r NCAA Nebraska 42 UCLA 10 Iowa 20 Ohio St. 14 NFL San Francisco 24 Atlanta 20 Washington 27 Seattle 17 Virginia 26 N.C. State 14 Maryland 13 Pittsburgh 7 Wake Forest 31 Richmond 6 Dallas 21 New Orleans 20 Miami 14 Kansas City 6 Buffalo 30 Houston 13 Clemson 41 Ga. Tech 14 New England 28 Pittsburgh 23 Sunny today, except... for members of Student Government who probably won't show their faces following a humiliating defeat by the Daily Tar HeelS, 1 1-1 . SG had earlier squeaked by the Tar Heels, 9-5. Copyright 1983 The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved. Volume 91, Issue 61 UNC scalps Tribe, raises record to 4-0 By MIKE DeSISTI Sports Editor North Carolina wide receiver Mark Smith came off as the aggressive oppor tunist without a conscience Saturday in relating his team's week-in, week-out of fensive game plan which had accounted for a season-high scoring output just minutes before. "We take what we can get," he said. "We don't do any more, any less. "We just take what we can get." Smith took two of quarterback Scott Stankavage's UNC record-tying four, touchdown passes in hand and the Tar Heels took a little more in a 5 1-20 win over visiting William and Mary in front of a Homecoming crowd of 49,400 in Kenan Stadium. He needn't feel greedy, however, seeing as William and Mary almost made a game out of it early on in the third quarter. The Tribe opened the second half in much the same manner as it had opened the game, and cut a 31-10 North Carolina halftime lead to 1 1 in scoring on its first two posses sions in the third quarter. William and Mary's Brian Morris made good on a 36-yard field goal attempt after the Tribe's opening drive in the second half stalled at the North Carolina 19., William and Mary then gave the Tar Heels three downs and a punt before mov ing the ball 62 yards in seven plays, quarterback Stan Yagiello completing passes of 17 and 15 yards and tailback Nonrequested services need not be paid for By LYNN DAVIS Staff Writer Students are not legally obligated to pay for Call Waiting or any other optional ser vice offered by the local office of Southern Bell unless the services were specifically re quested by the subscriber, said Dorothy Bernholz, director of UNC Student Legal . Services. "I'm telling my clients they're not obligated to pay for any services they didn't order," Bernholz said. Problems with the optional telephone services arose shortly after students return ing to school had their phones hooked up and then found that they also had one or more of the optional services, even though they had not requested them. With the Call Waiting service, a special tone interrupts a call already in progress to indicate that someone else is trying to call. By depressing the switchhook, the first call can be put on hold while the second is answered. Other custom calling services offered by Southern Bell include Call Forwarding, Three-way Calling and Speed Calling. James Exum, a junior industrial rela tions major from Charlotte,' said that a sales representative from Southern Bell in Chapel Hill called his roommate and in formed Exum's roommate of the services , available and told him the Call Waiting service had been placed on their phone. The sales representative said they would have to call Southern Bell if they wanted to have the service disconnected. Exum said he brought his complaint to Bernholz at Student Legal Services and Ron Everett, chairman of the Student Af fairs Committee of the Campus Governing Council. Exum said that after Bernholz contacted Southern Bell, he received his phone bill and there was no charge for the Call Waiting service. Bernholz described Southern Bell's marketing procedure as the "negative op tion" because it saddled the consumer with the responsibility of disconnecting a service that was never requested. Bernholz said that she questioned the method by which subscribers secure phone ' service. The phone connection cards that students complete and return to their residence halls have no place for the stu dent's signature. She said there is no legal mm Ethan Horton takes a handoff from Scott Stankavage Saturday against William and Mary. StankaVage passed for 218 yards and four touchdowns, and Horton rushed for 141 yards in North Carolina's 51-20 win. Michael Qemons shooting off right tackle and into the end zone from 24 yards out. Morris's point after touchdown made it 3 1-20, North Carolina; but that was all the scoring William and Mary would do while the Tar Heels padded their lead, to a large extent with a passing attack that accounted for 222 of 515 total yards on the game. "They attacked us in the right spots and were able to get a few yards off of us," UNC cornerback Walter Black said. "But our objective is to keep them out of the end zone more times than we get in the end zone, and we did that today." While Stankavage was 9-of-12 for 124 yards and two touchdowns in the first ly binding contract between Southern Bell and a subscriber. She also said that students should be able to indicate on the card whether they are interested in any of the optional services and then sign the card. Some students who called the local Southern Bell office to have their telephones connected also have had prob lems with the optional services. Sheryl Thomas, a senior English major from Hendersonville, said she called Southern Bell to have her phone con-. nected. When it still had not been con nected three weeks later, her roommate, Tracy Adams, a senior journalism major from Goldsboro, called Southern Bell again. . "The lady asked me if we wanted Call ing Cards and a separate listing, but she said nothing about Call Waiting," Adams said. "Now we do have it, and I wish we didn't." Thomas said, 'It irritates me, especially when I'm on the phone long distance and it (Call Waiting) interrupts me." Adams and Thomas have not yet re ceived a phone bill and do not know if they are being charged for the service. Trey Carter, a freshman from Gastonia, said a Southern Bell representative called him during the second week of school and told him about the options available. He said he told her he. was not interested, and she said she would send him a pamphlet with more information. "I never got the pamphlet, but I do have Call Waiting," Carter said. "I just happened to notice it when I was on the phone one day- It's more of a nuisance than anything." George Mullen, Chapel Hill district, manager for Southern Bell, said that to his knowledge, no one had had any of thie op tional services hooked up without first giv ing permission. "If someone says he did not request the services, he will not be held responsible to pay for them," Mullen said. "We operate on the premise-that everyone is as honest as we are.".. In some cases, students were called by a Southern Bell representative who told them that they would receive one of the optional services free for one month. At See SOUTHERN BELL on page 4 m Serving the student and the University community since 1893 Monday, September 26, 1983 half, most of North Carolina's offense in that half was generated on the ground. Junior tailback Ethan Horton side stepped and spun his way for 1 12 yards on 20 carries in those first 30 minutes of game time for North Carolina and the Tar Heels scored touchdowns on their first five possessions, failing only when they held , onto the ball for one down to let the last a 0:18 .run off the clock. ; ; "It's what they were giving us," said UNC tailback Tyron Anthony of the run. "In the first half, they gave us the run. In the second half, they shut down the run but still gave us the passing attack." But before the Tribe gave anything, it III s V I w U it - "Yure Nmomma," better known as Teague resident Steve Latham, was crowned 1983 Homecoming queen at the football game on Saturday. A differen t twist Homecoming queen a By AMY TANNER Staff Writer A guy in a dress with hairy legs, smeared makeup, and a five o'clock shadow. No, not a drag queen Homecoming queen. During halftime of Saturday's game, Scott College representative "Yure Nmomma" was crowned UNC , Homecoming queen. - "Yure Nmomma" is also known as Steve Latham, a junior political science major from Wilmington. Latham is a Teague resident. Latham said most people were congratulatory after his win, but that there were a few who weren't too happy. " ' "Some guy tried to throw water on me and it hit the roses," he saidv Latham and Carolina Athletic Association Presi dent Padraic Baxter said they were jeered at by fans angry with "Yure Nmomma's" new title. The CAA sponsored the Homecoming queen contest. Baxter last week considered not letting Latham run liar Chapel Hill, North Carolina DTKJamie Francis did a little taking: 11 plays, 67 yards and seven points worth to be exact. William and Mary received the kickoff and pro ceeded to "move that ball right down our throats," in the words of North Carolina defensive tackle William Fuller. After Morris's extra point and ensuing kickoff, the Tar Heels answered with a 16-play, 78-yard drive of their own, with Horton accumulating exactly half of those yards on the ground, the last of . which, came with Horton diving over the middle" of the goal line for the touchdown. y Stankavage rolled left and found Smith cutting to the corner flag on that side early in the .second quarter for another six See FOOTBALL on page 5 OTHWeff Neuville for Homecoming queen. "Baxter was an excellent sport," Latham said. Baxter said Sunday of the choice of Homecoming queen, "If 'that's what everybody wants, 'that's perfect." Dominica Palounek, a member of the Homecoming court and representative of the Marching Tar Heels, said she was disappointed when Latham won. "It's amazing how much of a joke he, Scott Residence College and the student body take this whole thing," she said. "I think it's cruel to do it to the people who worked so hard for Homecoming." Another member of the court, Varsity cheerleaders representative Jill Johnston, agreed with Palounek. "I realize a lot of the students don't take things as seriously as they should be taken," she said. "Anything unusual or different will get backing from the student body more than something that is traditional. I expected it after the whole incident with Reckshun." Reckshun was a pseudonym for a student running for student body president in February. Cease-fire accord declared The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon Saudi and Syrian officials Sunday night announced a cease fire agreement in the Lebanese civil war hours after a renewed attack near U.S. Marine positions at Beirut airport. Three Marines were wounded during the day. The cease-fire accord to take effect at 6 a.m. today (midnight Sunday EDT) was announced in Damascus, where Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul-Halim Khaddam told a news conference, "An agreement has been reached for a cease fire in Lebanon, ending the war and start ing a national dialogue. What was achieved is great." Druse leader Walid Jumblatt, who at tended talks with Khaddam and others, said he had ordered his militiamen to stop firing at 6 a.m. today. Khaddam said, "We appeal to all our Lebanese brothers to go beyond the blood shed and the hatred in order to restart the building of Lebanon." Lebanon's latest civil war began Sept. 4 with the withdrawal of Israeli troops from the mountains overlooking Beirut to a new defense line farther south. Syrian-backed Druse, reportedly aided by Palestinian guerrillas, battled fiercely with Christian militiamen and Lebanese army troops in the mountains and on the capital's out skirts. Khaddam and Saudi Prince Bandar Bin Sultan refused to provide details of the agreement at the Damascus news con ference, saying they would be disclosed later by Lebanese President Amin Gemayel in Beirut. Bandar said: "This is the beginning of the road for Arab solidarity and for free ing Lebanon from Israeli occupation." He Activity-filled weekend marks 1983 Homecoming By AMY TANNER Staff Writer It was sweat er-and-j acket weather during. Saturday's victory over the Col lege of William and Mary. Homecom ing weekend and the first days of fall were ushered in with 60-degree temperatures. Homecoming activities began Friday with a pep rally in the Pit at noon, and a parade at 3:30 p.m. In the parade Homecoming candidates rode in cars through Franklin Street, and there were several float entries. The winning float, from Manly Residence Hall, had a replica of a space shuttle and a sign on the side that said, "Manly Challenger." The banner in front of the float said, "Manly Dorm Salutes William Thornton, the first UNC graduate in space." The rock band Arrogance played at Great Hall Friday night to about 300 people. The concert, pep rally and parade were sponsored by the Carolina Athletic Association. During halftime of the game was the traditional crowning of the Homecom ing queen. This year's queen was "Yure Nmomma" Scott Residence College's representative. "Yure Nmomma" is Staff meeting There will be a short, but nevertheless mandatory, DTH' staff meeting tonight at 9:30. Everyone must at tend, or else! NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 Sunday called the pact "a historic achievement that guarantees the establishment of a balanced rule in Lebanon." Sunday evening, Christian neighbor hoods in east Beirut came under heavy shelling from the Druse and Syrian-controlled mountains overlooking the capital, the state radio said. Marine spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said mortar rounds and rocket-propelled grenades hit the perimeter of the Marine base in west Beirut about 45 minutes after the truce was supposed to have taken hold at 7:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. EDT. Another Marine spokesman, Warrant Officer Charles Rowe, said one Marine was slightly wounded in the nighttime bar rage as he and the other men again went to their highest state of alert, diving into bunkers and foxholes. As the shells fell, the battleship New Jersey patrolled offshore in a show of U.S. naval might. Earlier, state radio said U.S. presidential envoy Robert C. McFarlane told Gemayel that all parties had agreed to a truce, and President Reagan's national security ad viser, William Clark, told reporters in New York that an agreement would be an ' nounced in Damascus. In New York, Reagan displayed crossed fingers and said of the reported cease-fire, "It is a first step." , Reports of an accord to end hostilities between the Lebanese army and Syrian - backed militias have persisted in Beirut for days. t The Marines are part of a four-nation, force originally sent to keep the peace in Beirut last year following the Israeli inva sion and subsequent departure of Palesti nian guerrillas from the capital. But the See LEBANON on page 3 alias Steve Latham, a Teague resident and junior political science major from Wilmington. Granville East's eight floor won the halftime banner contest with an entry that proclaimed "William and Mary will never score." On the banner were an Indian and a girl in bed dreaming about a ram. The ram was laughing at the couple. The floor won a keg and 10 pizzas. UNC mikeman Kenny Ward said the crowd at the game lacked enthusiasm. "I was really disappointed," Ward said. "I want to believe the reason no one was cheering was because the game was so boring." Following the game, about 800 peo ple attended the Embers concert in Woollen gym. Concert Coordinator Perry Morrison said there was not much alcohol at the concert even though it was bring-your-own-beer. "Almost everyone was drinking cokes," Mor rison said. There was also music and dancing at Great Hall Saturday night. Students at the Black and Blue Semi-Formal en joyed themselves and jazz music, said Sherrod Banks, Black Student Move ment president. man this year Maybe, some people were unhappy about the choice of Homecoming queen, but Latham wasn't one of them. "I had loads of fun," he said, adding that everyone wanted pictures of him. - Latham said he had been worried about the reaction from his grandparents, who are UNC alumni and who attended the game. "They really got off on it," Latham said. His grandfather shaved his chest in the 1920s for a joke function on campus, Latham said. "It must run in the family." Some alumni higher in the stands were surprised to learn that Latham was a male, and he heard more than a few expressions of shock as he walked through the stands, Latham said. The queen wore a white dress with lavender stripes that was borrowed from a Whitehead resident. It looked like a "maternity dress without a sash," he said. Latham also wore a white hat with a purple band See QUEEN on page 3