Mr-i r- au .. New Orleans 20 Kansas City 28 LA. Raiders 35 LA Rams 17 N.Y.Jets 25 Minnesota 27
iMrL rOOfoali San Francisco 17 Seattle 7 New England 20 Atlanta 6 Indianapolis 20 Buffalo 20
Miami 30 Chicago 45 Dallas 17 NY Giants (OT) 16 St Louis 43 Detroit 30 Cleveland 21
Denver 26 Washington 10 Houston 10 Philadelphia 10 Green Bay 28 Tampa Bay 9 San Diego 7
Iff
?
Chilling effect
In the wake of Gloria,
today's high will finally be a
fall-like 72.
Copyright 1985 The Daily Tar Heel
J J
Weekend's sport
3
Get a complete rundown of
the weekend's sports
demolition on page 4.
&.& v. &
Bill
Serving the students and the University community since 1893
Volume 93, Issue 71
Monday, September 30, 1985
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
NewsSportsArts 962-0245
BusinessAdvertising 962-1163
x X
X'
I s.X
t: " " ZSt SB S. ' " E 1 I I I . .
r
- ft-,
sttaundl- aft a
mm
i:
; ( V. '
ooi 517 VM
DTHDan Charlson
UNC's William Humes wards off an oncoming VMI defender with a stiff-arm to the face. The Tar Heel tailback ran for 1 04 yards on 21
carries as the Heeis pounded the Keydets, 51-7.
o
o
By RANDY FARMER
Staff Writer
Amidst all the the halftime shuffling at
Saturday's football game in Kenan Stadium,
something was standing perfectly still the
UNC Marching Band.
- Band Director Maj. John Yesulaitis said
Thursday that the band would not march in
Saturday's game because the lines on its
practice field were too faded to rehearse its
show.
And it didn't march. But it did play at
halftime in concert formation, which means
no moving.
"It was a compromise," said Joe Stewart,
a senior band member. "But I feel we didn't
compromise the essence of our gripe about
the faded lines because we did not march."
The band played in concert formation
because of parent's weekend, Stewart said.
Yesulaitis told band members at Saturday's
practice session that they would play in
concert formation, Stewart said.
Stewart said Yesulaitis made that decision
after a meeting Friday with Donald A.
Boulton, vice-chancellor and dean of student
affairs. Stewart said he did not know the
content of the meeting.
Yesulaitis said he had no comment.
"It would have been a perfect time to make
that statement," Stewart said. "But it just
See BAND page 3
By SCOTT FOWLER
Assistant Sports Editor
North Carolina decimated a Very Mediocre
Institute of Division I-A A football 51-7 Saturday .
in the type of football game that is rarely seen
at Kenan Stadium nowadays, one where fans could
relax, guzzle some contraband alcohol and still
not miss much.
Actually, this one really shouldn't have been
called a game, for that word implies some sort
of competitive situation where both teams stand
a chance at winning. 1
Instead for VMI, the smallest school in all of
Division I football with a 1,250 member cadet
corps, (a handful more than the number of students
that live in Hinton James dorm), the event was r
more like a sacrificial lamb being led to the altar
of big-time football. The 0-3 Keydets struggled a
bit, but after a 75-yard touchdown pass to Eric
Streater bleated once and were silent. -
UNC's biggest margirr of victory last season was
seven points, and this 44-point blowout was
unquestionably welcomed. The facts that the now
2-1 Tar Heels outweighed the Keydets by 30
pounds in the interior lines, five of the VMI starters
played with moderately, severe injuries and the
game itself was played under a cloudless, heavenly,
Carolina Blue sky (perhaps God has forgiven the
DTH?) were gracefully swept under the carpet.
A victory is a victory is a victory, and Lord knows
UNC needed a confidence-builder before begin
ning the meat of its ACC schedule next week at
Georgia Tech.
The sluggish giant was slow to awake in the
first quarter, as UNC failed to score the first three
times it had the ball. Kevin Anthony started out
one-for-six passing, but led UNC on a drive late
in the first quarter that culminated in his one
yard bboflegToTaJTD"
UNC got a 27-yard Lee Gliarmis field goal early
in the second quarter to make it 10-0, but VMI
made it to the UNC 25 on its next series of downs
before a Tim Goad sack took them out of field
goal range. UNC took over at its 11, and three
plays later the Tar Heels served notice they were
not susceptible to the upset disease that struck so
many college teams Saturday. Anthony faded back
and lofted the ball to Eric Streater, who beat his
man deep, made a fingertip catch and, 75 yards
later, jubilantly threw up his arms in the end zone.
"IVe been dreaming about that pass for the last
two or three years," Streater said. "I was just
running a streak pattern, and the ball hit me right
on stride."
"It happened just like you draw it up," Anthony
said. The UNC quarterback rebounded from his
horrendous start to throw for more than 200 yards
for the sixth straight game, completing 17 of 31
passes for 268 yards.
After that, it was pretty much only a question
of how much of a rout it would be. The Tar Heels
ended up scoring eight times in nine possessions
at one point and missing a field goal on the other
one. Meanwhile, VMI, whose uniforms and
performance reminded one of the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers in their early years, got a lot of practice
at punting. However, the Keydets did manage to
sneak a 67-yard touchdown pass from Al Comer
to Mark Stock in early in the second quarter.
But that was the lone deviance in a formula
that called for complete UNC dominance after the
first 15 minutes. UNC had 27 first downs to VMI's
nine, 577 total yards to VMI's 262, and 270 yards
rushing to VMI's 79.
The rushing statistic was particularly significant,
as coach Dick Crum made good his promise to
exercise his running corps more. William Humes
ran it 21 times for 104 yards, and Brad Sullivan
went 13 times for 60 yards. "I thought our running
game was better," Crum said. Both Humes and
Sullivan scored twice on runs. Lee Gliarmis kicked
three field goals to account for the rest of UNC's
scoring.
NOTES AND QUOTES VMI coach Eddie
Williamson, a master in the art of stating the
obvious, and a man who has lost his first three
games as VMI coach by a combined score of 119
36: "We want to get our program to the point
where we can play a couple of Division I schools
a year and be competitive. Obviously, we are not
to that point yet."
Todd Freiwald, the VMI player who was injured
and lay on the field for 15 minutes "in the first
quarter before being loaded into an ambulance,
is okay. He accompanied the Keydets back to
Lexington, Va. Saturday night with no apparent
injuries.
To most fans one of the high points of the game
was the bench-clearing brawl after a kickoff return
by Eric Starr. Did you see Denny Marcin, the
defensive coordinator, slinging UNC players away
from the pile? Crum said he didn't know what
happened, but assured reporters that "I'm gonna
find out."
The paid attendance to the game was announced
at more than 49,000, but sports editor Lee Roberts
made the perceptive observation that the visitor's
side was half-metal.
New polocy jfoir MM Hail
By KAREN YOUNGBLOOD
Staff Writer
The Clef Hangers and the Loreleis aren't singing
any sweet songs about a new policy that locks
them out of Hill Hall. .
For years the two prominent a cappella singing
groups have used the pianos and rooms in Hill
Hall to rehearse. The groups were told about two
weeks ago that they could no longer use the music
department facilities because of a change in policy
which includes new building hours.
J. W. Pruett, chairman of the music department,
said the policy was part of an effort to prevent
vandalism in Hill Hall, which has a history of
break-ins.
"WeVe had numerous thefts and vandalism,"
Pruett said. "We have tightened down on use by
all groups. There's too much of a risk for people
and equipment."
Sgt. Ned Comar, security officer with University
Police, said Hill Hall was more vulnerable to
vandalism than other University buildings because
of its location.
"The fact that Hill Hall is a public school, not
just for registered UNC students, is a problem.
As is where it is in relationship to the city," he
said. "If you consider the hours it's trying to be
available and where it's located, you have the
potential for vandalism."
Mark Hebert, director of the Clef Hangers, said
that while he understood the need to tighten
security at Hill Hall, he didn't consider the Clef
Hangers a threat.
"We perform for Chancellor Fordham a lot and
we tour a lot, representing the University," he said.
"We're willing to offer a security deposit if
necessary if they're worried about damages, but
Dr. Pruett seemed pretty adamant about their new
policy." i
Jeffrey Sykes, a junior music and math major,
said none of the music students were allowed to
enter Hill Hall after hours, but added that the
groups should be allowed to use the building when
it was open. But he agreed that there was a need
to tighten the building's security.
"We're right on the borderline of downtown,"
he said. "On Friday nights, especially, we have
people wandering into the practice rooms and
doing all kinds of things. We once found six or
seven people banging on a piano and smoking
pot."
Phyllis Drake, president of the Loreleis, said
the policy about hours was 'not made clear to her.
'We just wanted to use
the pianos. We're not
going to firebomb the
building or anything.'
Drake
'We've had numerous
thefts and vandalism.
We have tightened
down on use by all
groups.' Pruett
"A woman from the music department called
me and told me I needed to apply for a key,"
Drake said. "She acted like there was no problem
with it. When I called back about the application,
the woman told me 'Dr. Pruett said a big, fat
no.' They told me if you're not music department
affiliated you can't use it."
Pruett said it was not just non-music majors
who were being kept out of Hill Hall after hours.
"We don't even let music students in after hours,"
he said.
The new policy has made finding a place to
rehearse very difficult, Drake said.
"We really have exhausted our resources," she
said. "The Union was really cooperative and I have
reserved a room for the rest of the semester, but
the acoustics are bad. And being an a cappella
group, we need to hear each other. Hill Hall is
just perfect." "
Drake said she hoped that some sort of
arrangement could be made for the two groups.
"We just wanted to use the pianos," she said.
"We're not going to firebomb the building or
anything."
Hebert said he didn't want his group to appear
as college brats who want their own way.
"We don't want to look like cry babies," he said.
"W5 just need some place to centrally go to. Now,
we don even know where we're going to be
practicing the next night."
Campus Y9 HiEei inimitie to combat hunger,
comtifudt cevemoimiai booth in Pit Sunday
Ins " V V I
I x x, k - . ?a
o .- c. v.
V
i X.
i
I
r
. . ., ,
x xx-x
"
X
"X
i ..A
' 7 i -T
i
r:
' i ( x it
f . : .
DTHDan Charlson
Dicns Litke ties vegetables to the cei'lng of the Sukkah built In the Pit
By DONNA LEINWAND
Staff Writer
Two Campus Ministry organizations have teamed up
to fight hunger.
The B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation and the Campus
Y built a booth in the Pit Sunday to commemorate the
Jewish harvest festival of Succot and to raise money for
Oxfam America, an international non-profit organization
that aids people and countries with hunger problems.
Succot is a celebration of the first fruits of the harvest,
as well as a rememberance of the Jews' exodus from Egypt
and the 40 years they spent in the desert. The holiday
lasts for eight days.
At the beginning of the holiday, celebrants build a booth
called a sukkah. In the past, the sukkah was used as
a resting place for farmers during the harvest.
"What we are doing is taking the Jewish holiday of
Sukkot and using it as a means of making people aware
that there is a lot of hunger in other countries and locally
as well," said Rina Wolfgang, director of Hillel.
To address the problem of hunger, the groups organized
"Project Sukkat Shalom" which means tabernacle of
peace. People from Hillel and Campus Y will staff the
booths, collecting donations and distributing information.
Wolfgang said she was concerned with the security of
the sukkah.
"I would prefer to believe that no one on this campus
would desecrate something like this," she said. "We hope
that people will respect the sukkah because of what it
stands for."
Stuart Gansky, co-chairman of the Campus Y's Hunger
Responsibility Committee, said the groups' program
would help alleviate local hunger.
"We hope to increase awareness on campus about
hunger problems in the community as well as Third World
countries," Gansky said.
Other universities have used this program as a means
of speaking out about nuclear war, disarmament and
peace, Wolfgang said.
"We are speaking out for a different aspect of peace,"
she said. "We wanted to do something on campus that
would educate people."
In the sukkah, there will be information on the holiday,
the hunger problem and the Campus Y Hunger
Responsibility Committee. Ths groups also will be taking
donations, which are tax-deductible.
"I just hope that when people see the sukkah, they
just stop in and say 'hello' and maybe look at some of
the information," Wolfgang said. "People should realize,
although the Jewish population is small and Hillel is a
minority, that our beliefs come from the same roots as
Christian moral beliefs and we care about people and
want to help them, too."
The marching band refused to yield Don McLean