U--C. Library trials Dept. Eox 870 1 Hill, n.c. JSB Exchange Meeting The International Students Board will hold a meeting Monday at 7 p.m. upstairs in the Y-Building. The ISB ad ministers exchange programs to Germany, France, Colum bia, and Puerto Rico. Interest ed persons are invited. Founded February 23, 1893 F rosh Cheerleaders rhlm8. for the freshman cheerleadmg squad will start It J- Pm- Monday in Kenan Stadium. Six boys and six girls are needed, said Head Cheerleader Dick Starnes. Volume 74, Numhpr n CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1966 .Heels wolffpack .1 1(07 I- r , r i -V X, V' - " " f.r - ' Tar Meets Storm Back After Half I: t i r r - fir ' C. a V3 v-Y.V A- i s THE KEY PLAY Carolina's left end Bo Wood lunges through game. Klebe's pass was intercepted by Gayle Bomar and State's the Wolfpack's line and forces quarterback Jack Hebe to hurry final drive ended. his throw with less than a minute and a half remaining in the DTH Photo by Ernest H. RobL The First Home Game At Carolina H as nn ipecial Thing About It By BILL AMLONG DTH News Editor There's this thing about the first home game: that's when you really know you're back at Carolina. A Carolina football game especially when the Tar Heels win is like nothing else anywhere in the world. And that's how it was Sat urday. Carolina won a football game before about 50,000 fans in Ke nan Stadium Saturday and the fans yelled so loud that every body knew it. "By damn, the crowd hel ped win that game," a hoarse- voiced head cheerleader Dick Starnes said later. When they really started yel ling like they hadn't yet hollered all day long was when the football sailed through the uprights with 25 seconds left in the first half. Carolina was ahead. LOTS OF alumni were back for Saturday's game. Alumni are like that. But one of the proudest was Dick Alder, a broadway com poser - lyricist who had two things to going for him at the half: He crowded Miss Consolidat ed University. See FOOTBALL On Page 6 By SANDY TREAD WELL DTH Sports Writer A capacity crowd of 46,000 sat in a sun-drenched Kenan Stadium yesterday and watch ed the Tar Heels come from behind and defeat the Wolf pack of North Carolina State by a final score Vof 10-7. When the final gun sound ed most of the 46,000 let out an ecstatic roarThe blue -uniformed players "leaped in to the air. They happily ran off the field and Vinto their locker room an they had good reason. 4 v The Tar HeelsS proved yes terday to thousands of doub ters that they .ere a football team capable of "scoring. And they proved that" they had a tough and continuously cour ageous defense. V. There were -no individual stars in the gatme. It wasn't , that kind of football. It was a story of two determined teams fighting to dig themselves out of the loss column. State ;. did its digging primarily on the ground while Carolina took , to the air. And through an al " most unbearably exciting second half it was a question of could Carolina find its way f into the end zone and could its defense continue to contain . State's repeated drives, i And, as everyone in Chapel Hill and Raleigh found out yesterday afternoon at four ' thirty, the answers to both questions were affirmative. 1 The first answer came with "four minutes and forty -one seconds remaining on the Sta dium's clock with Carolina trailing State 7-3. Talbott took the snap from center and rolled out to his left and found right halfback Tom Lampman open in the end zone. After the catch, Talbott kicked the extra point and the Tar Heels had their first sev en point combination of the '66 season. The second question was resolved with 1:19 remaining in the ball game. It came af ter a determined State drive engineered by its surprise se cond string quarterback Jack Klebe. Klebe began the drive on his own twenty yard line as he kept the ball and swept across the right side of the hne for three yards. With the Tar Heel defense digging in as it had done a countless number of times during the long after noon, Klebe pitched to his half back Don DeArment for anoth er three. With a vital third down and four Klebe passed to DeArment for four yards and a first down. Two plays and ten yards lat er the sophomore left bander found WB Gary Rowe down field. The reception account ed for sixteen yards and mov ed the Pack to Carolina's for ty - three. Klebe went to the air again with slightly more than a min ute and a half remaining. Again he spotted DeArment in the clear, but he overthrew Continued On Page 5 7r t A. i ... - M fl A TIIRILLING MOMENT it was as Lynn f.J Burkholder, 18, of Charlotte was crowned Miss Consolidated University. A student at QUNC-G, Lynn was crowned at half-time yes IICCD terday by Richard Adler. DTH Photo By Ernest II . Robl Fine Arts Festival To Feature Ballet, Buffalo Philharmonic If plans are any indication (and in this case they are), the 1967 Fine Arts Festival will be one of the most excit ing events of next spring. One of the big performan ces of the Festival will be pro vided by the Merce Cunning ham Dance Company. Cun ningham, who will appear with his Dance company to gether with composer John Cage and pianist David Tu dor, is recognized as a lead ing figure in contemporary American dance. He will ap pear on- April- 10th: Both as dancer and as cho reographer, Merce Cunning ham has been acclaimed by critics and audiences from London to Tokyo, with equal praise for his superb compa ny. The London Observor com ments: "At a blow, ballet has been brought right up in line with front - rank experimen ters in the other arts." The Japan Times notes "Mr. Cun ningham offers serious avant - garde modern dance, present ed in a form that is witty, whimsical, and daringly beau tiful. Other events celebrating the Festival will be a nation al student graphic arts show, an original play by the Play makers, an outstanding liter ary figure, and, in coopera tion with GM and the Chap el Hill Concert Series, the Buf falo Philharmonic Orchestra. ireJl 1 ia I-Jtaos Go IF Arein 9a Editor's Note: It's nice to know when someone appreciates you. Carolina gentlemen take note, the coeds have finally revealed their true feelings. The following story was prepared by the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel; the DTH passes it along courte sy of the J and S for the enlightenment of our readers. By Arlene Edwards WinstorirSalem Journal and Sentinel ATTENTION COLLEGE GIRLS You have again resumed your quest for educa tion, equality and eligible men at the state's institu tions of higher learning. You need help. Not in the studying and crusading, of course. You can handle those things yourself. But that husband hunting is an entirely different matter. The situation is desperate. A recent survey shows fewer males of marriageable age around than there used to be. Viet Nam and older women will mean even fewer. Realizing that every evening and weekend counts, we have done some preliminary husband-hunting for you. We quizzed dozens of girls at eight of the state's colleges and universities Salem and Wake Forest colleges here, the Chapel Hill, Raleigh and Greens boro branches of "the University of North Carolina, Duke University at Durham, Meredith College at Ra leigh and Greensboro College. Each of the girls was asked to rate the boys oops, men - at the "Big Five" - UNC, N. C. State, Duke, Wake Forest and Davidson. And did they ever! Their opinions: Carolina "There are more cool guys at Carolina because they've got more guys than they've got anywhere else," declared a Salem senior. College girls across the state agreed ... and dis agreed. - Many who had dated at Carolina expressed sur prise that the 'Carolina Gentleman' really was. Others from Meredith in particular expressed disgust at the drinking and wild partying on the UNC campus. "Most fraternity boys are putrid," said one Mere dith senior. "The way they pass out in six inches of liquor turns my stomach." "I think they completely gross a girl out," agreed a blonde Army brat at Wake Forest. A girl at UNC-G described the gentlemen at Caro lina as "drinking and sex fiends" who -'don't want a date who won't get potted and then (censored)" and who "won't take 'no' for a final answer." ' Another Greensboro girl labelled them "potential rapists." When he looks into your eyes, he's thinking "about your bod," said one UNC-G girl. But not all of the girls interviewed were com plaining. . Asked what schemes were used in Chapel Hill to get a girl alone, a Salem girl smiled knowingly and said, "Who cares?" One at UNC-G said, "He doesn't need any it's a mutual understanding." A Salem sophomore, however, said that what they're really thinking when they look into your eyes is "God, I'd like to have a beer." "Drinking," said a Duke Girl, "isn't a problem at UNC . . . It's a way of life." Duke girls find the Carolina campus more excit ing to date on than their own but are not unaware of the Carolina gentleman's weaknesses. "They are excessively Southern even the North erners." "At parties they try to impress you with how much they have to study; at Duke they try to con vince themselves how much they party." And on a date they'll explain in detail how they could have gone to any school "but chose UNC." "Carolina," said another Duke girl, "is the only place where your date changes clothes more times than you do." "If fancy clothes and flashy cars made men, then Chapel Hill would rate No. 1," said a State girl. But unfortunately these things don't make men, she said, and Chapel Hill boys aren't. Said another, "If the girls were half as impressed with the Carolina boys as they are with themselves, then Chapel Hill would be heaven." The Carolina coeds are impressed with their guys at least those patient enough to see through Trs DISGUST7NG V THEY'RE flLl- 1 the veneer of "super cool" in which the Carolina gen tlemen feels he must envelop himself. In the words of a senior : "Once you've convinced this gentleman he's an individual that you don't like stereotypes, but real people you'll have a great date, the greatest to be found anywhere." Wake Forest The Wake Forest male drew considerable com ment most of it unfavorable from the girls at the colleges polled. But the strongest reactions came from a dozen or so Salem seniors and a junior or two who had gathered in the living room of the senior dorm before supper. "You date them your freshman and sophomore years you don't know any better," said one senior. "That," said another with a sigh, "is in my past, and I'm glad." Dating Wake Forest boys, agreed still another, is "one of those growing experiences that you outgrow. What's wrong with them? "The boys are kind of like their campus kind of new and out in the country. No ivy and no polish." "They're so rude and crude and unacceptable that they date a girl for an afternoon game and then take her back to the dormitory so they won't have to buy her dinner." "They're so concerned about what other people think about them that they come to Salem and work out dance steps for the weekend." "They have to maintain their cools at all times which they do not have." When a Wake Forest boy looks into a girl's eyes, what is he thinking? Said one Salem girl, "He just looks, he doesn't talk. Kind of duhh." Added a UNC G senior, "it's questionable whether any thought oc curs at all." Another Salem student recalled a far different re action, however. "It's kind of a lull before the storm," she said, alluding mysteriously to "many traumatic experiences." This same girl had been emphasizing the back wardness of Wake males earlier in the conversation. Asked about the conflicting statements, she explained, "They've learned THAT! They're retarded mashers." What ploys do they use to get you alone? "Little boys have ploys NEVER! answered an incredulous UNC-G girl. Salem girls answered: "Sheer, brutal, physical force." "Wouldn't you like to come and look at my grandmother's picture on the ceiling ? " "There's a great movie on at the Flamingo!" Then, as suddenly as their diatribe had started, the girls began to back down. "It's nice security to have somebody across town," said a junior, apparent ly worried about losing out on dates during her final year. "And, after all," said still another, "it's a good way to check books out of the Wake Forest library." The Wake Forest men fared little better at the other schools. Said a UNC coed: Nice little boys . . . not terri bly considerate . . . not interesting intellectually . . . unoriginal in thought or action." (Continued on Page 6)