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U-N.C. Library Serials Dpt. Box 870 Aprijn guests Organizations requesting an appropriation in the 1967 - 68 Student Government Budget should contact Hugh Saxon at 968-9165 by Tuesday, February 7. This applies only to organ izations which did not receive an appropriation in the 1966 67 Budget. ' ..i -am J Legislature Seats Four legislative vacancies will be filled at the Student Party meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in Gerrard. Two vacan cies in Men's District IX, and a vacancy in Men's District I and Women's District I will be fined. 'To Write Well Is Better Than To Rule9 Volume 74, Number 90 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY FEBRUARY 5. 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 -Heels Try TTh n oweiJi Jricjsi yl f 1 Hard, Outlast" For 85-77 Win By SANDY TREADWELL DTH Sports Editor Several persistent young sculptors from Maryland chip ped away at an awesome North Carolina 22 point lead in the final quarter yesterday. They tried to create a come from behind victory. But the task proved too great. The nation's number two team re mained just that in defeating the Terps 85-77 in Carmichael Auditorium. From the opening seconds of the second half Carolina ex ploded with offensive board control and a flawless execu tion of the fast break. Rusty Clark and Larry Miller swept up misguided Maryland shots, and Dick Grubar and Bob Lewis pass ed the ball down court in an instant into the hands of a white-uniformed teammate un der the basket. More often than not the open man was someone named Bill Bunting. The tall forward played the finest basketball of his life. Before yesterday's game his performance was tight and often uncertain, as though he was awed at the prospect of playing on the same floor with the likes of Miller and Lewis. But Bunting was relaxed yesterday, and, more than, that, he was aggressive. When he left the game he had ac counted for 17 points and five rebounds, and was thanked with a standing ovation from the capacity crowd. But, with just over 10 min utes remaining, Bunting and Company lost their inspiration 'I I f Carol Is JjslPr 1 j We try ; t 1 . :l 1 A sign on Carmichael ... Predicts playing of the Heels inside. By GENE IRONS Special To The DTH : How do Chapel Hill Barber Shops feel about rais ing the price of haircuts to $2? A survey of several local barber shops revealed that they are about evenly divided on the matter of an increase, with four saying a rise in the near future is probable,' and three saying it is not. One shop has already raised their prices to $2. "It's a good possibility, but not in the near future," said a spokesman for the Tar Heel Barber Shop. He cited overliead-living expenses, water, rent for v, -linft supplies and new tools as factors contributing to the Necessity of a .price increase. "Our constant flow of school-year customers is . jjf on vacations. A day off for a barber means in c nf a whole day's pay since each man is paid otly a percentage of what he collects by the day." Md Five which appeared to have crush ed Bud Millikan and his Mary land squad to the point of em barrassment. Little John Avery entered the game and made good on two iump shots from the top of the key. His presence was the spark that ignited the Terps to a comeback. Avery's first shot registered the figures 66-47 on the score board. Then forward Joe Har rington scored on a three (Continued on Page 5) Summer Work Will Be Topic Of YMCA Week Panels and displays on sum mer social work, travel and educational projects will fea ture the YM-YWCA-sponsored "S u m m e r Opportunities Week " Set 'for Feb. 13-17, the first two days of the week will be given to projects in city slum work, tutoring, work with mi grant farmers or Indians, and seminar programs and en campments. Wednesday will feature two panels one on summer jobs and the other on various sum mer programs. Thursday and Friday will be on projects abroad. Anyone who has participat ed in a summer project offer ed by a wide variety of or ganizations is asked to leave his name in 102 Y Building if he is interested in helping with the program. The $2 Haircut Is It Coming Well, the inevitable happened in yesterday's pregame traffic. in front of it. The whole mess then had to be towed away so A Pontiac went out of control, sideswiping a parked VW and the fans could get into Carmichael. ramming an Olds. The Olds then rolled into another VW parked , DTH Photos by Mike McGowan Resident Advisor Applications By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer Applications for 110 resident advisors' jobs for next year are now available in the Dean of Men's office. They will be accepted through Feb. 28. All students who have already expressed an interest in the program Voting Age Council Plans Chapter Here A chapter of the Voting Age Council of North Carolina, which is working for suffrage for 18-year-olds in the state, will soon be organized here. Dick Callaway, a freshman , Morehead Scholar from Winston-Salem who is to head the group, was unavailable for comment on details of the UNC chapter Saturday. The Duke University VAC chapter has already gathered support in the General Assem bly. Among the key legisla tors who have indicated" their support are Glenn Pickard, member of the committee es tablished to codify and revise North Carolina's election laws, and James C. Johnson Jr., House minority whip. Jim Beatty of Charlotte, a former champion Olympic run ner who has worked frequent ly with young people in the state, has also promised his supp'ort, saying he is "very enthused" about the concept. Pickard and Beatty will co sponsor the bill to have the age reduced. In light of support received from legislators and others across the state, Bill Lowry of Burlington, president of the three-month-old group said "I think that this is the year for a lowering of the voting age." Support of the legislature will not be enough, however, to secure final passage of the proposed new voting aee. The present 21-year-old minimum is a part of the state consti tution, and may require ap proval in a state-wide referen dum. Two states, Georgia and Kentucky, currently have an Another owner, Mack Snipes of the University Barber Shop, said he was against raising hair cut prices at the present time. "Most barbers haven't talked about it just the customers and the students are talking," he said. Earl L. Barker, owner of Village Barber Shop, glanced around his crowded shop and said "As long as we get this type of business there is no danger of a rise in prices. "We have talked about it at two of our meetings, .and some barbers want to go up and some don't." Guy Adams, owner of Eastgate Barber Shop, cited the expense of running a barber shop and said that an increase is probably inevitable, though it won't come "anytime soon." "Our rent is high and we have to pay for the shop ping center's free parking," he said. "We are too far from campus to get a lot of the college business." Even with low prices, he said, "giving good hair- C i-vf fits v Acis LJ - 1 d a 4X' 4 Attv V. J s will be sent an application form in the mail. The nine college masters, 54 house advisors and 47 assist ant house advisors will be se lected on the basis of academ ic average, extra-curricular activities, a personal inter view with the staff of the Dean of Men, and personal 18-year-old minimum voting age. Alaska requires voters to be at least 19 years old and Hawaii, 20 years. At least six other states are cdnsidering lowering their voting ages to 18 this year. Other chapters of the Voting Age Council are planned at N. C. State University, Wake Forest College, and other cam puses in the state. WUNC-FM To Broadcast N Javits Speech Senator Jacob Javits, who will speak here Monday night, is being featured in this week's issue of Look Magazine which appears on the stands Tues day morning. The Senator's appearance in Chapel Hill will be the first stop on a nationwide tour which will test his support for the 1968 vice-presidential race. Javits will speak at 8 p.m. and will discuss the Republi can Party's future in the South. His speech is being spon sored by the Carolina Forum fnd questions will be received from the audience at the end of the speech. Javits will hold a brief press Javits will hold a brief press conference at Raleigh Durham Airport Monday Afternoon be fore coming to Chapel Hill. WUNC-FM Radio will carry Javits' speech live at 91.5 megacycles. recommendations. Upperclassmen are eligible for house advisor and assist ant house advisor positions. Only graduate or professional students are considered for the college master's job. College master candidates should have experience in an advisor program, have a high academic standing, and car ry one course less than the full academic load. , In the high rise residential colleges of Ehringhaus, Craige, Morrison and the new Hinton James, married stu dents will be considered. In the five low rise colleges, how ever, only single students may apply. " College masters will be ex pected to work an average of 25 hours per week. The 54 house advisors will be chosen from applicants with high ' academic standing who can be available for work during the evening hours. They must be single and be able to devote at least 15 hours per week to the job. Students with experience in the program and Batchelor's degree are preferred. Seniors or graduate or pro fessional students are pre ferred for the assistant house advisor's job, though rising juniors will be considered. They also must be available during the weekday evening hours. The college masters, one for each of the nine residence colleges, serve, in effect, as assistants to the Dean of Men for the various residence areas and work in an admin istrative and supervisory ca pacity. The house advisor assumes responsibility for all activity within the house and works di rectly with both the students and his college master. The house advisors' assist ants work with and advise the students who live in the area to which they are assigned. "The advisors are not cops," said Assistant Dean of Men Fred Schroeder, "Nor are they in any way supposd to function as psychiatrists." Their function is to advise the undergraduates in their areas on matters of study, grades, social problems, "or any one of a hundred or so cuts is the only way to bring customers back." Among those favoring raising prices were Charles D. and John T. Blanto, co-owners of the Professional Barber Shop: We work a 70-hour week and are well underpaid for it. It costs about $7,000 for a 60-by-200-foot lot in Chapel Hill, three or four times more than anyplace other matters," he said. They also serve to give students directions concerning where to go and whom to see on , problems of a more seri ous nature. House advisors and their as sistants are the first echelon in the administration. A college is, in the case of the high rise buildings, a sin gle structure, such as Craige. In the older, multi - structure residence areas, a college is a group of buildings, such as Scott College, composed of Parker, Teague and Avery Residence Houses. One house is a single floor in the high rise South Cam pus colleges and Granville Towers. It is an entire build ing, such as Aycock, in the older multi - building colleges. One house advisor will be con cerned with each house. The assistant house advisor will take care of two of the four wings of a house in the high rise colleges. His area will be a floor in one of the houses in the low rise col ( Continued on Page 6) Morel Argentine guitarist Jorge Morel, who is appearing to night at 7:30 in Memorial Hall, is in his seventh year of Amer ican tours. He started in his . native Buenos Aires on the guitar at the age of 11. Six years later, he went on the stage with his actor-musician father. At 22. he gave up acting to devote his full attention to the guitar, making a triumphant tour of South America and the Caribbean. In 1961, he came to the United States, giving his first concert in New York at fam ed Carnegie Hall. Since then, he has made numerous tours across the country. When not on tour, he lives in New York and plays at the famous "Village Gate" and other clubs in the city. For enjoyment, besides the guitar, he listens to his large collection of jazz, particularly American jazz. He also enjoys soccer, tennis, and swimming. To Chapel Mill? elBarre A By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer Dave Le Barre has been annninted as the Attorney General of the student body, Student Body President Bob Powell announced Saturday. Le Barre fills the vacancy left by Frank Hodges, who re signed when he was married Discussion Set On Experimental College Topics Profeors who have shown intrest or suegested tooic? for the exDerimental collece start ine this semester will meet with the college orieinators Mondav and Tuesday at noon, Jed Dietz said Friday. Profpssors will meet with Dietz. Terrv Fowler, and Dave KM for lunch in upstairs Le noir Hall to clarify anv ques tions they have about the col lege. "We want to make sure thev understand th concept of 'non-direction'." Dietz said. "It's teacher Darticipation ra ther than leadprshin. "Students will choose a ton ic from the experimental col Ippe catalog which will be dis tributed, after Feb. 15. Then thev will meet with the non director (Drofessor1) and de cirf together on the anoroach to he taken in the course." During the next two weeks Dietz will talk with governors of the residence colleges to an swer anv question they have . about the nrogram. "We are hoping to hold some courses in the resi dences themselves," Dietz said. "Dossibly in Granville. Morrison, and Chase Cafeter ia. rm Jriayi f ; VP' fJ a ; j '. - , -A " , j 1 , J J 1, f ,.i - - ' - - S - -1 around here. Bill Coville of the Chapel Hill Barber Shop said that rising prices are "in the future, like the continued rise of the cost of living. We hadn't talked or thought much about it but we have many expenses to cover, the greatest, of course, being rent. Every time the lease expires the rent goes up." David Marley, owner of the Carolina Barber Shop and president of the local chapter of the Barber's Association had this to add: "Since 1942 living expenses have been easing up a little bit every year. It is up to each barber shop, to set their own prices to cover this. Rent is high in Chapel Hill and we have to replace expensive equip ment, lights, water, and linen." Some barber shops may keep with the $1.75 hair cut in the future, but the rising cost of living and professional expenses will probably force the $2 hair cut to be commonplace. General over the semester break. The junior from Durham has been active in the attorney general's office for three years and has served this year as Hodges' right-hand man as As sistant Attorney General for the Men's Council. "Le Barre is the man who ran the Attorney General's of fice under Frank Hodges," Powell said. Le Barre's appointment will be presented to student legis lature Tuesday night, but "the appointment is effective imme diately," said Powell. "We can't wait for legisla ture's approval. We have to have someone running the of fice now." Powell said he "hated to lose Hodges. Everyone had the utmost confidence in him. "And I feel that the many compliments this office heard from faculty, administrators and people throughout the state have borne out the con fidence we all had in him. "But it's hard to argue with matrimony," he said. When Hodges announced his resignation before the semes ter break, Powell conferred with Hodges and decided that "Le Barr was definitely the man for the Job. "His three years in the at toney general's office have proved him," he said. Last year, there was con siderable - difficulty in getting the legislature's approval of Hodges. "That was a strictly partisan problem, though." said Presidential Aide Eric Van Loon. Van Loon predicted no such problems with Le Barre, 'To my knowledge, Le Barre isn't even a member of either cam pus party," he said. O gM loni
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 5, 1966, edition 1
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