t -' - i - ' 4
U.N.C. Library
Serials Dapt,
Box 870
Poet9
George Danel of the French
Department will lead a discus
sion on ths free flick BLOOD
OF A POET, following the 7
p.m. showing In 200 Carroll
Hall.
275U
Fire Star
if it it k it
Sports Final
The South' s Largest College Newspaper
Volume 74, Number 122
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY. MARCH 12, 1967
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Mansfield Talks
On U.S. Policy
Senate Majorty Leader Mike
Mansfield will speak tomor
row night in Memorial Hall
on the topic of "Central Con
cerns of American Foreign
Policy."
The 8 p.m. speech is one
of Mansfield's very rare pub
lic appearances.
Sponsored by the Carolina
Forum, the Montana Demo
crat will be "offering new
views and suggestions on the
conduct of U.S. foreign policy
in.Europe, China and Vietnam"
according to Robin West,
Forum chairman.
"Mansfield's talk will be a
major foreign policy speech,"
West said.
Mansfield, said West, "is
one of three outstanding dis
senters, along with Senator
Robert Kennedy and Senator
J. William Fulbright, of some
American foreign policy."
foreign policy."
West stressed that "this is
a remarkable opportunity for
the student body, particually
in the light of the upcoming
campus Vietnam referendum.''
W.UNC-TV Channel 4 will
carry the speech live, as well
as the 20-minute question and
answer session following.
Mansfield will arrive at. i25
naieign-uurnam airport ana
will hold a press conference
there.
The Senator, arriving three
days before his 64th birthday,
never graduated from gram-
Lady Bird
Po Tour
ippalaehia
WASHINGTON (AP) The
nation's first lady will drop in
for a look at a planetarium,
college campuses, adult, eve- x
ning classes and an isolated
mountain school on a 1,500
mile Appalachian journey next
week.
.She wants to see for herself
what millions of federal dol
lars are doing to promote edu
cation, says Mrs. Lyndon B.
Johnson. And the quest will
take the President's wife to
West Virginia, North Carolina
and Tennessee, March 13-15,
to six schools and institutions
getting .over $3 million in un
der 18 education bills.
The White House has labeled
it an "adventure in learning."
As to why this three-state area
was picked, the White House
said it was geographically
"within our reach" with a va
riety of projects that tell the
education story, including pro
blems of disadvantaged young
sters from poverty areas.
Mrs. Johnson will join school
children on a field trip to a
planetarium-cultural center in
Charleston, W. Va. She'll
travel 70 miles by chartered
bus through the Smoky-Blue
Ridge mountains to meet
Teacher Corps volunteers and
sit down for a school lunch
with youngsters in remote
Canada Township, N.C., where
it's 11 miles down the moun
tain to the nearest telephone.
Three Democratic governors
Buford Ellington of Tennes
see, Dan Moore of North Ca
rolina and Hulett C. Smith of
West Virginia will join the
first lady on her travels
through their states.
Her first stop Monday after
noon will be Charleston, W.
Va., for a look at the Sunrisa
Cultural Center, its planetari
um, art gallery, garden and
nature center.
Tuesday, she will travel in
Western North Carolina from
Asheville, boyhood home of
author Thomas Wolfe, where
sh3 will take in an adult eve
ning class in 8th grade math.
mar school or attended high
school, but has B.A. and M.A.
degrees from Montana State
University.
He left school at 14 and
served in the U.S. Navy for
the duration of WWI. In 1919,
he enlisted in the U.S. Army,
and in 1921, he entered the
United States Marine Corps
for two years.
On returning from service,
the Montanan took entrance
exams to enter college. All
of his education has been in
his native state, except for
two quarters at UCLA while
working on his Ph.D,
Mansfield has traveled ex
tensively, particularly to South
east Asia and Vietnam, under
the direction of Presidents
Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy
and Johnson.
He was .first elected to Con
gress in 1942 and served for
five terms in the House of
M
iller Wins Coveted
Majority Leader .
Mike Mansfield
Representatives bsfore being
elected to the Senate in 1952.
In 1961, he was elected to
the Senate Majority Leader's
position, where he has served
in each succeeding session of
Congress.
This is the third of a series
of distinguished speakers the
Carolina Forum has brought
to the Carolina Campus in
the past six weeks. Feb. 28,
Vice President Hubert Hum
phrey addressed a packed Me
morial Hall and on Feb. 6.
Everett Case Award
By SANDY TREADWELL
DTK Managing Editor
GREENSBORO Take four Sophomores who
didn't play that way, add a senior who found himself
and finish with a junior superstar.
The result was an 82-73 victory over the Duke
Blue Devils last night.
The Tar Heels ended a long road of twenty eight
basketball games. It was a road which took them into
national prominence, and which last night earned
them a ticket to the NCAA Eastern Regional Tourna
ment in Maryland this week.
Carolina, a team which
staggered to victory against
N. C. State and Wake Forest,
put all its potential together
during fifteen long minutes
of basketball against Coach
Vic Bubas and his Blue Devils.
The game was desperately
v
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a shot over Larry Miller who foul
ed him. Miller and Verga were
f!
IfJVC Players carry Coach Demi Smith off the floor after isinning
the ACC championship.
-lP Telephoto
exciting and always undecided
till its final two minutes.
The Tar Heels fought off the
desperate final surge which
brought Duke within five
points, 70-65, with a long 4:25
left to play.
But Bob Lewis, oblivious to
all the pressure in the packed
coliseum made good on a 1-1
foul situation. Suddenly Duke's
sophomore substitute Steve
Vandenberg lost his head. His
off-balance shot was picked
off by the second half of the
L&M pair, -Larry Miller. Mil
ler scored seconds later from
the left. side.. -. - -;.
' Then BobVefgiC; fouled
Lewis, and the All-American
from Washington added two
more points from the line.
Suddenly, with 1:53 remain
ing, the Tar Heels led 7b-ta.
The basketball team from Duke's Bob Verga comes in for
Durham became only a me- '
mory. -
The momentum swayed back
and forth with the slow but
persistent regularity of a see
saw in -the first half.
Duke played the opening five
minutes of the game looking
as though they would power
their way to. the championship.
Then the Tar Heels, employ
ing a full court press began
to force Duke into numerous
offensive errors. They began
a drive which tied the score
29-29, with 4:48 left to play
in the first half. The Tar Heels
stretched their lead to six,
40-34, at the buzzer.
Throughout the second half
Carolina was never tied, and
throughout most of the final
twenty minutes maintained a
nine point lead.
A decisive factor throughout
the second half was the foul
trouble, of Duke's finest re
bounders, Mike Lewis and
Bob Riedy. Riedy left- the
game with five fouls with 15:15
remaining in the game. Lew
is picked up his fourth foul
during the opening minutes of
the second half. He was forced
to play cautiously until he
finally joined Riedy with just
over seven minutes to play.
Larry Miller, for the second
time in as many nights, was
the star of the Tar Heels. He
sparked his team's first quar
ter comeback, and when the
two of the big men in the cham
pionship game.
UPI Telephoto by Jerry Huff
long forty minutes of basket
ball ended, he was the game's
leading scorer with 32 points.
In post game ceremonies Mil
ler was awarded the Everett
Case Memorial Award as the
tournament's most valuable
player.
Bob Lewis found his shoot
ing eye and his confidence
just when his team needed
them most. Lewis, playing his
final collegiate game in North
Carolina, followed Miller with
26 points.
The surprise of the game
was the performance of Gerald
Tuttle. The sophomore guard
substituted for Dick Grubar
during much of the game. His
defensive assignment was the
toughest on the court. The
scrappy little athlete from
Kentucky held Bob Verga to
just 20 points during the All
American's final game.
After the game, Dean Smith
said. "The key to our victory
was our defense. It was mag
nificant. "Miller is truly one of the
greatest players in college
basketball today," Smith said.
North Carolina:
STATISTICS
Duke:
FG FT T
Bunting 0-1 7-9 7
Miller 13-14 6- 8 32
Clark 3-51-37
Lewis 8-22 10-11 26
Grubar 0-3 3-4 3
Gauntlett 0-1 0-0 0
Tuttle 1-24-66
Brown 0-1 1-2 1
Moe 0-0 0-1 0
TOTALS 25-49 32-44 82
Riedy
Kolodziej
Lewis
Verga
Wendelein
Liccardo
Kennedy
McKaig
Golden
Vandenberg
TOTALS
FG
2- 4
3- 7
4- 11
6-20
2- 7
1- 4
0- 1
0- 1
6- 7
2- 5
26-67
FT
0- 1
5-10
4r 4
8-10
2- 3
0- 0
0- 0
0- 0
2- 2
0- 1
21-31
T
4
11
12
20
6
2
0
0
14
4
73
FG 51.0: FT 72.7
FG 38.8; FT 67.7
'Black Power'
Backs Powell
Stokeley Carmichael
Sets Duke Address
Long ECC Fight Seen
DURHAM Stokeley Carmi
chael, a ramrod for the Black
Power movement in the U. S.,
will bring his controversial
views to Duke University Fri
day. '
Carmichael has agreed to
field questions in a closed ses
sion at the Duke Law School
and later will make a major
address in Page Auditorium.
His meeting with law students
is set for 3 p.m. and his pub
lic address is scheduled for
6:15 p.m.
This is Carmichael's first
appearance at a predominant
ly white southern university
since he moved into the fore
front of the Black Power
movement. His visit to Duke
is sponsored by the Men's Stu
dent Government Association.
John Kinney, secretary of
the MSGA, said Carmichael
has announced he will offer
general remarks on education
in the U. S. and has agreed to
answer questions from the
audience. The public will be
admitted.
Carmichael is former direc
tor of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating "Committee. H i s
civil rights activities have car
ried him into Georgia, Ala
bama and Mississippi where
he engaged in voter registra
tion drives.
A spokesman for the MSGA
reported Carmichael has ve
toed a press conference or
dinner with Duke student leaders.
(Related Story Page 6)
RALEIGH (AP) The legislative fight
shaping up over independent university status
for ECC will be only one in a line of loud
and long controversies over education in the
North Carolina General Assembly.
Both the squabble over the North Caro
lina Speaker Ban Law and the struggle over
changing the name of North Carolina State
were long, drawn out political battles.
The East Carolina request for separate
status has split the legislature on a sectional
basis.
Dr. Leo Jenkins, president of ECC, leading
the crusade, said in a 1966 speech it is "an
ancient right of the people to petition directly
to their representatives in the legislature."
Gov. Dan Moore has made clear his op
position to separate university status for ECC.
State Sen. Robert Morgan, D-Harnett, chair
man of the ECC board of trustees, joined in the
figure for ECU and now looms as the grand
marshall of the parade.
The North Carolina Board of Higher Educa
tion, at the request of ECC, named a "blue
ribbon" group of out-of-state consultants to
study the college and its readiness for univer
sity status.
The report has not yet oeen puDuciy re-
BIMINI, BAHAMAS (AP)
One of America's most mili
tant civil rights figures inject
ed the Black Power issue yes
terday into Adam Clayton Pow
ell's campaign to regain his
Congressional seat.
"Beep, Beep! Hup! Hup!
Black Power!" exclaimed Stok
eley Carmichael,, who first
popularized the term.
Standing beside Powell, Car
michael told a news confer
ence he would do all in his
power to help Powell get re
elected in the April 11 special
election in New York City's
Harlem district.
"I'll strike my Black Pow
er," the 25-year-old head of
the Student Nonviolent Coord
inating Committee (SNCC)
said. "Nothing but Black Pow
er. That is the major theme."
Neither Carmichael nor Pow-
leased, but will be the focal point for the legis- eU me,ntioned James Meredith,
lative battles.
Morgan demanded a copy of the report,
even going to the attorney general's office for
a legal ruling. His wishes were granted, but
the board of higher education said it had plan
ned all along to send Morgan a copy, and the
demand was totally unnecessary.
Many see the independent status as the
beginning of the end for the consolidated uni
versity system.
When and until the higher education board
report is released, the question remains as to
the readiness of ECC for university status.
the Republican candidate op
posing the 58-year-old Demo
crat in the election.
It was during a 1966 Missis
sippi Civil Rights March insti
gated by Meredith, first Ne
gro to enter the University of
Mississippi, that Carmichael
projected the term "Black
Power" into nationwide prom
inence. Carmichael, Trinidad - born
resident of New York City's
Bronx, blamed "pure, unadul
tered . racism" for Powell's
March 1 exclusion from Con
gress for alleged misuse of
government funds.
"Never before has there been
such an unholy . alliance by
white liberals and white ra
cists as that which caused Mr.
Powell's exclus:6n," Carmi
chael said. "They wanted to
get themselves a nigger."
Carmichael said SNCC would
campaign actively for Powell
in Harlem.
"We will tell them to vote
him back in," the Civil Rights
leader said. "We will tell
them that in the streets, and
we'll ring door bells."
His organization, Carmichael
said, will work with the Con
gress of Racial Equality
(CORE) in the campaign for
Powell. CORE Chief Floyd
McKissick flew to Bimini early
this week to throw support be
hind Powell.
Powell said other supporters
will arrive next week on this
British-owned fishing island
where he lives. He mentioned
Julian Bond, Negro member of
the Georgia House of Repre
sentatives; Dick Gregory, Chi
cago entertainer, and Mervin
Dymally, California State Sen
ator. Carmichael spoke of Powell
as an "exile" and asserted:
"Mr. Powell doesn't have to
campaign."