operations.
"We've had more damage after a foot
ball game."
The worst damage done to residence
halls was caused by a small fire in the
tenth floor kitchen off Hinton James
hall during the game,-Perry said. Dam
age was estimated to be around $500.
Perry attributed the small amount of
damage across campus to a letter sent
out to students from Donald Boulton,
vice-chancellor for student affairs, en-x
tiburaging good behavior during the
games.
Approximately fifteen employees of
the UNC Physical Plant were busy Tues
day cleaning up the mountain of debris
deposited by fans during the celebration.
The worst problems reported were the
amount of trash and paint covering
areas around the Pit, Silent Sam and
Howell Hall, said Gene Swecher, direc
tor of the Physical Pin"
An even larger crew of fifty employ
ees would be needed Wednesday, he
said, to take care of trash problems that
result from the homecoming celebration
for the players as well.
At North Carolina Memorial Hos
pital, 26 people were treated for injuries
related to the celebration, said Kathy
Bartlett, NCMH spokesperson. The
most serious injury was a broken leg
suffered by a student, she said.
The other 25 people treated, none of
which were University students, were
not seriously injured, she said. Their in
juries rangecf from lacerations to those
received by five persons hit by a car. All
were treated and released.
At the Student Health Services, the
33 students seen after 10 p.m. suffered
lacerations and sprains. No serious in
juries were seen, said Judith Cowan,
director of the SHS.
B
usinesses suffer at rowdy fans9 hands
By ALAN MARKS
Staff Writer
The party is over and Chapel Hill is beginning to return to
normal, but the 35,000-40,000 people that spilled onto.
Franklin Street Monday night did not leave without causing
a little damage.
Approximately $6,000 worth of property damage occur
red, said Chapel Hill Police Chief Herman Stone, But the
crowd was a lot better than last year, he said.
"On the whole, everything went really, really well," he
said.
Some local businesses do not agree.
Fowler's Grocery Store on Franklin Street had damage
estimated in the thousands of dollars when the crowd spilled
into the store at 10:30 Monday night and began throwing
food off the shelves and urinating in the aisles.
, "We had to clean up with shovels and rakes and wash the
floors down with hoses," said Billy Wood, night manager at
the store. "It was ridiculous."
The store was closed until noon Tuesday Wood said.
The Happy Store, on the corner of Franklin and Columbia
Streets, had an estimated $1,000 worth of damage done to
their gas pumps arid buildings, said manager Bobby Itock.
"I can see they (the students) had a very good reason to
celebrate, but they took it to the extreme by having no
respect for property," he said.
An estimated $200 worth of damage was caused at Biscuit
Towne, USA on Mallette Street when the electric hand
dryers in the bathrooms were torn off the walls, said
manager Sean Sullivan.
See CITY on page 3
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111
Blackwhite tension to remain
King predicts continued conflict
By KYLE MARSHALL
Staff Writer
The people of the United States, including all blacks
and whites, are in danger in the 1980s, Urban Crisis Cen
ter President Charles H. King, Jr., told an audience of
about 275 in Memorial Hall Tuesday night.
King focused his lecture on the "Black White Crisis in
the '80s." "Every major American city will be domi
nantly black by 1 990," he said, -"This will cause fear andL
anger. . . and will create a situation of two nations living
in one. There is no way of surviving if we are to remain
apart like this.
"The crisis for blacks is based on institutionalized
white racism," he said. "That's what's got to change."
King, who served on President Lyndon Johnson's
Civil Rights Commission, said the commission conclud
ed that racial unrest in the 1960s was caused by white in
stitutions, who created, maintained and condoned the
ghettos. "Not only did America allow these condidons
to remain the same, it allowed them to grow progressive
ly worse. Now, blacks and whites are separate, and that
is the crisis we face.
"We've got to go back and rebuild our cities," he
said. "In World War II, we bombed Japan, and later
rebuilt their nation. Instead, we must build before, not
after." King advocated using the money allocated for
defense to give all blacks jobs and other opportunities.
"We must not allow ourselves to become paralyzed. We
must begin to .rebuild," ,4C"V..'-.. -
In addition to describing the crisis facing America in
the future, King explained how whites defended their at
titudes toward blacks. "They (whites) always intellectu-alize.-.they
always respond with another question or
observation." He said the worst defense whites use is
when they say they "see no color." "All blacks in
America are affected by their color."
See KING on page 5
' V i If
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DTH. Suzanne Conversano
James Worthy salutes exultant UNC crowd at Kenan Stadium
...25,000 turned out Tuesday to greet the Tar Heels
Heels welcomed home
DTH John Williams
UNC administration denies parking problem
By LIZ LUCAS
Staff Writer
Although it may be difficult for stu
dents to find parking spaces near classes,
officials maintain that UNC is not facing
a parking crunch.
"Individual perception of where one
wants to park one's car is the problem,"
said Robert Sherman, Director of Secur
ity Services. The question of a campus
parking crunch depends on what area is
being discussed, he said.
"The problem (of parking) is in the eye
News Briets
of the beholder," Sherman said. "Stu
dents may not be able to park exactly by
their classes, but if they will use alterna
tive lots and buses there's no problem."
But students say there is a definite park
ing problem on campus.
"Who gets what and where" is the
problem, said sophomore Terry Bow
man, chairperson of the Student Govern
ment Transportation Committee. "It's
impossible to make everyone happy.
There is always a demand for better
lots."
Even the faculty does not think there
are enough parking spaces where they
want them, around the center of campus,
said Sally Hadden, former chairman of
the Transportation Committee.
Sherman advocates the use of
periphery lots such as the F lot and the
P lot by both students and faculty.
These lots are rarely filled, said Sherman,
adding that parking permits are still avail
able for the P lot. The idea of parking at
periphery lots and catching buses in to
campus needs to become more widely ac
cepted, Sherman said.
Some people do favor fringe parking,
Hadden said, especially those concerned
with saving gas and those feeling that cars
are not absolutely essential. Other
students are afraid of vandalism if they
park on fringe lots, she said.
Most parking complaints to the Traffic
Office come from students not able to
find parking spaces in specific lots, Sher
man said. Students should keep in mind
that permits are sold by zones rather than
lots. They should familiarize themselves
with the lots in their zone and check these
lots for spaces when they find their usual
lot full, he said.
See PARKING on page 4
By DAVID LAMBERTH
Staff Writer
A roaring crowd estimated at 25,000
filled on side of Kenan -Stadium to wel
come home the national champion Tar
Heel basketball team Tuesday afternoon.
Students, faculty, alumni and other fans
began assembling around 12:30 p.m. in
the sunny stands to greet their victorious
team.
The players were due to arrive at 2:50
p.m., but their plane arrived late, said
Carolina Athletic Association President
Perry Morrison. The CAA sponsored the
event.
Fans were entertained by members of
the band and the Junior Varsity cheer
leaders as well as several speakers while
they anxiously awaited the players' re
turn. Spontaneous ' ants of "Wor-thy"
and "We're number one" went through
the crowd, and one sign read "Dean
Smith for President."
"The team represented the campus as'
nobody else has," said Student Body
President Mike Vandenbergh to the
crowd.
UNC President William C Friday said,
"Thank you to all of you who came by
the house last night." Remarks from
Woody Durham followed.
At 3:02 p.m., the crowd glimpsed the
first player and went wild. Senior Jimmy
Black led the team to the center of the
field as James Worthy held the champion
ship trophy high.
"We're so grateful to bring the cham
pionshirback where it belongs," Black
said" To the cheering crowd. The crowd
convinced Black to allow all the players
to speak. .
"It's time to relax and have a good
time," said Worthy after quieting chants
of "One more year."
"We proved to ourselves, our coaches
and the fans that we are number one,"
Sam Perkins said.
"I hope that in my next three years
here we'll win two or three more," fresh
man Michael Jordan, said.
"You guys tore up Franklin Street this
weekend," said Matt Doherty, "I'm gon
na do some of the same tonight." After
twenty minutes of comments from all the
players and cheers from the crowd, the
players left the field and the fans began to
empty the stadium.
"It was fantastic," Morrison said.
"The team was appreciative as was Chan
cellor Fordham. I'd just like to thank all
the people who worked for it."
Only one problem occurred during the
eventAbout 1:30 p.m. a Carolina-blue
and white hot air balloon being filled on
the field had to come back down after
part of one side was melted by the gas air
heater.
4 paratroopers killed in exercise
FORT IRWIN, Calif. (AP) Four U.S. Army paratroopers based at Fort Bragg,
N.C., were killed Tuesday and dozens were injured in a massive, wind-battered
parachute exercise testing the nation's rapid deployment force, the Army said.
The incident occurred as some 2,300 troops completed an overnight flight from
North Carolina and parachuted into a cold, windy Mojave Desert morning.
At least four soldiers were seriously injured, officials said, and 20 others were be
ing treated at field emergency stations for assorted injuries not believed to be
serious, said Lt. Gen. Robert C. Kingston, commander of the Rapid Deployment
Joint Task Force, which is being tested in a month-long exercise called Gallant
Eagle 82. 'At least 80 other paratroopers were checked for possible injuries but were
returned immediately to duty, and Lt. Col. David Burpee said they were not con
sidered to have been injured.
House begins nuclear arms debate
WASHINGTON (AP) The House on Tuesday launched a debate on nuclear
arms control, pitting proponents of an immediate U.S.-Soviet treeze on atomic
weapons against supporters of President Reagan's longer-term approach toward
mutual arms reduction.
To reject an immediate halt to nuclear arms proliferation "is to give up on the
concept of reduction as well," said Rep. Jim Leach, R-Iowa, one of the prime
sponsors of the debate. "The desire to maintain a freeze and to make it work would
be an important new pressure to secure new reductions."
But the president and supporters of a rival congressional resolution say an im
mediate freeze would lock the United States into a position of nuclear inferiority.
Salvadoran government forms
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) The right-wing National Conciliation
Party, ousted two and one-half years ago in the coup that installed El Salvador's
ruling junta, emerged Tuesday as kingmaker in post-election maneuvering by six
parties to form a new government.
A National Conciliation leader said one thing was certain moderate Jose
Napoleon Duarte, president of the civilian-military junta, would have to go.
Duarte's Christian Democrats won the most votes in Sunday's asser ,bly elections,
but fell short of a majority.
Me.anwhile, the Salvadoran military scored a new success in its war against leftist
guerrillas, retaking the eastern city of Usulutan in heavy fighting.
Sisters dedicated to UNC sports;
family has long school tradition
By KAREN HAYWOOD
Assistant Managing Editor
Two of the most dedicated Tar Heel fans were not in
New Orleans this week. They weren't even in Chapel
Hill. They were in Huntersville, a sleepy town just out
side of Charlotte. Kate Ranson Cornue, 75, and her
sister Nelle Ranson, 77, love Tar Heel basketball.
"We watch all the games. Woe betide the person who
interrupts us," Cornue said.
Why the interest? Cornue looked through the old
scrapbooks of Carolina pictures and old Yackety Yacks
scattered around the room before she explained.
"Our brother Lucius helped start the first basketball
team in 1911. He and Marvin Rich and a Carmichael
started it," she said. "Lucius played second string. He
wasn't but 5 '10".
If that's not a good enough reason for being a Caro
lina fan.
From 1910, when Lucius entered Carolina, until 1967
when Cornue's daughter Virginia graduated,, their.fami
ly had an unbroken 57-year streak of connections' with
the University a record not equalled by any other fami
ly, Cornue said. Their brothers Oliver, Earl, Paul,
Lacey, Dale, and then Nelle all attended Carolina. Some
of the brothers' children attended. Dale Ranson was a
track coach for 38 years from the time he was in school
until his death in 1962. Virginia Cornue enrolled in 1962.
.'"When she graduated, I thought, 'Virginia is the end
of an era,' " Cornue said.
All of the Ransons were involved in sports here, most
ly track.
"All of them ran on the track; they dominated track
at the University for 13 years," Cornue said. "Lucius,
when he was a freshman, hung around the track. Coach
asked him what was he doing hanging around there and
told him to get out there and run. Lucius out-ran the
ones who had been training for a year."
' Cornue smiled at the memory of her older brother.
"He was injured a lot," she said. "There's a picture of
Lucius standing on his head with his arm broken."
The two sisters looked through the scrapbooks spread
out on the sofa, reminiscing about 57 years of Carolina
history.
"This is more fun than (watching) the Waltons,"
Ranson said.
They talked about the people they and their brothers
knew.
Frank Porter Graham . . . Max Gardner . . . Thomas
Wolfe are not just names in books to the sisters.
"All these people that you read about in North
Carolina histories are just household words in , our
house," Cornue said.
"Lucius roomed with Frank Porter Graham, who was
in graduate school she said.
"Several of them roomed in Old East and every sum
mer 'they'd bring bed bugs home with" them. Mama
cnildn't let them in the house," she said shaking her
head.. .
Frank Graham was a frequent guest in their home.
"One summer, I heard someone banging around on
. the front porch and heard someone yell. 'Are there any
Ransons here?' and I almost fell into his arms," Cornue
said.
Ranson smiled, remembering her days as a student at
Chapel Hill.
"I was down for someone's graduation and Lacy was
down for summer school and he said, 'Nelle, you want
to go to summer school with me?' 1 said, Yeah, but I
don't have any clothes but what I have in my suitcase.'
He said "Mama can send them to you. And school
won't cost but $80,' " Ranson said.
"And I remember one time I went down with Early in
the plumbing truck and we grilled steaks by the side of
the road," she said.
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Lacy Ranson, a UNC student in the
early 1920s, sleeps in his Old East
room. "Several of them roomed in
Old East and every summer they'd br
ing bed bugs home with them. Mama
wouldn't let them in the house," Kate
Cornue said, shaking her head.