4 ft Ji HTf i : ' -- : ; : ----- : - 1 : m ' s -: Th3 North Carolina golf teem flnichcd Cth In tho nation after p!cing cs h:Ch co 2nd in th3 32- i Arte Features 4-7 Briefly : ...T 2 Comics 0 Commentary 10-11 Crossword 3 Sports 0-9 Week's Fare . . . , 6 TT HE TUT, TT1 TT I -A H i t J L - J 1 1.1 11 The Daily Tar Heel 1933 Thursday, June 16, 1983 Chapel Hill, N.C. News 9S2-0245 AdvertisingS62-0252 Further investigation of Green ordered The Associated Press RALEIGH A Wake County prosecutor filed grand jury papers Tuesday that accuse Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green of conspiring to take bribes of $10,000 a month from an undercover FBI agent, and of taking a $2,000 bribe. The accusations were listed in presentments handed down Monday by a grand jury in Superior Court. The presentments order district attorney C. Colon Wuloughby to further investigate the allegations against Green and return with an indictment if he decides it is ap propriate. One presentment accuses Green of conspiring with Howard F. Watts of Clarkton to take bribes of $10,000 a month from under cover FBI agent Robert J. Drdak and others "for performing and ommitting to perform official acts as Lieutenant Governor of the State of North Carolina." The presentment says the alleged conspiracy involving $10,000 montly bribes occurred from about Dec. 21 , 1981 , to April 29, 1982. In a second count of the presentment, Green is accused of taking a $2,000 bribe from Drdak. Green has accused Drdak, posing as Thomas "Doc" Ryan in the FBI's Colcor probe of corruption in Columbus County, of trying to entrap him by sending him the check after meeting with him twice. Green said he returned the check. Flaifodiin' Cloggerdedicated to the dance By JODI SMITH Tar Heel Staff Writer . Mary Sisk sat casually on a faded flower cushion in a swing on her screened back porch. Around her stood potted plants, a bicycle and an old paint bucket. Her blue eyes were warm and her smile quick and especially wide as she spoke of her unusual hobby flatfootin'. Sisk, a 26-year-old graduate student at UNC working on her sec ond master's degree in education, is a charter member of the Apple Chill Cloggers, a performing dance group that formed in 1974. "Clogging is a mixture of Irish and Scottish jigs and English square dancing that was influenced by the Cherokee Indians of Western North Carolina and probably black minstrel shows as well," she said. "People brought the music and a similar dance step over from the British Isles to the Southern Appalachians where it was originally called flatfootin'." See CLOGGERon page 4 : ........... .... - ,. - s i ' f V j h i i Tar Heel'Lo-l TT' '3 What better way to beat the afternoon heat sprinklers? Jason Porter, 3, discovered that than by piaying in the arboretum he needed watering just like the grass. !V.v.:- :v.y.:-.:. J u'jni limn. pulll llimr u'JlMi j - HIN -(neiwn " xg w... nuvA v..wa r w w.r JJ"llflf ' a .v IWW 11W. y "T;, ..,.w.r wy f rr I ,.N .4 x-.v ... .-if!.:s - N .s-.(.-..1 v. ' MW-WWv :. '- 4 iimi nor '.::: : v ' t 1 r - 'iTrTSSJi, : Women' 's soccer scores with European tour UNC celebrates AIAW victory Cy EILEEN McCANN Tr Hed Staff Writer Being the best in the nation is an ac complishment the UNC women's soccer team has enjoyed not once, but twice in the past two years. As AIAW champions in 1981 and NCAA champions in 1982, there wasn't much left to conquer on this continent. But beyond? UNC's women found out just how good they are when they took their fast-paced, ag gressive style of play across the ocean to Europe for a five-game tour that lasted from May 17-31. Before they left, however, there were some obstacles to hurdle. Like funding a two-week " stay in Europe for 14players, two chaperones and one coach. Coach Anson Dorrance proposed the idea to his team with the understanding that they would try to raise the money but what they didnt raise would come out of their own pockets. He then left it up to the team to make all the necessary arrangements. . "I didn't organize this trip, I just went on it," Dorrance said. ; ... - - Enter co-captains Laurie Gregg and Janet Rayfield, who actually organized the tour. To raise money the team held doughnut sales, worked as ushers and ticket-takers at UNC's home lacrosse games, and held a raffle. The Nike shoe company donated various footwear as prizes for the raffle, and an anonymous donor gave a color television as the grand prize. Players swept the Chapel Hill area en masse to sell tickets. Some sold as much as $500 worth of tickets, significantly trimming the $900 total each player had to raise. On May 17, the 14 players, Coach Dorrance and two chaperones took off for Hamburg, Germany, where they caught a train to their first stop on the tour Vildbjerg, Denmark. Since European colleges don't field soccer teams for women, competition was provided by club teams in each city. Amateur soccer in Europe is played according to skill level, with the First Division being the best players. Playing against the club team from Vild bjerg, the Heels found out quickly they could play with the best, walking away with a 3-2 victory. Accommodations for the UNC team were provided by the host team, Vildbjerg, which let the Carolina players bunk in its dorm. See SOCCER on page 8

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