r 7 4 J 1 II 1 Sir 7m All mixed up Rain mixed with snow or sleet changing to snow before ending In the after noon. High In the 40s. Low In the 20s. KVrKV v n Polltenders Anyone interested in work ing the polls Feb. 15 should contact Stan Evans in Suite Cat 962-5201. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Copyright The Daily Tar Heel 1983 rr i iiim mi i - in" Volume f pA Issue 1?& Friday, February 11, 1983 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsAits 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 4t H Jordan d ComDlaint filed. a no Ml y n i a s i Xr7 7 u i. ii TT ."ST w if I M MFIKS OS iL Hteels ta f A win. m By S.L. PRICE Sports Editor With 11:48 left in last night's game, the North Carolina starting five stood at midcourt, hands on their hips. Waiting for the Cavaliers to get back on the court, and end the long timeout. Waiting to erase a 13-point, and two Virgirua jump shots later, a 16-point, UVa lead. Waiting for someone to take control. Eleven minutes later, Michael Jordan answered the call, going behind Othell Wilson, forcing him to bounce the call off his own foot and into Jordan's waiting hands. Jordan ( bolted, raced down the right side of the court, and ham mered a one-hand slam dunk from the hip to break Virginia 64-63 and cement the Tar Heels' shaky hold on the No. 1 na tional ranking. "We wanted it real bad," Jordan said. "We knew what we had to do, and we came out to do it." UNC came out from the dismal first-half of shooting and began the long road back with seven and a half minutes left in the game. Jordan banked in a hanging jumper that Ralph Sampson just got a finger on to cut the lead to 12; Jim Braddock, with one of his five steals on the night, took it all the way down court and layed it in to pare the Wahoo lead to seven with 6:25 left. . With the score 63-56, and 4:12 left on the clock, Wilson double-dribbled for one of his three turnovers. And then Sampson grabbed a rebound in Tar Heel territory, and came down on top of Matt Doherty. Doherty made both foul shots to bring the game within five. UVa.'s Jim Miller responded by taking a back door pass and putting the shot up with Sam Perkins right in front of him. Bad move. Perkins, in a display typical of his defensive performance, timed his leap perfectly and slapped the ball away. ( - ; With the Cavaliers shaken, Perkins cooUyhit-two foul ' shots to make it 63-60, and Jordan tipped in a Cecil Exum at tempt to pull the Tar Heels within one point. After Jordan's steal-and-slam, Virginia set up a jump shot to Rick Carlisle, but the Cavalier guard missed, and Jordan, appropriately, snatched the rebound and the clock clicked to 0:00. Before what seemed to be the ninth or 10th game of the century this year, Sampson predicted a Virginia victory. "Hell yeah, I said we were going to win," Sampson said. "You come into a game and you always want to win. It wasn't the national championship, was it? The national championship is is Albuquerque." While Sampson's knowledge of geography is right on the mark, he may lack a sense of direction. To get to Albuquer que and the Final Four, a team can't suffer too many set backs. Virginia's loss, coupled with the 105-98 Tar Heel win in Charlottesville earlier this season, puts them pretty much out of contention for the regular-season ACC title. See WAHOOS on page 3 i yA i I .. I ; j l i) I) a, r ' -V'V J i ''' y - ! - ' I ? 4 o again st Voder By CHARLES ELLMAKER Staff Writer Campus Governing Council member Dennis Bartels (District 10) said Thursday that he would file a complaint against CGC Speaker Bobby Vogler charging that bills passed at the Jan. 25 CGC meeting are invalid because a quorum was not present when the bills were pass ed. Because Vogler was not a legal member of the CGC, only 13 members were pre sent one less than quorum while several referendum bills were passed, Bartels said. Vogler moved out of his Granville Towers district at the beginning of the semester, violating a section of the CGC By-Laws concerning membership. CGC member Phil Painter (District 19) filed a similar complaint against Vogler Monday, charging that the Student Ac tivity Fee increase referendum bill passed at the special CGC meeting Feb. 2 was not legal because a quorum was not pre sent. The Student Supreme Court issued a restraining order Monday night pre venting the counting of the referendum ballots in Tuesday's campus elections. Bartels said he decided to file a com plaint because Painter was unfair in pick ing out only the fee referendum bill to challenge on the basis of lack of quorum. Painter walked out of the Feb. 2 meeting to break quorum, blocking a vote on the fee referendum bill. Quorum was met later that evening, and the bill was passed unanimously by the 14 members present. If one bill is thrown out because of lack of quorum, all of the bills under that same circumstance should be thrown out also, Bartel said. The two referendum bills passed by the council Jan. 25 were Painter's bills. Both of those referendums one which prohibits the use of Student Government funds for political or religious programs and one which rewords a Student Constitution section concerning the student initiative referen dum were passed by the students in Tuesday's campus election. "Phil is being so unfair in picking out only a certain bill that he doesn't want," Bartels said. "He's politicizing his actions and not acting in the best interests of the students." Vogler said Thursday that if one bill were thrown out because his resident status broke quorum at the fee referen dum meeting, Painter's bills at the Jan. 25 meeting should also be thrown out. Bartels also charged that Painter knew about Vogler's resident status long before the Jan. 25 meeting, but chose not to disclose it until after the fee increase bill was passed. "Phil chose to keep (Vogler's resident status) quiet till he could use it to his own advantage," Bartels said. "Bobby made a mistake, but (Painter) has brought a lot of disgrace on Bobby unnecessarily." Painter said Thursday that he had not taken any action as a member of the CGC Ethics Committee to have Vogler dismiss ed from the council. "I guess that's something we should have done," he sai. Vogler's pre-trail hearing in the Painter case is schedule for Friday afternoon, and his final trial should be Monday. He does not plan to resign unless the Student Supreme Court rules that he is not a member, he said. r-A A- .r ,r jr. i DTHScott Sharpe Michael Jordan hanging 20 for two of his 16 points in Va. game Thursday .. sophomore guard's slam off a steal iced game for UNC, as Heels won 64-63 Area schools print ad without negative reaction From staff and wire reports Although The Daily Tar Heel has received critisism for printing a recruiting ad for Playboy magazine, some Atlantic Coast Conference schools have printed the ad without negative reaction. The Technician at North Carolina State University and the Old Black and Gold at Wake Forest University publish ed the ad. Duke University's paper, The Chronicle, at first rejected the ad but now has decided to run it. "I rejected it because it went against the advertising policy of The Chronicle, " said Todd Jones, advertising manager for .the student paper. Jones said the paper would not print anything that degraded any group. But in a Wednesday meeting, The Chronicle's editorial staff council voted 11-8 to run the ad, reversing the initial decision. See PLAYBOY on page 5 RHA backs Monroe, Baxter By SCOTT BOLEJACK Staff Writer The Residence Hall Association Governing Board Thursday endorsed Kevin Monroe for stu dent body president and Padraic Baxter for Carolina Athletic Association President in a special meeting held in response to the run-off election scheduled for next Tuesday. But the Governing Board could not reach a two thirds majority vote for RHA presidential endorse ment, 4nd for the second time in two weeks failed to endorse a candidate for the RHA office. "The Governing Board was split," said RHA president Scott Templeton. "We could not get a two-thirds vote for one candidate. I t llQCti "We feel that both Mark (Dalton) and Henry (Miles) have good but different qualities about jxrforming the RHA job," he said. "The students need to look at the qualities of each candidate and make a decision as to which would make a good RHA president." The board re-endorsed Monroe for student body president because, Templeton said, "We still felt he was the candidate best qualified to fill the needs of the student, body." "Kevin was very concerned with the question of legitimacy of Student Government that came up during Hugh (Reckshun's) campaign," he said. "He stressed the need to reassess the structure of .Student Government's relationship with the stu dent body, campus organizations and the ad ministration. "Hugh's campaign platform has caused students to question the true purpose of Student Government," Templeton said. "Monroe was able to clarify questions about Executive Branch expen ditures." Throughout his campaign Reckshun has questioned the legitimacy of the Executive Branch and has promised to abolish it if elected. r5S.Cv .'J 1 .-.-W. w'' : Jim Hunt: determination carries over into his politics See RHA on page 4 Gov. Jim Hunt relaxes behind desk in Capitol office ... reflects on college, law school, political career DTH'Zane Saunders . By DEBBI SYKES Staff Writer Gov. Jim Hunt faile the state bar exam the first time he took it. But his determination and self discipline shone through then, as it has throughout his career. "First of all, it did not destroy my confidence in myself," he said in an interview at his Capitol of fice. "Second, it made me have a greater feeling for people who don't always succeed at everything they do. Third, it made me determined that I was going to pass the bar exam." Hunt resolved to begin studying Jan. 1 for his second try at the exam while working as an economic adviser to the government of Nepal. "I got up early and I went over to the old Rana family (a former governing regime) palace that housed the government secretariat," he said. "People came to work at 9 o'clock. From seven to nine I was there studying for the bar exam. ; "They didn't have any heat in those buildings. Generally, by the time the sun got up it was fairly warm. But in those early morning hours it was cool, so I had to bring in a special kerosene heater. I did that for six months till I came back to the United States." His ultimate success on the bar exam is just one link in a lifelong string of achievements. Hunt earned a bachelor's degree in education and a master's degree in economics at N.C. State Col lege. He served as student body president there for two terms. He entered UNCs law school in 1961 and graduated in 1964. Although Duke University of fered him a scholarship, Hunt chose Carolina "first, because it was an excellent law school," he said. "Second, because I knew that I planned to spend my life practicing law in prosecuting and public service in North Carolina." Hunt married his wife, Carolyn, between his junior and senior years at State. He does not con sider being a married student a disadvantage. "I think married students get along very well," he said. "They're settled and serious jbjui ihcir studies. "We borrowed all the money they'd let you bor row at the student aid office," he said. "We graduated the same day in 1964 she with a bachelor's degree in education, and me with a law degree. We were $8,000 in debt. But it was the best money we ever borrowed." Hunt thinks law school was excellent prepara tion for his political career. As an example, he cites his efforts to curb crime, saying that his background allowed him to work in that area as no lay person could. He says that a torts (wrongful acts other than a breach of contract for which injured parties can recover damages in civil action) class related to his current work on the dramshop proposal that would make owners of businesses that sell alcoholic beverages responsible for damages incur red by drunken drivers. Hunt distinguished himself both in and out of the classroom. "He was a very active student," said Dr. Dan Pilot, Hunt's instructor for a Supreme Court seminar. Pilot recalled that Hunt created intellectual ferment. Both men campaign-, ed for John F. Kennedy; Pilot was head of the faculty group and Hunt led the student counter part. After graduation, Hunt spent two years in Nepal. He practiced law upon his return to the United States, but he did not let his political career lie fallow. In 1968 he was elected president of the N.C. Young Democrats. In 1972 he became lieute nant governor under Republican Gov. James E. Holshouser Jr. He was elected governor in 1976. He has accomplished many goals during his tenure as governor. Hunt is an activist. Defeats in the Legislature are not typical. He helped in the fight to pass a state constitutional amendment in 1977 that allows the governor to succeed himself in a second four-year term. This accomplishment alone was itself a sign of political savvy. But Hunt also was able to take advantage of the amendment personally and was re-elected in 1980. See HUNT on page 4

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