NCAA-
Kentucky
Georgia
Memphis State
Oklahoma
64 Tennessee
40 Vanderbilt
69 Syracuse
65 St. John's
76 Duke
69 Clemson
78 Notre Dame
74 Maryland
67 Wake Forest
65 Virginia
t
52 DePaul
47 UCLA
84 Villanova
76 Arkansas
84 Marquette
68 Louisville
58
54
65
60
Indiana
Iowa
Houston
Baylor
54
47
84
58
II- I
Golden Globes
Terms of Endearment' won
four Golden Globe Awards,
including best motion pic
ture drama. See story on
page 3.
Weather
Mostly cloudy today and
tonight. Highs in the upper
40s and lows in the mid-20s.
)
Copyright 1984 The Dailv Tar Hed. All rights reserved.
Volume 91, Issue 121
Heels stop
LSU; Smith
hurts wrist
By MICHAEL DeSISTI
Sports Editor
That North Carolina won the game
can't be argued. Check the score. But
then neither can the assertion that, at
least for now, the Tar Heels may have lost
a whole lot more. Check the X-rays of
Kenny Smith's left wrist.
No. 1 -ranked North Carolina held off
an LSU team very much worthy of its
pregame status as the No. 10 team in the
nation Sunday with a 90-79 win before a
capacity Carmichael Auditorium crowd
and a national TV audience.
But the celebrating will have to wait.
Smith, the Tar Heels' precocious fresh
man point guard, fell to the floor after a
slam-dunk attempt late in the game, frac
turing the wrist of his non-shooting hand
and removing him from UNC's lineup in
definitely. Smith, picked up a loose ball on the
right sideline of North Carolina's back
court with just over 4Vz minutes to play
in the game and streaked toward the
basket. LSU's John Tudor came in from
the left side attempting to block the shot,
but when Smith went up the Tiger guard
took his legs out from under him. Smith
landed horizontally on the floor, face
down.
Team physicians said they would know
more about the seriousness of Smith's in
jury today.' -
"When Kenny got the breakaway, we
were down 5 or 7, and I just went strong
after the block," Tudor said. "It wasn't
an intentional foul."
It may not have been an intentional
foul, but it was offensive enough to
arouse Michael Jordan's displeasure. Jor
dan charged up and helped Tudor to the
floor with a less-than-playful shove that
cost the junior Ail-American a technical
foul.
"That was something I shouldn't have
done," Jordan said. "It's just the way
Kenny fell, he fell on his face. I kind of
lost my temper. I shouldn't have done it,
but it could have ended Kenny's career
right there, and I'd hate to see someone
do that."
Smith remained in the game and hit the
second of two foul shots, awarded for the
Tudor foul, for the last of his 14 points.
But he sat down for the rest of the game
less than one minute later, with North
Carolina leading, 80-71, and the Tar
Heels in their four corners' offense.
With LSU content to foul the Tar
Heels in the game's final minutes, hoping
for a missed shot and the rebound, North
Carolina was 8 of 10 from the line and
easily secured the win. The Tar Heels,
17-0 overall and 6-0 in the ACC, hit 22 of
their 25 foul shots in the second half.
LSU fell to 12-5 overall and 5-3 in the
Southeastern Conference.
At Priscilla's English
Tea Room, people
forsakefast-food life
By KATHY HOPPER
Staff Writer
At first sight there is nothing unusual about the Anti
que Music and Wheels shop. It has the usual gift store
items post cards, Smurf statues and Confederate
flags. But behind the far right shelf of exotic tea bags is a
little bit of Old England.
Priscilla's English Tea Room promises "English teas
and light lunches for discriminating people." The menu
offers a wide variety of teas that will please a connoisseur
and confuse but intrigue others. Camomile, English and
Irish breakfast teas, papaya, lemon and cherry are all in
cluded. One small pot of tea costs $1.50.
The room's atmosphere suits the menu. Every table
has a music box that plays a rendition of "You Light up
my Life." Pink lampshades hang above, and bone china
is set on the table.
It is a place where people can have long talks and for
sake the fast-food life. People can practice correct eti
quette, imitate the uppercrust or pretend they are filming
an episode of Upstairs Downstairs or Brideshead
Revisited. A portrait of Queen Elizabeth II hangs above
for inspiration.
Priscilla Lane, proprietor of the tea room, scurries
from table to table talking to regulars and greeting
newcomers. Her English accent is evidence of her
Yorkshire birthplace.
"I haven't been to England for years," she said. "I
moved here (North Carolina) three years ago with my
husband from Canada. There were a lot of Britishers up
there, though."
So what does a transplanted Briton do when she
comes to North Carolina? She opens a tea room, of
course. "I guess you make the surroundings to suit
- mm
s
I, t
'"A
iS
it' ,,,, - - " I
f 4 ; -f:V"i A - 1
T )( !' - I
I ill ' I $ IT - l
I : l 1 I it ' i
t " 'If
'" ":f ? ,
"i a- ::.':::-::
M Mv w J 7
$, j V T S "" i t
DTHCtevtes Ledlcxd
UNC's Kenny Smith drives to basket against LSU's John Tudor on play
that resulted in Smith's fracturing his left wrist.
"It was an excellent college basketball
game," North Carolina coach Dean
Smith said, "if you like offense and
athletic ability. It was not real solid for
coaches to watch defensively, but it was
an excellent college game for thrills and
frills."
Though LSU had a convincing im
poster for the best player on the court
Sunday, the Tar Heels had the real thing.
Two of them, to be exact.
While the Tigers' sophomore forward
Jerry Reynolds, a 13-points-per-game
man, was scoring 29 points on 12-of-15
spwreoyr-ssNg i i ! wm.mm i
h I VS." 4&zXnj
LnV j W A aift inMMk nfirriMniiiiniii mmf-" wtf's'' a mymmwf rn i TiT'l "" " " " mi l"Mi i inrar lliiniiLmu luj
Elizabeth Deknheel and her son Gabriel drlnk tea at Priscilla's English Tea Room as pro
prietor Priscilla Lane looks on. The tea room's menu offers a. variety of teas.
yourself," she said.
And Lane's surroundings are different from the
average restaurant. A quiet tea is likely to be interrupted
by the loud calliope music of a player organ on the front
porch. The organ is one of her husband's collection of
antique musical instruments. And don't be surprised to
see a rooster or goose walk by the window. The Tea
Room is next to a farmyard that includes a fence
walking goat.
"People like to stop and have a drink," Lane said. "It
just seems natural. Brownie troops come in and drink;
mothers bring their daughters."
Though tea time is 4 p.m., Lane said her busiest time
Serving the students and the
Monday, January 30, 1984
shooting from the field, North Carolina's
candidates for national player of the year
were going about business as usual.
For Sam Perkins, though not-so-silent
anymore, this meant a relatively quiet 19
points and 17 rebounds, 12 in the first
half.
. For Jordan, this meant 29 points on
12-of-18 shooting from the field, and 11
rebounds in a style that, as always, was
anything but silent and frequently spec
tacular. See LSU on page 4
University community since 1893
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
ra
dig ror
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON Declaring, "Our
work is not finished," President Reagan '
said in a paid political broadcast Sunday
night that he will stand for re-election.
"We are here to see that government
continues to serve you not the other
way around," he said. "We are here to
lift the weak, and to build the peace." He
set no specific goals for a second term.
Reagan, 72, confirmed that Vice Presi
dent George Bush will again be his run
ning mate in a campaign already well
underway.
There were no surprises in the text of
the five-minute announcement televised
from the Oval Office at 10:55 p.m. EST.
Several newspapers were on the street
with the story even before the broadcast
began.
The president ticked off a list of prob
lems that he said faced the nation when
he took office in 1981, and concluded,
"Well, things have changed." Echoing
his 1980 campaign theme, he said, "We
made a new beginning."
The former actor and governor is mak
ing his fourth presidential campaign.
(07 o "tvr
EthicspaneL
By MARK STINNEFORD
Staff Writer
The Campus Governing Council Ethics Committee will meet
today to investigate whether Speaker James Exum misused his
authority in reserving rooms in the Carolina Union for cam
paign meetings.
Exum, a candidate for student body president, said he had
held "three or four" campaign meetings in the Union, using the
name of the CGC or the Black Interdenominational Student
Association to reserve the rooms.
"We were made aware that some question as to the speaker's
conduct in office might exist," said CGC Finance Committee
Chairman William "Doc" Droze, a member of the Ethics Com
mittee. Droze said the committee's investigation should not be taken
as a presumption that Exum had committed any wrongdoing in
office. .
"When a question of ethics is involved, it is the duty of the
Ethics Committee to undertake an investigation to determine
the nature and extent of the alleged violation," Droze said.
Exum said the Ethics Committee's investigation was ap
propriate under the circumstances.
"I think it (the room reservation issue) should immediately go
through the proper authority and that is the Ethics Commit
tee so there will be no question as to malfeasance or
whatever," Exum said.
Officially recognized student organizations are given priority
in the use of Union rooms, said Pam Kyff, chief reservationist
for the Union. Students may use rooms for other purposes, in
cluding campaign meetings if space is available, but cannot
reserve a room more than a day in advance, she said last week.
While Kyff said she was unaware Exum was reserving the
DTHJeH Neiivilie
is around lunch.
"From 12 to 2 p.m. you should make a reservation to
be sure of a table."
From 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. she serves tea with scones,
creamcakes and lemon squares. .
Priscilla's Tea Room is located in the Daniel Boone
Village in Hillsborough, exit 64 off 1-85. ,
But for those who can't make it to her restaurant,
Priscilla's also offers a catering service.
"I call my car the cream cake special because
sometimes there's more cream cakes in there than
anything else," she added. "I pack up my bone china
and teapots and off I go."
ounc
1JLJLJ
re-e
Twice he did not win the Republican
nomination; this time he is unopposed.
His decision came as 1,000 GOP of
ficials gathered in a nearby hotel
ballroom to cheer a candidate who is
riding high in the polls and has already
amassed a $4 million re-election warchest.
"Tomorrow we have all got to go to
work," campaign director Edward J.
Rollins told the crowd.
"Vice President Bush and I would like
to have your continued support and
cooperation completing what we began
three years ago," Reagan said. "I am
therefore announcing that I am a can
didate and will seek re-election."
"Our work is not finished," he said.
"We have more to do in creating jobs,
achieving control over government
spending, returning more autonomy to
the states, keeping peace in a more settled
world, and seeing if we can't find room in
our schools for God."
Eight men are seeking the Democratic
nomination to oppose Reagan and the
president was already on the attack.
In an interview with Newsweek
magazine, Reagan took direct aim -at
former Vice President Walter F. Mon-
ec
to in ywtiggte Exum
case.
'Carolina Course Review' changes
planned to restore its credibility
By MELISSA HOLLAND
Staff Writer
Changes that would increase the stabili
ty and restore the credibility of the
Carolina Course Review are in the works
this spring, according to Michael Salemi,
an associate professor in the economics
department and faculty adviser for the
CCR.
He said the organization was in the
midst of a three-part "re-vamping" aim
ed at improving the paper's reputation.
"We have been working in the direc
tion of a change in organization," he
said. "In the fall of 1981, there were quite
a few problems. Students had trouble
with understanding how the computer
programs worked and some nonsense
results came out, which threatened to
close down the organization."
The three-part plan includes a new for
mat, a new way to finance the paper and
an attempt at creating an appropriate at
titude among the faculty and students, he
said.
Last semester's CCR covered 470
courses and was entirely financed by the
Campus Governing Council.
"It will be more practical for more
people if we get more departments involv
ed," said CCR chairperson Lynn
Crowder.
As far as financing goes, Crowder said
the CGC fe't that since faculty as well as
students benefited from ?'v CCR. it was
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1163
on
dale, who leads the field of Democrats
seeking to oppose him.
"Frankly, I think he has tried to be all
things to all people, and I think he has
made more promises than probably can
possibly be kept ... His promises, if all
kept, would give us a budget that, as one
of his opponents in the Democratic con
test said of him, would make the deficits
$400 billion."
Under Reagan, the deficit has increas
ed to $18.0 billion.
. Reagan said he expects a close race, ad
ding, "As I've said so many times, just
take the advice of President Dewey
don't get overconfident."
House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr.,
one of Reagan's most prominent ,
Democratic critics, was quick to react.
"Ronald Reagan has been a divider,
not a uniter," he said. "He has divided
our country between rich and poor, bet
ween the hopeful and the hopeless, bet
ween the comfortable and the miserable.
He has not been fair and the people know
it.
"The American people will reject four
more years of danger, four more years of
pain."
rooms for campaign meetings, both she and Exum described the
problem as a misunderstanding.
The Ethics Committee could recommend that Exum be cen
sured by the council, that he be expelled from the CGC or that
no punitive action is necessary, Droze said. The committee's
recommendations should be presented to the full council by its
regular meeting on Wednesday, Droze said.
A move to censure or expel Exum would have to be approved
by a three-fourths majority of the full CGC.
The Ethics Committee consists of Exum, Droze and Student
Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Everett. Exum said that since
he is under investigation, he will not sit on the committee for this
.1
ide
Exum said he didn't expect the incident to harm his cam
paign. J
"I don't see how it could come out to appear anything other
than a misunderstanding," Exum said. "I don't see how it will
affect the race in any way.
"Some people who I don't really know have come up to me
and said, 'Don't worry about it' and 'It's not that big a deal,' "
he said. "They said they were glad I have stated what
happened."
Mark Dalton, one of the five announced candidates for stu
dent body president, said he didn't expect Exum's use of Union
rooms to be a campaign issue.
"He said it was a misunderstanding, and he apologized for
it," said Dalton, who is currently president of the Residence
Hall Association. "I hope it's not an issue."
Exum repeated his intention to complete his term as CGC
speaker.
"I will serve until the new CGC takes office or until we win
the (student body president) election, whichever be the case," he
said.
unfair for students to bear the entire cost
of the publication.
A proposal that suggests that the ad
ministration share the cost of putting out
the CCR is under review said Salemi. If
adopted, such a proposal would not only
ensure a more equitable funding arrange
ment, but would also increase the stability
of the organization;
Crowder said the shared financing plan
possibly would enable the CCR to obtain
office space andor hire people to take
over some of the production aspects of
the paper.
He said last semester's course review,
which involved more than 17,000 evalua
tion forms, was the largest in three years
and practically devoid of error.
"A few years back, in some cases,
wrong information was printed," he said.
"Professor Y was given Professor X's
evaluation scores. We are working to
make sure that each professor is
associated with his respective students."
Salemi and the committee worked to
redesign the format of the CCR and came
out with the new form for the first time in
the spring of 1982
"In 1982, to try to rebuild the credibili
ty of the CCR. we started working with
the departments we knew would
cooperate," he said. "We have since been
working hard to increase participation,
See CCR on page 4