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I ll-Ti)i',"-"ca1l,",'i (SMI? Volume 75, Number ;C r"""- " "S ,. E m - - .... t i, n i fnil tiiiwx 'jiv: . ' - ; . , ' " v -,-' ' - - . ' J ",-. ,.--. - - - ... . i.i "T .... ,. - r ;.-.. . j iVo y4nsi.i;er From N. Vietnam JOHNSON CITY, Tex. President Johnson told reporters Saturday there had been no reply from North Vietnam to his reiterated peace overtures which he made in a speech Friday night. Johnson also announced selection of Edward L. Weisel Jr. as the new assistant attorney general in charge of the Civil Division of the Justice Department. Weisel, son of the New York state Democratic committeeman, has been assistant attorney general in charge of the Lands Division. Johnson, speaking Friday night in San Antonio, Tex., repeated an American offer to stop bombing North Vietnam if Hanoi would enter promptly into productive peace discussions. The President expressed a willingness to talk with North Viet nam President Ho Chi Minh immediately if it would help the situation. $70 Billion Defense Bill Signed JOHNSON CITY, Tex. President Johnson signed Saturday the $70 billion defense spending bill largest money bill ever enacted into law with a warning it may not be enough. Johnson told Congress restrictions it attached to the spending package may boomerang on the United States. Johnson outlined three major objections to the bill: It was $1.6 billion less than he had asked for and may not turn out to be enough. It violates "America's word" to Great Britain. It places a floor under the manpower levels of military reserve forces. American Jailing Denounced BERLIN The United States Saturday denounced as a "travesty of justice" the East German sentencing of an American jack of all trades to 15 years as a spy. An East Berlin court Friday convicted Peter Feinauer, 27-year-old West Berlin resident, formerly of Providence, R.I., of being an agent of the Central Intelligence Agency and helping refugees flee to the West. He was arrested Oct. 7, 1966. An American spokesman here said the sometime taxi driver, photographer and art student had been held almost a year without learning the charges against himself and had been tried in secret. In a strong statement the spokesman said the United States took a very serious view of the arrest. Reds Resume Bombardment SAIGON Communist gunners suddenly resumed heavy bombardment of allied positions below the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) firing more than22)) 220 shells and rockets against U.S. Marine' bases and South Vietnamese units in the past 24 hours, military spokesmen reported Saturday. . . At least one Marine was ViiioH w nded, 14 of them seriously enough to require helicopter evacuation. ... - . - ' ?- ' - - 4 rogress Was:blmv And Mmtly Non-Extsteitit World News BRIEFS By United Press International ... -4s Riggs Follows Bomar Through .Drag Cage CMaM By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily tar Heel Staff Anticipating a marked in crease in the number of drug cases to come up on campus this year, Student Body Presi dent Bob Travis said he in tends to make certain that of fenses this year will be tried in student courts. '.'We will have a problem with drugs at UNC this year, and a compromise should be reached with the Chancellor and Dean of Men before the cases come up." Travis has tried to contact the administration to schedule a meeting to decide upon the guidelines that will be followed in drug cases. His main objective is to pre vent the University from by passing the student court system and suspending anyone for drug offenses, as was done in the 1966 summer. The system Travis would like to see effected would call for the honor courts to try drug offenses with the aid of competent medical advice, such as the presence of an in firmary doctor at each trial. Travis bases his prediction of an increase of such cases on reports he has heard of mari juana becoming increasingly available on campus. His interest in the problem is shared by a group of UNC students who have banded together into a discussion group to consider the medical, legal, psychological, and sociological aspects of the pro blem. Many of the group were among those delegates to the National Student Association Congress this summer who supported NSA's "Drugs On Campus" resolution. Part of the NSA resolution suggested that "colleges and universities encourage open and honest dialogue on the facts, implications, possible dangers and possible benefits of drug use." One of the NSA delegates who helped draft this resolu tion, Marie Harriss, will also be a member of the campus 75 Years of Editorial Freedom CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1, ? -r "5 j - : 14 .r6 Meqiiegt JL -- ; discussion group to be form- " ed. The group will be organizing at 5 p.m. Monday in 111 Beard Hall. While the group is not a direct outgrowth of the NSA Congress, one of its functions will be to determine the extent of drug abuse on campus, which was also called for the VP To Breakfast With By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Student Body Vice President Jed Dietz will start holding legislative breakfasts Monday in order to stay attuned to legislators' opinions and to make the legislature more ef ficient. In addition, he will hold weekly meetings with com mittee chairmen and the floor leaders. Student Body presi dent Bob Travis also will start meeting with the legislators sometime after this week. Dietz explained that this year he will be "instituting fairly extensive reforms in the legislature" and wants to be able to get together with the legislators to tell them about his programs and find out their opions, and contributions they have to make. In the past, Dietz, whose main function as vice president is as speaker of the legislature, said the vice presi dent, "has been aloof, and tended not to communicate with the legislators." - This has sometimes made the - legislators resent the speaker and feel powerless, he added. By explaining all the technical matters of the bills to them before the meetings the legislators can devote more time to debating the central issues instead of mino r points. L W; - : We- -is el ivV ff- DTH Staff Photo by Ernest H. RobI Lots Of Green Wave Drugs on Campus" resolu- tion. The group will discuss poten tial problems arising from drug abuse. In its program are discussions by experts on various aspects ' of the drug problem, discussions in residence colleges and debates and panels. egisiators Dietz already has about 30 legislators signed up to breakfast with him some day next week. He will hold two a day, Monday through Friday, If the breakfasts at 8 a.m. and 9 a.m. don't work out, Dietz said, he may switch over to having legislative lunches. A Win or lose, you can't escape the football games traffic. So what 1967 (Gat rollm& (h)0 By LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff North Carolina did not wait until the second half to lose its tenth straight game and third of the year Saturday in Kenan Stadium. Falling behind 15-3 after two quarters the Tar Heels, playing at home for the first time this year, were drubbed 36-11 by Tulane. A pitifully small crowd of 32,000 watched Green Wave quarterback Bobby Duhon direct the winners to their big gest victory margin in seven years. Their record is now 1-1. Duhon, a senior southpaw with All-American aspirations accounted for 95 yards total of fense and passed for two touchdowns in an attack that netted 336 yards overall. That's just how weak the Tar Heels were defensively. "Bobby did a fine job direc ting our attack," said Coach Jim Pittman, afterwards. "The thing he did best was to move the football down the field and across the goal line." North Carolina led briefly in the first quarter on a 32 yard field goal by Don Hartig, his second of the year. If the Tar Heels ever had a chance, however, a third straight listless second half proved otherwise. They took the second half kickoff inside Tulane territory only to be stymied into a pun ting situation at the 46. Jeff Beaver, who averaged only 31.5 yards on seven kicks, had an attempt blocked by end Scott Haber, a terror all af ternoon. Bruce Guidry, the other end, picked the ball up and saun tered down the right sideline 37 yards for a touchdown that put the game on ice. , The Tar Heels weren't really . ready to die though. Again they moved well after the kickoff, going from their 16 to the 34 in only four plays. A Gayle Bomar pass was in tercepted by safetyman Jimf Jancik, however, and Tulane But Tar By JIM FIELDS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The locker room was silent, and coach Bill Dooley strolled slowly into the press room, cigarete in hand. "It was a long afternoon gentlemen," he began. "Tulane played the type of football we thought they were capable of playing, and they have a reai fine team. Like everyone has said all week, Miami of Ohio just slipped up on them last Saturday. "Let me say that we made a lot of mistakes today, but I made the first one," he con tinued. "It was my decision to go for the first down on fourth and short yardage in the first quarter, and they rose up and stopped us. They then took the ball and went right in for then first touchdown." One of the mistakes that Dooley cited was the Tar Heels inconsistent play. "On one series of downs, on offense and Familiar one thing that always goes with can yon do? Sit. Then sit some Dooley Made .Fa! t rm Ji o i t w DTH Staff Photo by Ernest H. Rob I Carolina wasn't really cheering the Goodyear blimp, but it sure did look that way. was in business at Carolina's and Charlie Carr acounted for 36. 26 more. A 20-yard aerial from Duhon Sophomore Saulis Zemaitis to tailback Chuck Lof tin upped carried the ball in from the the lead to 30-3 and there were one for the score. Bomar, after , still eight , minutes and J 43 , fumbling the snap on the extra seconds left in the third point attempt,- added two quarter. points when he scrambled into Carolina immediately found the endzone. its way onto the scoreboard, Tulane had one more driving 66 yards from its 34. touchdown in its repoitoire and Bomar gained 21 of those this one belonged to the sec yards in the march and passes A from Beaver to Peter Davis (Continued on Paffe 6) First Heels Made More defense, we would look like a football team, but we just couldn't remain consistent," said Dooley. Also, we really fe1! down on our kicking game after devoting so much time to it after the N. C. State game.". ... Coach Dooley said that he thought the biggest problem in preparation for the Vanderbilt game next week would be get ting the team ready mentally. "For the first time this season, they're really beginning to realize what it means to lose. The loss hurt them more this time than either of the first two did. When you start realiz ing what it means to lose, you're more willing to pay the price to win." "I want to emphasize again that this is a young football team and they're continuing to make mistakes, but they're agressive mistakes, and it's my job as their coach to cor- , rect them. Situation : .... V more. It's all in the game Founded February 23, 1893 mane The only Tar Heel player that Dooley cited for playing well was end Charlie Carr. Charlie's personal feeling on the matter was, "You don't play to well when you lose by a score like that. We'll just have to play better next week." Dooley also said that he thought both of Tulane's quarterbacks, Bobby Duhon and Warren Bankston, played exceptionally well. "I think Duhon is the faster of the two," he said, "but Bankston is certainly much stronger. I thought a couple of times we were never going to get him" down." Jim Trahan, Tulane's fine running back, was also cited by Dooley. Trahan is a real fine ball player, and he really had a field day out there to day." Dooley said that the team sustained no major injuries although several players wer2 bruised up pretty badly. V.VA'.Vi'.VAV DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS 0s Mistake, 5 i i i ! h 4 -. .v
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1967, edition 1
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