-NCAA-Maryland Virginia N.C. State , Wake Forest NFL Washington L. A. Raiders Green Bay Tampa Bay 23 Miami (Fla.) 3 Duke 38 Auburn 15 Fla. State 56 West Virginia 17 Pittsburgh 27 S. Carolina 24 S. California 24 21 38 14 37 Dallas 35 Minnesota 55 Philadelphia 14 Atlanta 37 Pittsburgh 24 Houston 28 Baltimore 24 Cincinnati 17 10 34 31 Warmday Mostly sunny today and Tuesday with highs in the mid-80s. Lows tonight in the mid-50s. Thanks, Yaz Boston says goodby to Yastrzemski ... See page 5. iT. mtn Copyright 1983 The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 91, Issue 65 Monday, October 3, 1983 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 UNCgets comeback win over Ga. Tech By KURT ROSENBERG Assistant Sports Editor ATLANTA Brooks Barwick had just kicked a 24-yard field goal with 0:00 showing on the clock. The first half was over and North Carolina, trailing Georgia Tech, 21-10, went into the locker room to try to sort things out. It was up to coach Dick Crum to do the sorting, to tell his players what they were doing wrong and what they had to do to cancel a huge party that was already being scheduled for sometime around 4:30 p.m. Saturday on the Gerogia Tech cam pus. It was the opportunity for a classic pep talk dripping with cliches, to bring intensity to a team that had been sluggish on defense and had not played anywhere near its potential. But Dick Crum saw no need to be a Rockne or a Lombardi. It's not his style. What did he say to his team at halftime? "Nothing," Crum said. " 'Just keep playing.' " Whatever he said, or didn't say, apparently worked. North Carolina came out of its locker room at the northwest, corner of Grant Field and did the same things that were suppos ed to go right in the first half and didn't. The Tar Heels didn't make any drastic changes, but the scoreboard did. UNC scored four touchdowns in the second half, stiffened on defense, allow ing the Yellow Jackets just 78 yards in the final 30 minutes, and left Atlanta with a 38-21 win and a 5-0 record. "He didn't go through a tirade or anything," cornerback Walter Black understated, as he described Crum's low-key halftime talk. "Most of the talking was done by the football players. It was just a matter of the players taking charge." Just as it had been a matter of the Georgia Tech players tak ing charge in the first half. With 8:51 left in a scoreless first quarter, tailback Robert Lavette took a quick pitch from Tech quarterback John Dewberry, started to run right and saw the hole in the UNC defense quickly close. So with the defense go ing one way, Lavette decided to go the other, slashing against the grain and outrunning the North Carolina defenders for a 58-yard touchdown. "A shock," UNC defensive tackle William Fuller called it. Five minutes later, the Yellow Jackets stung again. Starting from their own 37, they drove, to the Tar Heels' 22, where Dewberry lofted a pass to wide receiver Darrell Norton near the left sideline. Because of a breakdown in North Carolina's zone defense, Norton found himself wide open inside the five, caught the ball and scored easily to make it 14-0. Before things got too out of hand, Scott Stankavage took things into his own hands with 18 seconds left in the first quarter. On third-and-five from the Georgia Tech seven, the UNC quarterback completed an 80-yard drive by sneaking into the end zone after seeing his receivers covered. Stankavage roll ed to his left, then, under heavy pressure reversed his field and, helped by tight end Dave Truitt's block, managed to get in for the score. Stankavage said he didn't know Truitt made the block, but he did know how important it was. "I was ready to pat him on the butt as I jumped into the end zone," he said. Georgia Tech jumped into the end zone once more, though, driving 47 yards after linebacker Dante Jones intercepted a Stankavage pass. Dewberry hit tight end Ken Whisenhunt, who was open in the end zone, for a five-yard touchdown pass that put the Jackets up, 21-7. Barwick's field goal cut the deficit to 1 1 after the Tar Heels drove 83 yards in 1 :23, helped by the run See GAME on page 5 IIIIMIIII w.fsyyyyyyfysyysy. Mmmmttt 4, t-XX'r. -':::;:;:::v: fy-ttsyy&tf'tyy? r &msfst- ?. z -Mm mmrnm-' :yy 1 I f; rj y .f. Xj 4, mmmm P O 'Ik: i stir "' " yy , & ' . C X I-'"' '' 'f' ' i 'i ,4 y ' , Q ' y ) 'yy'i'", - ' 7A- '''Si Just swingih9... DTHRyke Longest This youngster didn't need a demonstration of homemade swings at the Festifall Street Fair Sunday; he tested them himself. Festifall, in its 12th year on Franklin Street, provided fairgoers with crafts.'food and entertainment. Lebanese adviser says there is a plot to partition Lebanon The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon Druse leader Walid Jumblatt set up a council to ad minister Chouf province, and an adviser to President Amin Gemayel on Sunday ac cused Jumblatt's Syrian backers of plot ting to partition Lebanon into separate states. Gemayel called in top Moslem and Christian advisers for an emergency meeting to discuss Jumblatt's announce ment Saturday that he was forming an eight-man "civil administration commit tee" to run the day-to-day affairs of Chouf province "in the emergency cir cumstances. . .until the return of central government institutions." Jumblatt told reporters in his Chouf mountain home at Mouktara that the committee would later act as a "pressure block" for the Druse in the central govern ment's management of social, economic and administrative affairs. Farouk Jaber, a political adviser to Gemayel, told reporters after the emer gency government meetings Sunday that Syria was using Jumblatt to partition Lebanon into cantons, or separate states. "I believe there is an attempt to parti tion Lebanon on a canton basis," Jaber said. "The action taken by Jumblatt falls in the long-term strategy of the Syrian government to extend its hegemony over parts of Lebanon." . Gemayel met with Prime Minister Shafik Wazzan and former President Camille Chamoun, and Chamoun told reporters afterward that he too thought Jumblatt meant to divide Lebanon on the basis of "federal cantons." "The most urgent question is whether this applies to the Chouf only or to all other Lebanese areas," he said. "This defies the resolutions of the Islamic confederation of Lebanese Moslem leaders, which said 'no to federa tion, no to confederation and no to parti tion,' " Chamoun said. "Those whom he announced as the ad ministrative committee are true sectarians with loyalties to their religious sect instead of Lebanon." The Christian Voice of Lebanon radio reported brief artillery exchanges around the town of Baasir in the southern Chouf mountains Sunday, and Beirut Radio said gunmen kidnapped four internal security policemen and two employees of the state electricity company just south of Beirut airpot. All six were later released unharmed after the abductors confiscated the weapons of the policemen and their two cars. The gunmen were not identified. Meanwhile, the rightist Christian Lebanese Forces militia turned over about 200 Druse women and children to the wife of a major Druse leader. The refugees had been held at the village of Ghosta, in the Christian mountain heartland, for several weeks. Trinkaus building house after 'prophetic' vision By CLINTON WEAVER Staff Writer It isn't easy to find Ted Trinkaus. Miles outside Chapel Hill, past scattered houses and occasional cars, a sign along a gravel road sits precariously inside a cinderblock. It points to the right and says, simply "Trinkaus." Visitors travel a winding path through dense, green woods, marked by stacks of carefully cut timber. Few of the sun's rays penetrate the foliage until, at the long trail's end, comes a clearing. There you can find Ted Trinkaus at work on his craft, building b.jiew home. It's not just any home, though. For Trinkaus, it's part of a vision, a visit that changed his life. In 1969, Trinkaus was a successful businessman. Work ing in New York as an industrial and graphic designer, he lived in Connecticut, where he was building a large, new home. All seemed well. Then, at work on his home one day, Trinkaus saw an image of a house, a much smaller house he felt he should be building. His crowded suburban life was fast becoming unbearable, "It got to be a bit too much for me," Trinkaus says somberly. He sits calmly on a wooden board, his hands a faint orange from the hard, red clay. "Everything was wretched. I was successful in business ' and had good partners, but it was pretty wretched. So I decided to run away. "But," he says, "I ran away with my family." Trinkaus, his wife and three children traveled for five years, living on money from the sale of his house a house he had spent five years of weekends building. "The original idea was, we were gonna leave the crowd ed Eastern conditions," Trinkaus says. "We were gonna go to Montana. . . . There was hardly anybody there." They did, camping in the wilderness most of the time. It was a soothing change from the city life they left. Then they went to Nova Scotia for three years, but something still wasn't right; Trinkaus couldn't forget the vision of a small house he had seen. He and his family spent a winter at architect Frank Lloyd Wright's summer home in Wisconsin, while Trinkaus studied his works. Finally, finances ran low. Destitute, Trinkaus came to North Carolina in 1974, but the recession kept him from finding a job. Then, last November, he had another prophetic vision, he says, to begin building his house. He did. "We had no money to pay people," he says, "but things fell into place. . . . We've been depending on spiritual guidance for everything we've done." So far, he has cleared a path to the site and laid the home's foundation. His 22-year-old daughter, Liz, quit college to help. She says the house is more important to her than school. "It was a once-in-a-titetime opportunity, . . . ' she says. "I've been 100 percent devoted to it for years." Liz is proud of her father's commitment to the project and his ability to change the course of his life. "Most peo ple would like to be able to do that just pick up and move. . . " she says. "1 probably wouldn't do some of the same things, but that doesn't take away any of the respect. I' really am very proud of him." She and her father work on the house each weekday, with hopes of completing it by winter. "It seems to suit our purpose to do it the way we're doing it," Trinkaus says, "to find out how a non-professional does it this whole project in a sense involves our spiritual philosophy." He explains the connection between house and spirit in his book, Ted Trinkaus in Good Company: "These words came to me: . . .The home will become the center of Spiritual Life. Man and his family will need a more ap propriate shelter to inspire dreams to flight and substance, to nurture the beauty of the soul. A house of Light and Hope, a simple temple, open to all life, hinting at the unity of God." Trinkaus' "temple" will be heated by a wood stove beneath its hollow concrete floor, he says. Heat from the stove will travel in a cavity between two-layered brick See HOUSE on page 2 had -year-olds ast lawful beers By TRACY ADAMS Staff Writer Whew, the rush is over! Eighteen-year-old beer drinkers who refuse to abstain will now be closet drinkers, hiding in the haven of their dormitory rooms. Friday night, Franklin Street bars were the havens as 18-year-olds gathered for their last night of legal beer consumption. Many 18-year-olds anticipated drinking until midnight but were disappointed when many bars stopped admitting them hours before the deadline. ' The Upper Deck stopped admitting 18-year-olds at 8 p.m., said manager John Hartley. Hartley said he decided on 8 p.m. be cause it was a slow time for business and because it would be easier than trying to do it at 11:30 p.m. or 11:45 p.m. "It was either decide on a cutoff point or close down entirely," Hartley said. Troll's, He's Not Here, Linda's, Papagayo's and Henderson Street Bar also stopped admitting 18-year-olds before the deadline. While 18-year-olds were denied admit tance before the deadline, most of them were taking it well. "There's been no trouble," said a bouncer at Troll's, where 18-year-olds were denied admittance after 6 p.m. Tim Poe, who was working the gate at He's Not Here; said he had turned away about 100 people. Poe said some people were hassling him about not letting them in, but he just explained that he was doing his job. Mike Yoppe, a bouncer at Henderson Street Bar, said the change seemed not to hurt business and to disappoint only some people. Eighteen-year-olds were not ad mitted after 8 p.m. Keegan's on West Franklin Street con tinued admitting 18-year-olds but closed at midnight and stopped serving beer at 1 1 :30 p.m. Buzzy Sumerell, a bartender at Keegan's, said she had served mostly 18-year-olds. Sumerell said she remem bered one girl who was celebrating her 18th birthday and her only day to legally drink. Keith Greenspon, 20, a junior industrial relations major from Charlotte, said he thought raising the drinking age to 19 would increase drug abuse, especially marijuana, among young people. Greenspon said he disagreed with the new driving-while-impaired law because it was based on each officer's discretion, making the system inconsistent. Geoff Owens, 20, a junior geology ma jor from Cary, said the strict DWI laws are "smart and long overdue." "Every drunk taken off the road is a favor to the citizens," Owens said. Moving east on Franklin Street, 18-year-olds didn't fare as well. Instead of spend ing their last legal night of guzzling beer in bars, many spent the night walking along the street and contemplating the effects of the new law. Benjy Sutker, 18, a freshman biology major from Charlotte, said he was aware of all the law's provisions. He said he did not see the connection between the drink ing age and the problem with drunk drivers. "The main problem (with the old law) was the plea bargaining that people got away with," Sutker said. "They can send me to Lebanon to put bullets in babies but I can't have a beer. If I have the responsibilities of a U.S. citizen, I want to have the privileges," Sutker said. While most people did not share Sutker's opinion on the law, most agreed that it won't be totally effective. David Schwartz, 18 and a freshman from Chapel Hill, said a policeman talked to his dorm about the law during orienta tion week. "He (the police officer) said they would make a lot of arrests during the first couple of months to let people know they're serious, then they'd slack off. "How are we supposed to respect that?" Schwartz said. Schwartz, who was interviewed after he left Purdy's, said he would probably drink less. "I think the new law takes a lot out of the college atmosphere," Schwartz said. "Nightlife is as important when you're in college as classes; you just don't have a faculty adviser for it." While most of the impact of the law in Chapel Hill was felt by UNC freshmen, some high school students also lost the right to drink. Leslie Robinson, 18, who attends Chapel Hill High School, said that the DWI law is important but that raising the drinking age will not solve the problem. "The new drinking age will help get alcohol out of the high school but not much," Robinson said. "Eighth-graders can get someone to buy them beer." While 18-year-olds were being turned away from bars, only a few flocked to convenience stores to stock up on their favorite beer: "Business is much slower tonight than we expected tonight," said Bruce Willis, a See REACTION on page 2 3 4 5 Weekend rain doesn 't help; restrictions still mandatory By JOHN CONWAY City Editor When it rains, it pours. But even when it pours in Chapel Hill, the water shortage drags on. Despite a total rainfall of 1.04 inches Friday and Saturday, University Lake re mained more than 60 inches below full this weekend, and mandatory water restrictions continued to be imposed by local water utility officials. University Lake was 60.5 inches below full both Saturday and Sunday. Friday's lake level was 62 inches below full. Although Chapel Hill received more than one inch of rain last week, the effect on the lake level was not significant, said Pat Davis, systems management specialist for the Orange Water and Sewer Authori ty. ' Davis said the rainfall added a couple of days' supply to the reservoir and re duced water consumption. The lake level rose 1.5 inches Friday and remained at that level through the weekend. . On Friday, OWASA customers con sumed 5.6 million gallons of water. Con sumption dropped to 4.8 million gallons on Saturday. Davis said OWASA customers did not feel the need to water their lawns and gardens Saturday follow ing the rainfall'on the previous two days. Under the mandatory restrictions, resi dents are permitted to water their lawns and gardens only between 4 p.m. and 8 pm. Saturday. But Everett Billingsley, executive direc- University Lake I p Sunday's lak laval 60 Inch below lull I Saturday! consumption laval 4J million gallons, OWASA Target Laval U mlMon gallon tor 01 uWAbA said Sunday that con sumption must continue dropping before OWASA can reach its average consump tion target of 5.5 million gallons per day. Billingsley also said it would be a cou ple of months before mandatory restric tions could be lifted. "Unless we get some unusual rainfall, the restrictions will remain in effect throughout the fall," he said, "and they will become more severe if we do not receive enough rain to restore the lake level." Mandatory water restrictions were im posed by OWASA on Sept. 6 when the level at University Lake dropped to more than 48 inches below full. The conservation measures prohibit serving water in restaurants, unless re nuvitcd, and ban the use of water-cooled air conditioners, except for health and safety reasons. Car washes that use OWASA-provided water also are banned.

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