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Hllj"il'jlijiiifTtiryiTr,'iiiji irrt'i i s::::::::5ww NFL Football 23 Pittsburgh 17 Houston 31 N.Y. Giants 17 Dallas Chicago LA. Raiders Green Bay New Orleans 1 7 Detroit 23(OT) 6 Philadelphia 23 23 Denver 26 13 New England 19 San Francisco Cincinnati Miami N.Y.Jets 35 7 19 7 LA. Rams St. Louis Seattle Kansas City 16 13 45 0 San Diego Indianapolis Cleveland Buffalo 38 10 13 10 275143TFlJ CAI.:?U3 MAIL ccpioc NC Collection Wilson Library U1JC Caapus Chapel Hill, NC 27?14 rf 4 Didn't preregister, huh? If not you may still come by Hanes Hall by 5 p.m. today and drop off your preregistration form. A semester is a terrible thing to waste. rKV rK 4 UZ ytfO1-1 I i i i r i I i S POSTAGE PAID Copyright 1384 TYw Dafy Tar He Serving the students and the University community since 1893 f" Star Et to Volume 92, Issue 78 Maryland with fifth By FRANK KENNEDY Sports Editor The Maryland Terrapins, like a pack of wolves lying in wait to hit their prey at precisely the most opportune moment, charged out from behind their camouflage for all of 10 seconds Saturday and laid waste to North Carolina's football season. Trailing for almost three full quarters, Maryland struck for two touchdowns in the final 22 seconds of the third period to shock a UNC team that had controlled the pace of the game to that point, and went away from Kenan Stadium with a 34-23 victory. The Tar Heels had built only a 16 13 lead late in the third despite three Maryland turnovers and an offense that had thoroughly dominated the game in time of possession. After a Tommy Barnhardt punt put the Terrapins at their own 10 with 4:16 to play in the period, Maryland drove 90 yards for the score that would put them ahead for good. But the backbreaker came when quarter back Stan Gelbaugh found tailback Alvin Blount wide open on a post pattern on a 52-yard play that put the Terps at the UNC three. On the next play, fullback Rick Badjanek scored the six points. On the ensuing kickoff, UNC's Earl Winfield fumbled the ball away, and from the five, it was Badjanek who got the call for another score to make it 27-16. The Tar Heels, whose offensive gameplan had centered almost exclu sively around the run up to that point, were ineffective at playing comeback ball, and never threatened. The Terrapins added a 71-yard drive midway through the fourth quarter and UNC scored with 37 seconds left on a Wes Sweetser-to-Eric Streater pass. The loss eliminated UNC from the ACC race and left it at 3-5, 1-2 in the conference. Maryland remains atop the conference with a 5-3, 4-0 record, and will face Virginia in the final game of the season for the ACC championship. The Cavaliers are 3-0-1 in the conference. Student killed, two hurt A UNC sophomore was killed and two others injured in a 4:30 a.m. accident Saturday on Highway 54 west of Carrboro, according to the N.C. Highway Patrol. Jeffrey Samuel Cooper of Shelby was killed in the single-car accident. Randall Eugene Masters of Wilkesboro was listed was listed as stable in the intensive care unit of N.C. Memorial Hospital. Christopher. Dean Allman of Greens boro was reported in fair condition at NCMH. According to patrolman Ronald Student activism at UNC By WAYNE THOMPSON State and national editor The words of the former president wafted out windows and drifted past concrete columns to 500 students, professors and townspeople standing in silence outside the hall in the humid air of a hot October night. "Who led the movement against Vietnam? Students! The Civil Rights movement? Students! Where is the activism for peace, arms control, human rights and environmental quality?" Jimmy Carter asked. For the 1,700 inside Memorial Hall and those outside straining to hear, age and experience called up matching images. For undergraduates, there was the amplified crackle of another speak er's voice in the Pit and crudely painted signs announcing yet another forum, or perhaps TV images of Marines digging through the rubble in Beirut to reach their buddies, or Iranian students holding handkerchiefs over their mouths and noses as they view bodies of Americans killed in the aborted hostage-rescue attempt. For those who lived in Chapel Hill during the '60s and early 70s, there were state troopers in riot gear closing Lenoir Hall cafeteria during a month-long strike by cafeteria employees in 1969, a column of 4,000 students moving down Franklin Street with coffins held aloft in the front ranks on May 6, 1970 the day national guardsmen gunned down four students at Kent State University, or thousands of students gathered on the campus side of the stone tags UNC loss. 34-23 The Tar Heels' gameplan was simple but direct: run the ball up the gut of Maryland's wide-tackle six defense. One week earlier, UNC ran with great proficiency against Mem phis State en route to an upset. The Tar Heels exploited seven- to nine man fronts by Memphis to sweep outside. But against the Terps, the object was to go inside, and, for one half, it worked. Tailback Ethan Horton carried the load for two quarters, rushing 25 times for 94 yards. Reserve William Humes was out with a twisted ankle, and fullback Brad Lopp, who played ahead of Eddie Colson, managed 5 1 yards by the half. UNC quarterback Kevin Anthony, who threw very rarely until the Tar Heels were forced to rally, said one man such as Horton could not carry an entire team. "It's 1 1 guys out there and not just Ethan," Anthony said. "It's just a matter of everybody doing his job and that didn't happen today." Anthony was not critical of the Tar Heel gameplan to stay on the ground. UNC ran the ball on 41 of 46 first half plays, and 49 of 62 plays through three quarters. "The two weeks before we didn't pass the ball that much but we won," he said. Meanwhile, the Maryland defense keyed heavily on Horton, who man aged only 32 yards in the second half. "We were more concerned about Ethan Horton running the ball than we were about their passing," said Maryland's secondary coach, Greg - Williams. . -- The story of the game was, once again, missed opportunities for the Tar Heels. On the opening drive, UNC moved to the Maryland 39, but tight end Arnold Franklin fumbled. Later in the quarter the Tar Heels moved to the three but the drive fizzled when Horton tried to run outside, and Kenny Miller kicked the first of his three field goals. UNC had an opportunity to put the game away early in the third. Tied 10-10, Maryland's Keeta Covington See FOOTBALL on page 2 Whitehurst, Masters was driving Allman's car east on Highway 54 toward Chapel Hill. Whitehurst said the car swerved to the left side of the road, hit the embankment and flipped end over end. at 2 p.m. today at Aldersgate Methodist Church in Shelby. A Jeff Cooper Memorial Scholarship has been established at Crest High School in Shelby. Contributions may be sent to the school on Crest High School Road, Shelby 28150. wall across from Hector's Kerr Scott's wall listening to a communist speaker lecturing from the street side. Because of a speaker ban law enacted by the Legislature and supported by Scott, avowed Communists couldn't speak on University property. Polo gear, button downs, short hair and close shaves vs. peace T-shirts, rumpled denim jackets and sideburns and shaggy locks and beards and mustaches; John F. Kennedy's New Frontier, Lyndon Johnson's Great Society, Richard Nixon's detente then disgrace vs. Jimmy Carter's human rights and Ronald Reagan's New Federalism; "Blowin' in the Wind," "The Times They Are A Changing" vs. "Another Brick in the Wall" and "Sunday Bloody Sunday" like the rest of society, the University has been witness to these changes and has felt their impact, causing Carter, colum nists, sociologists and others to question whether today's campuses are conser vative centers of banality where making bucks is more important than making waves. "It's been my experience that within a student society, 1 percent is the leadership and among them, the com pulsion to help others, the motivation (to work for social progress) is still there," UNC President William C. Friday says, attributing changes in student activism to the influence of television and transportation. "First of all, your generation is more mobile. Because of that (ownership of cars, easy availability to air travel), Voters quickly Monday, November 5, 1984 L V"' ; : fK I mi ty . 1 B? - i v " - --- 4 I Nfe mK ,i f jmr I ""i. " "- -2 t&", v x, I 1 y. $ t" ' I r s - . i ? fi'it j.wM.rv.ry.." r.,t i-ayMftnniiiTr"i) iMiiiiii'M n ''nnimiwig lluijiiuijji j. LiULiiioiijiq.uLj-iij u lij I J DTHJeff Neuville Greg 'Lump' Lunsford cavorts with Maryland's mascot. At last, the By KATHRYN L. HOPPER Staff Writer Political experts are calling it the battle of the century, the national news media says it's a struggle between the Old and New South, and everyone agrees it's too close to call. Voters tomorrow will decide who is going to Washington to represent North Carolina in the U.S. Senate until 1991. Many North Carolinians still don't know which way to go. Helms is a staunch conservative not limited 'It's been my experience that within a student society, 1 percent is the leadership and among them, the compulsion to help others, the motivation (to work for social progress) is still there. ' William C. Friday you're more internationally-minded today, and the television screen has had it's impact also. You have a different culture." However, Friday says most students have been inactive since the post Vietnam era until recently. "The issues now are so much more intense and the choice is much more drawn and that is challenging students to express their own philosophies about government," he says, likening the student interest in the Helms-Hunt campaign to the 1950 U.S. Senate race between Raleigh lawyer Willis Smith and University President Frank Porter Graham. During that campaign, UNC students worked door-to-door for Graham across the state a consid erable sacrifice since students had to stay in the top 25 percent of their class to avoid the Korean War draft. Even before Frank, who lost to the race-baiting Smith, students were active if not for the same noble causes. "Mr. Gillespie personally waylaid and stoned Mr. Webb, accosted Mr. Flinn with the intention of beating him, but were diverted at length from it, at length uttered violent threats against Mr. forget what a man says. Richard M. Nixon Chapel Hill, North Carolina Jim and Jesse show winds down praised for his stands on free enterprise and old-fashioned moral principles. He is criticized for being paranoid about communism and insensitive to women, blacks and the poor. In the 1960s Helms was known for his ultra-conservative television com mentaries on WR AL TV. Helms was elected in 1972, defeating Durham liberal Nick Galifianakis with a little help from Nixon's coattails. Re-elected in 1978, he became the guru of conservatism that swept Reagan to the 1960s Murphy and Mr. Caldwell, who were never put into execution," 777f News and Observer in Raleigh quoted 1799 dated documents about the first major disorder at UNC which occurred that year and resulted in a week of turmoil and the dismissal of three students. No one knows what caused the ruckus, but some owed the student's temerity to the nature of the food available at the time. Feelings ran high again on campus as the South plunged into the Civil War in 1860. The whole freshman class enlisted, leaving only one person to graduate. He later joined the war effort too, but was discharged because of poor health. Isolationism found its way to Chapel Hill on Oct. 21, 1935, when 15 delegates from nine North Carolina colleges supported a declaration against partic ipation in wars outside the boundaries of the United States. The students went off to World War II in spite of the 1935 declaration, and came back in the early '50s as many of the 4,000 students on the GI bill. UNC graduate and journalism pro See ACTIVISM on page 5 GOP sweep? Carolina Poll shows Reagan, Helms, Martin lead opponents By KEVIN WASHINGTON Staff Writer Republican candidates may sweep the state in the presidential, senatorial and gubernatorial races tomorrow, according to the Carolina Poll con ducted by the UNC School of Journalism. The Carolina Poll, released Friday, showed that Democrats probably would vote split tickets. The president's popularity in the state is expected to be a critical factor. The statewide poll indicated that: President Reagan leads Walter F. Mondale 66 to 29 percent with 5 percent undecided; Sen. Jesse Helms leads Gov. Jim Hunt 55 to 42 percent with 3 percent undecided; 9th District Congressman Jim Martin leads state Attorney General Rufus Edmisten in the gubernatorial race 50 to 41 percent with 10 percent undecided. The results were taken from tele phone interviews of 605 registered voters last week. The error margin for the poll is 4 percentage points. The poll showed that although most people surveyed had registered Demo cratic, many plan to split their tickets: 48 percent of registered Democrats and 95 percent of registered Republi cans plan to vote for Reagan in the election. 40 percent of the Democrats and 69 percent of the Republicans would vote for Helms. 34 percent of the Democrats and 73 percent of the Republicans would vote for Martin. The Carolina Poll showed a greater margin of support for Republican candidates than other polls. The largest margin was in the Senate race which showed Helms well ahead of the governor. Although a recent Charlotte Observer poll conducted Oct. 24-Oct. 27 showed Helms leading Hunt 47 to 43 percent, the margin of error at 3 percentage points indicated the race was dead even. Another poll conducted by the Wilmington Star News and WW AY-TV between Oct. 23 and 25 showed Hunt leading 49 to 46 percent; to the presidency in 1980. Hunt, the state's first two-term governor this century, is known as a progressive who fought for improved education and high-tech industry. He's criticized for being a career politician who changed his stands on tough issues to stay popular. He says he will put his experience and pragmatism to work in Washington for North Carolina. The two candidates are strikingly different, yet each is representative of North Carolina. Both have small-town Massing at South Building: the 1980 ' ;TW J.J" ' ' II I ! HI HI I ' . '"' '! v- - : ?::.. ! x ft "... f : . II j S - It 1 li v s-- 'm ml i W' Xi ' ill !. V s ' ; -' ' K I ' V" J if II S t ? ' t it " . - V , ' NewsSportsArts 962-0245 Business Advertising 962-1163 the margin of error also showed an even race. Hunt and Edmisten campaign press secretaries said they didn't think the Carolina Poll was accurate. Will Marshal, Hunt spokesman, said, "That poll has no credibility. AH the polls weVe seen put the senate race dead even." Dick Carlton, Edmisten press secre tary, said he thought the gubernatorial race was dead even. "WeVe seen some trends in the last couple of nights of our track polling which show the Edmisten campaign increasing in momentum," he said. The Observer poll also showed Martin leading 47 to 41 percent with a 3 percent margin of error. However, the Wilmington Star News poll showed the candidates even, each with 47 percent of the vote. Carlton said, "Before the election, you're going to see some of the Demo crats come home although there'll still be a lot of split tickets. But Merle Black, associate professor in the UNC political science depart ment, said "Reagan may very well be bringing Helms back to the senate." With Reagan receiving more than 60 percent of the vote in the state, Black said, Helms would probably ride Reagan's coattails. "If Reagan is getting two out of three votes in the state, it would be impossible for Hunt or Edmisten to really do well," he said. Black said Hunt's strategy would be to get most of the state's black vote and at least 40 percent of the white vote. According to the Carolina Poll, Hunt only received 3 1 percent of total white support. "In most polls, Hunt is running at about 36 to 38 percent of the white vote," he said. "All Helms has to do is get a little more than 60 percent of the white vote to win." Robert Rupen, UNC political science professor, said one reason the coattail effect might be so powerful in the senate race was that Helms had consistently placed himself with the president. "I don't think Mondale ever caught See POLL on page 3 backgrounds. Helms finds support with the state's Bible-toting conservatives and big businessmen who want less government control. Hunt appeals to progressive-minded suburbanites and minorities who oppose Helms' stance on civil rights. Both candidates say tomorrow's voting will tell the nation what kind of state North Carolina is. Hunt says a victory for him will show See SENATE on page 2 s Klan verdict sparked recent protest '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 5, 1984, edition 1
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