NCAA NFL Maryland 36 Virginia 38 L. A. Rams 27 San Francisco 31 Wake Forest 33 VMI 10 Atlanta 21 New Orleans 13 Clemson 38 Auburn 31 Dallas 37 Pittsburgh 44 Duke 31 Georgia Tech 13 Philadelphia 7 Cleveland 17 World Series The Baltimore Orioles are the World Champions of baseball after sweeping three games in Philadelphia, cap ped off by a 5-0 romp in Game No. 5 Sunday. See story, page 5. Weather Sunny today with highs in the mid-70s. Fair tonight and tomorrow. Lows in the lower 50s and highs in the mid-70s. Copyright 1983 The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved. Mm 4 nr Concert Review The name of the band is Talking Heads. They per formed in Carmichael Thurs day, and the story is on p. 4. Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Volume 91, Issue 75 Monday, October 17, 1983 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 mmmm mm . mrnmi 4$ . V .(I u s& W tek , Annilll Mil A .j1iimirnl A.s v V OTHZane A. Saunders Wide receiver Earl Winfield fights his way into the end zone after catching a Scott Stankavage pass in the fourth quarter. Winfield had four catches in North Carolina's 42-14 victory over N.C. State Saturday in Raleigh. Heels write familiar script in crushing State By FRANK KENNEDY Assistant Sports Editor RALEIGH The State Fair was in full gear just a hop and a skip from Carter-Finley Stadium Satur day, but that didn't take anything away from the football circus put on by North Carolina and N.C. State. The Tar Heels' ground assault force ran roughshod over the Wolfpack, while Tom Reed's Pack passed wildly through the UNC secondary. In the end, the Tar Heels won easily, 42-14, but this was nevertheless one of the better games in the recent history of the rivalry. Just ask UNC coach Dick Crum. "I told the kids before the game that they were go ing to play in one of the true classics in the United States," he said. "I believe that's the kind of game it was." For North Carolina, there were plenty of fireworks in what has become something of a repetitious script for UNC. Although the Tar Heels had State totally outmatched on paper, the Wolfpack still rallied from an early deficit to tie things up at 14 at the intermis sion. Sound familiar? In the last two UNC games, Georgia Tech took a 21-10 lead over the Tar Heels at the half and Wake Forest kept things even through two periods. So what is the problem in the first half? That old intangible called intensity. "There are no major problems," - UNC Ail American defensive tackle William Fuller said. '.'It's just a matter of intensity. Plus, (State) was working with real good field position in the first half. They were starting from the 50 and the 40, and when they only have that far to go, the emotion is going to be in their favor." That, and the fact that Wolfpack quarterback Tim Esposito sizzled all day, completing a school-record 31 of 48 passes for 294 yards. "He's a good quarterback," Fuller said of Esposito. "He's a good thrower and I was impressed with him." It took Esposito's hot hand to keep State in the game, especially since the Pack couldn't move the ball on the ground. State's leading rusher, Joe Mcin tosh, managed only 20 yards on 1 1 carries. UNC linebacker Bill Sheppard said the defensive plan was to contain State's backs from the outset. "We wanted to shut down the whole running game," he said. "They have several good backs, and we were keying on all of them, not just Mcintosh." UNC struck quickly and decisively for the early lead, scoring on two six-play drives for a 14-0 margin. Quarterback Scott Stankavage scored the first points by sneaking over the goal line three minutes after the opening kickoff; then tailback Ethan Horton squirted around right end for 17 yards early in the second quarter for another six points. Horton, who picked up most of his yardage in the second half, rushed for 1 1 1 yards on the day to raise his season total to 809 yards with four games remain ing. Actually, the score could have been 21-0 at that point, if not for a painted ball that slipped from the grasp of tailback Tyrone Anthony at the end of a 45-yard dash midway through the first period. An thony was inside the Wolfpack 20 when the pigskin popped loose and bounded out of the end zone. Crum partially blamed the grounds crew for that incident and several problems encountered by both teams. "The field was in extremely poor condition," he said. "It was extremely wet and they painted it (Saturday morning). There was a big blob of paint on the ball and it just squeezed out of Tyrone's arm." Anthony led all rushers with 130 yards in 14 car ries, raising his season tally to 563 yards. State took advantage of excellent field position later in the quarter, driving to the UNC five before a fumble (recovered by Sheppard) ended the threat. But the Tar Heels could not get out of poor field position, and State took a punt at midfield, then drove quickly into the end zone behind the arm of Esposito and a four-yard Mcintosh run. After forcing another punt, State drove methodically downfield and scored just 38 seconds before halftime when fullback Vince Evans took a fourth-down carry through a wall of defenders into the end zone. Crum said the Tar Heels made no major ad justments during the half. "I figure if you go into the half even up, why, you still got a half to go and a half to win," he said. It took all of two minutes and 15 seconds for the Tar Heels to score the decisive points, as flanker Mark Smith caught a Stankavage pass, faked a defender and ran 19 yards for the score. Fullback Ed die Colson made it 28-14 just three minutes later on a seven-yard scamper. Sheppard broke up State's only second half threat when he picked off an Esposito fourth-down pass See GAME on page 4. .Bell i nves ng ervice confusion By LYNN DAVIS Staff Writer The district office of Southern Bell in Raleigh is conducting an investigation to determine the cause of the confusion over the unauthorized placement of optional telephone . services on UNC students' phones, a Bell spokesman said Friday. Herb Crenshaw, manager of the Southern Bell business office in Raleigh, said that district manager Ron Stamey is currently conducting interviews with Bell employees and subscribers to determine whether students were unintentionally misled by something in the sales approach or if there was actual wrongdoing by a Southern Bell employee. Crenshaw said Stamey would then make a decision as to whether auditors from the Charlotte area headquarters should be called in to conduct a "totally objective in vestigation." Stamey was unavailable for comment. Problems with the optional services arose at the beginning of the semester when students returning to school had their phones hooked up and then found that they also had one or more of the op tional services even though they had not requested them. Optional services include call waiting, call forwarding, three-way calling and speed calling. Several students said they were called by a Southern Bell sales representative who offered them one or more of the services free for one month. They said they were told to call Southern Bell's local office and have the services disconnected if they did not want to continue them past the pro motional period. But Crenshaw said Southern Bell's pro cedure had been to call as many students as possible and tell them they could have the services connected without having to pay a $10.50 installation fee. "I think most of the confusion is over the difference between the monthly rate and the installation rate," Crenshaw said. "We have not been offering any of the ser vices free of charge for a trial period. "There was no additional cost to put the services on, but there is a monthly rate, of course. It is our responsibility to make it clear, but evidently that didn't come across." The UNC Student Consumer Action Union has been conducting a survey to determine exactly how many students have received optional phone services that they did not request. "Preliminary results from our survey in dicate that over half of the students who were contacted by a Southern Bell representative understood that they were being offered the service free for a trial month," said SCAU chairman Richard Owens. Renee Osborne, a junior international relations major from Winston-Salem, said her roommate was contacted by a Southern Bell representative who said that they could receive all four services free for a one-month trial period, then call to have the services disconnected at the end of the month if they didn't want them. 'She didn't even talk about installa 1," Osborne said. "There was no men tion of it at all. She said they wanted us to try the services for free." Marty Kivett, a sophomore psychology major from Greensboro, also said that she was contacted by a Bell representative whom she understood to be offering call See BELL on page 2 Marine killed in Lebanon; U.S. combat deaths now 6 The Associated Press BEIRUT, Lebanon One U.S. Marine was killed and three were wounded Sun day in seven hours of sniping and rocket propelled grenade attacks on Marine posi tions at Beirut international airport, spokesman Maj. Robert Jordan said. It was the third consecutive day of at tacks on the Marines and raised the toll of Marine combat deaths to six since the American peacekeeping contingent arrived here 13 months ago. A seventh Marine perished when a mine he was attempting to defuse exploded. Jordan said the Marines serving with Alpha Company at the southernmost end of Beirut's airport first came under fire at about 4:20 p.m. (10:20 a.m. EDT) and that firing from small arms and rocket propelled grenades continued until after 1 1 p.m. (5 p.m. EDT). Jordan said the Marines fired back with anti-tank rockets and small arms. He said the dead Marine suffered a head wound, one injured man had an "urgent" head injury and another was in serious condition with an arm wound. Two of the injured Marines were flown to the Iwo Jima, the main hospital ship for the 1,600-man American force, and the third was treated on shore, said Jordan. A CH-46 helicopter came under small arms fire during the evacuation of the wounded but was not hit, he said. At one point, Jordan reported that five Marines had been wounded, but he later corrected that to three. None of the Marines was immediately identified. A total of 54 have been wound ed in the past 13 months. On Friday and Saturday, snipers con centrated on the Marine positions at the opposite end of the airport. One Marine was killed and another was wounded in See LEBANON on page 2 Higher pay urged for library staff By STUART TONKINSON Assistant University Editor The UNC Faculty Council urged Friday that the University give the "highest priori ty" to improving the number and salary of library staff members when considering the school's next budget. The council voted to support a resolu tion introduced by the Executive Commit tee of the American Association of University Professors calling for higher salaries for library staff members and an increased library staff. "As the quality of the staff dis seminating information becomes more im portant, UNC is falling behind in terms of staff conditions," University librarian James F. Govan said. The staff situation in UNC libraries has deteriorated regularly for the last ten years, Govan said. This situation must be cor rected for the library to maintain its stan dard of excellence, he said. Govan presented the council with a table ranking the median professional salaries in university research libraries for the 1983 fiscal year. According to the table, UNC ranks 95th of 101 research universities, with a median salary of $19,600. Duke University ranks 35th in the table with a median salary of $23,880. The University of Virginia ranks 75th with a median salary of $21,000. But Govan said that such figures did not accurately represent the quality of the UNC library staff and material. UNC ranks 22nd nationally in number of holdings and second in the Southeast, Govan said. The University ranks 1 1th na tionally in the number of volumes added each year and first in the Southeast. Volumes are added at the lowest cost in the Southeast, he said. Govan said that long-range plans made in 1975 for University libraries called for the creation of more than 25 new posi tions. The University recommended 40 new positions in 1980, based on the expan sion of UNC plans for the libraries, such as the construction of the Walter R. Davis Library. But 13 staff members have been lost since 1975, Gevan said. The loss of staff members is partly a result of the decline in median staff salaries, he said. The median staff salary for the 1982 fiscal year was $19,750, according to the table, which was compiled by the Washington-based Association of Research Libraries. A graph compiled from ARL-supplied data shows that me dian salaries for UNC professional librarians declined from a rank of 35th in the 1970 fiscal year to its present rank of 95th, during a time at which the scope of University libraries grew significantly, Govan said. Govan said that during this period the University has lost several young librarians because of this decline in median salary. In other business, UNC Chancellor Christopher C. Fordham HI told the facul ty that the committee searching for a new Affirmative Action officer had been authorized to look for candidates outside the University. The search for a new Affirmative Ac tion officer began last summer when former officer Gillian T. Cell resigned the post to become chairman of the history department. Benjamin E. Rawlins is presently acting Affirmative Action officer for the University. A six-member search committee chaired by Vice Chancellor for University Affairs Harold Wallace had earlier recommended to Fordham that Rawlins fill that position permanently. See COUNCIL on page 2 t " ' 1 J ' ,y is V ' ; Gov. Jim Hunt spoke at a fundraiser at the Hotel Europa Sunday afternoon. He stressed positive issues. Hunt says campaign to be open, positive By TOM CONLON Staff Writer The 1984 U.S. Senate race will be a campaign of issues not negative accusations, Gov. Jim Hunt told approximately 400 supporters at a $50 per-person fundraiser at the Hotel Europa Sunday afternoon. Hunt is expected to challenge incumbent Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C, although neither candidate has formally announced. "We will not run the kind of vicious, tearing down campaign that they (Helms' forces) are running," Hunt said. "We will run an open, positive campaign that we'll invite everyone to partici pate in." Hunt said the "Four E's" economy, education, elderly and environment would be the major issues in his campaign. "We've got to build a new economy," he said. "Interest rates, farmers and small businesses are suffering throughout the nation. "We will run hard on education," Hunt added. "The federal government cannot stand aside when we are talking about excel lence in education. "The elderly who have built this country to what it is today are entitled to have their Social Security and Medicare pro tected," he, said. "And I will see to it that at least one of this state's senators votes for Social Security." See HUNT on page 2

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