V NCAA NFL Clemson 52 Auburn 13 East Carolina 40 Pittsburgh 24 Buffalo 24 San Diego 24 Maryland 27 Georgia 7 William and Mary 6 Baltimore 13 N.Y.Jets 17 Dallas 23 Georgia Tech 49 Miami (Fla.) 17 Arizona 27 New England 17 Houston 27 Washington 33 Wake Forest 33 Florida St. 16 UCLA 24 Miami 6 Detroit 17 N.Y. Giants 17 I 1 1 1 I ii-:h.iIT ti i umnini i i in. in 1 n i. i. iiiii I" mi - ij -; li )- r K r . . .. i i In -i !!. ' -n:: ; )-,,:; iiiii i iiiiii ri. mi ..in hi i i i i iiiii iii. ii. i. ii. .iii.i . i.i i Weather Mostly sunny today with highs in the lower 50s. In creasing cloudiness tonight with a 60 percent chance of rain tomorrow. Lows in the lower 40s. of S Jf "li. mining K. iter fit a CopjrigJil983The Daily Tar Heel. All rights reserved.- Serving the students and the University community since 1893 Kozlov Tickets Student tickets for tonight's Kpzlov Ballet performance in Memorial Hall will be sold for $10 each from 4 to 6 p.m. today at the Union Box Of fice. Students may buy up to two tickets each with cash and a valid student ID. Volume 91, Issue 92 Monday, November 14, 1983 Chapel Hill, North Carolina NewsSportsArts 962-0245 BusinessAdvertising 962-1163 Tar Heels shock No. 1 Duke in OT By MICHAEL DeSISTT Sports Editor North Carolina's Mark Devey was well justified in handing out I-told-you-sos. The sophomore striker asked head coach Anson Dorrance after the game Sunday if Dorrance better understood Devey' s strug gle with whether he should take all the team's free kicks. And Dorrance was well justified in his reply. "Why struggle?" Dorrance said. "You take the kicks." Devey's goal on a direct free kick from 25 yards out on the left side with 7:33 to play in the second and final overtime period gave North Carolina a 2-1 upset win over No. 1 Duke before 4,800 fans on Fetzer Field. The win secured Virginia the 1983 con ference championship and almost certainly earned the Tar Heels a spot in this week's NCAA tournament. Devey's screaming shot through an un prepared and mispositioned wall of Duke defenders into the upper corner of the net should have erased any doubts of un ranked North Carolina's worthiness as one of eight teams to receive at-large bids to the 24-team tournament, which begins Wednesday. Bids are extended today. "The wall wasn't together and the goalkeeper (Pat Johnston) was still moving around in the nets," Devey said. "So I just - ran up and cracked it." Duke's Mike Jeffries had nullified a 1-0 North Carolina halftime advantage with an unassisted goal on a 30-yard shot just under eight minutes into the second half, sending the game, dominated statistically by the Blue Devils, into overtime. "You've got to score to win," Duke coach John Rennie said. "We had 26 shots; they had 10 (actually 1 1). We played well enough to win, we just didn't score." Billy Hartman's follow on a Devey miscue 26:08 into the match amounted to the only scoring by either team in the game's first half. Stopper Jim Poffs long throw-in from the left sideline was cleared in the opposite direction by a Blue Devil defender's head ball. Devey attempted to strike the clearance in mid-air but sliced the ball low and hard back across the goal, where Hartman was in position to push a shot just inside the right post off the hands of a sprawling Johnston. "I went toward the goal hoping to get a rebound, but (Devey) mis-hit it," Hart man said. "It came right to me and all I had to do was get a foot on it." Hartman hadn't the only foot of good . fortune for North Carolina on Sunday, however. Freshman right back Steve, Daskal three times over's 10-minte span in the second half cleared goal-bound balls off the goal line on Duke throw-ins and corner kicks. After tying the game at one, Duke ap plied continual pressure to goalkeeper Larry Goldberg, who played near-flawless soccer in making nine saves, and to the Tar - 1 -y- I 'mf ' jr .Apr V JffM "4 v,1 -j h y ' s. A a - ;'- - ' - " - I I - KC'lv-,''-,-' " ' " , f Wfs-'vJ- i.i:iFA'' A Reasan ends tour: issues unresolved The Associated Press SEOUL, South Korea President Reagan wrapped up his Asian tour today amid fresh signs of tension on the Korean Peninsula and White House arguments that human rights problems in the south must be measured against the military threat from the north. As Reagan prepared to fly back to Washington, South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan said he had ordered artil lery gunners to stand ready to fire if necessary to protect Reagan during his un precedented trip Sunday into the demilitarized zone, 30 miles north of Seoul. The zone separates communist North Korea and South Korea. Chun said he had hoped Reagan would change his mind about touring "such a dangerous place." . "While you were away in the front-line area, I... ordered my forces to be pre pared at all times to place an artillery bar rage between you and the enemy," Chun told Reagan during a meeting at the Blue House, the presidential palace. No problems occurred during Reagan's stop at the demilitarized zone. Standing in a mortar bunker encircled by olive-drab sandbags, Reagan told American GIs they were "our shield against the tyranny and the deprivation that engulfs so much of the world." Robert McFarlane, Reagan's national security adviser, said on CBS-TV's Face the Nation that Reagan's visit to the zone was not a particular risk. Interviewed in Seoul, he said the South Korean president's warnings came against a background of emotion that the Korean leader felt over Reagan's commitment to defending South Korea from aggression. Reagan was due back in Washington shortly after noon today from the six and one-half day trip that also took him to Tokyo. He was to depart from Seoul on Monday morning local time, which was Sunday evening Washington time. Two Korean children suffering from congenital heart defects were the guests of Reagan and his wife, Nancy, on Air Force One on the trip back. The children, who will undergo open-heart surgery in New York, were accompanied by Harriet H. Hodges, who has arranged for heart surgery for more than 600 poor Korean children over the past decade. The 72-year-old president appeared to hold up well during the trip, despite a time See REAGAN on page 2 20,000 protest in D.C. against U.S. intervention DTHChartes Ledtofd UNC sophomore Mark Devey (L), shown here battling Duke's Bob Jenkins for ball, scored in second over time Sunday to give Tar Heels win over nation's No. 1-ranked team. Heel defense. On one particular series with 30 minutes to play in regulation, Daskal stopped a head-ball on the goal line and Goldberg dove and swatted it out front. At this time another shot was directed toward the op posite side of the goal. Goldberg again dove for the save, sprang to his feet and watched one last attempt go wide and out of bounds. Four Duke shots, three in the first half, skimmed off the top of the crossbar, a few with the help of Goldberg. "I think this game was just our game; there was no way we were going to lose it," Dorrance said. "We got all the breaks we hadn't been getting the last four years, and it added up into one spectacular win." Dorrance said an NCAA bid, which would be his first in seven years at North Carolina, was actually not as much of a motivational factor in the game as a shot at Duke; not only because the Blue Devils are the nation's No. 1 team but because they've beaten the Tar Heels (16-3-2, 2-3-1 ACQ the last four times the teams have met. "We thought we had a bid without win ning (the game), as long as we didn't get blown out," he said. The loss does not cost Duke (17-1-2, 4-1-1 ACQ a berth in the national tourna ment, but it does mean the loss of an ACC championship. The Blue Devils were co champions last year with Clemson and sole winners in 1980. Virginia (14-4, 5-1 ACQ, No. 7 in the nation, wins its first conference champion ship since 1970 with the Duke defeat, and along with No. 6 Clemson (16-2-2, 3-2-1 ACQ, is another conference team on its way to the NCAAs. By KEITH BRADSHER Staff Writer WASHINGTON An estimated 20,000 people, including more than 50 UNC students, demonstrated here Satur day to protest continued U.S. intervention in El Salvador and Nicaragua. The protesters marched from three dif ferent locations to the Ellipse, carrying banners and chanting, "The people united will never be defeated." In response to the protest, dozens of counter-protesters in support of U.S. intervention lay down in Pennsylvania Avenue in an attempt to block the march. Police used billy clubs on the counter demonstrators to clear the street. Eighteen members of the Collegiate Association for the Research of Principles, including Jack Ash worth, the director of the Chapel Hill CARP chapter, were ar rested on disorderly conduct charges. Among the speakers at the demonstra tion was Democratic presidential can didate Jesse Jackson. "We are here today to demand a new course in foreign policy," he said. "Latin America is not our back door, it is our next door. We must respect our next-door neighbors." In addition to opposing further U.S. in tervention in Central America, Jackson stated his views on other foreign policy "and domestic issues. He called for an im mediate American withdrawal from Lebanon and denounced the upcoming deployment of U.S. cruise and Pershing II missiles in Western Europe. Jackson urged the election of more black and Hispanic congressmen as the way to pass the Equal Rights Amendment and to abolish Right To Work laws. He led chants of "Our time has come" and asked support for his Rainbow Coalition of Minorities. "The old minorities are the new ma jorities," he said. "We must come together." Congressman Ted Weiss, D-N.Y., one of the eight members of the House who have introduced a resolution for the im peachment of Reagan, condemned Reagan's ordering the invasion of Grenada as unconstitutional. "The time has come to protect, preserve, and defend the Con stitution from Ronald Reagan." A representative of the El Salvador resistance movement said the rebels' flag now flies over a quarter of the municipalities in El Salvador. "Together, we will have to defeat this intervention," he said. "Neither you nor us want to see our beloved countries bleed." The November 12 Coalition, a group of about 70 human rights and peace groups, organized the march. Four local groups the Carolina Com mittee on Central America, Democratic Socialists of America, Combined Forces, See RALLY on page 2 Author to speak Tuesday on human ancestor Lucy By MARYMELDA HALL Staff Writer Ask most people about Lucy and they'll immediately assume she's of the "I Love" variety. Donald Johanson's Lucy, however, is a bit older than the beloved television character about 3.5 billion years older. Johanson will speak at 8 p.m. Tues day in Memorial Hall about Lucy, the oldest, most complete skeleton of any erect-walking human ancestor ever found. Discovered by Johanson in November 1974 in the Afar region of Ethiopia, Lucy has sparked interest and controversy throughout the world. Johanson is one of the world's leading paleoanthropology and is author of Lucy: The Beginnings of Humankind. After receiving his bachelor's degree in anthropology from the University of Illinois, Johan son studied under Professor F. Clark Howell at the University of Chicago where he earned his master's and doc torate degrees. , After the discovery of promising fossil sites during a 1972 trip to the Afar region, Johanson ictuincu wiui his colleagues in 1973. There he discovered the remains of a knee joint, the earliest evidence of hominid bipedalism. A hominid is an erect walking primate. A 1974 expedition to Afar yielded Lucy. Lucy's name comes from the Beatles' hit song, "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds." Johanson explains in his book, "We were sky-high, you must remember, from finding her." Another expedition in the fall of 1975 resulted in the discovery of the First Family, the fossilized remains of at least 13 individuals. This discovery marked the first recovery of an associated group of individuals. Because intense laboratory analyses of the fossils revealed to Johanson and ' his colleagues distinct differences be tween their Afar findings and other known species of hominid, they named a new species called Australopithecus afarensis (the Afar ape-man). This new species has brought about revision of ideas about the evolution of early hominids. It has also sparked controversy among anthropological Yin Ss i . r Donald Johanson scholars. Johanson's primary adversary is Richard Leakey, who is world renowned for his fossil discoveries and contributions to the study of fossils. According t5 Leakey, all the remains classified by Johanson as afarensis do not belong in the same group. Leakey maintains that at least two and pro bably three hominid lines were already present at the time, existing side by side for several million years. He insists that afarensis is not ancestral to Homo. See LUCY on page 3 North Carolina takes third strike, 1 7-14, against upstart UVa in Charlottesville By LEE ROBERTS Staff Writer For the second time in three weeks, an exuberant home crowd tore down the goal posts after a big win over North Carolina. Virginia defensive back Bart Farinholt gave his armpads to a young boy who had rushed onto the field. In the Virginia locker room, the players triumphantly exchanged high-fives and chanted over and over again, "UVa! UVa! UVa!" Virginia wide receiver Billy Griggs, who had caught a crucial third-quarter touchdown pass said, "This is the biggest win I've ever been involved in." Virginia coach George Welsh faced the throng of reporters and said, "This is one of the biggest wins for me personally and is the biggest win for this team since my regime began." Everyone was happy in Charlottesville after the Cavaliers' stunning 17-14 homecoming victory over 19th-ranked North Carolina. Well, almost everybody. UNC wide receiver Mark Smith stood in the hushed silence of the loser's locker room and thought. "It seems like all our goals are really wrecked right now," he said. "Everything has been taken away." - Smith and his teammates had just watched a 14-3 halftime lead dissolve into their third consecutive loss, as Virginia ex ploded for two third-quarter touchdowns in a span of 1:58. The victory ensured Virginia of its third winning season in 31 years and its first win over North Carolina since 1973. The Tar Heels had come out of the blocks in impressive fashion, scoring two touchdowns in their first three drives on the strength of one pass and 23 down-your-throat runs. For the next 41 minutes, however, it was a swarming Virginia defense and a balanced offensive attack that led the Cavaliers to their biggest win since a 31-0 pasting of Georgia in 1979. On its first possession of the second half, Virginia drove 54 yards in five plays to close the gap to 14-10. Quarterback Wayne Schuchts connected with Billy Griggs on a 33-yard pass for the score. Griggs caught the ball at the five, bounced off two UNC defenders and romped in for six points. "It was a deep route," Griggs said later. "I was expecting to get hit. But I caught it, the two guys hit me, and somehow I stayed on my feet." Just five plays later, UNC's Ethan Horton fumbled at the UNC 18-yard line and Virginia was home free. Virginia defensive back Lester Lyles caused the fumble. "They had been running that play all day," Lyles said. "I just went in there as hard as I could and hit him on the numbers. I didn't realize he'd fumbled until I saw people jumping on the ground." Horton. ho gained 69 yards rushing on the day to reach ex actly 1 ,000 for the season, did not seem to care about his indivi dual accomplishment. Just the fumble. "He made a good play," Horton said. "I never saw him coming." See CAVS on page 5

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