Y Needs Help Tie YM-YWCA needs pec;!s t fcti? pi testier 2 t recipe for tie Carcllsa Takzt Search, a pro grain for the recruitrsert cf Negro steiests fc tit Ucrrersitr. Isterested fr$crs shszIJ coae by 152 Y VzZlZ Tuesday tires Friiay. utJy iuaa I cm D 75 Fears o Editorial Freedom NORTH CAROLS Founded February 23, 1S33 Iiiiiii rir-' . wnr. 'MM W3. V(;P.V. jiinber 42 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 19S7 CSHMT0)UI1 l J H II l i vi i l ill r"! r i ii Coed. at- KAREN FREir.IEN i!7laiZl Tar x1 stay C-m nceHor's Advisory gSJttee on Admissicnslmd StiS? .toMconser a sharp cutback in the number of out- -j?ie iresnman coed3 tending UNC next year? dnnTf 01 committee SSSn? to reveal t recom mendation will be forwarded to Provost Hugh Holman . Dean of Admissions Charles Bernard advanced the predic tion last week that the com mittee's recommendation would make freshman out-of-state coeds at UNC next year practically nonexistent." His only comment when con tacted Monday afternoon was, I nave nothing to report" Dean J. C. Morrow of the College of Arts and Sciences, who chairs the committee, refused the divulge the fin dings of the group on the grounds that release of such information would be premature because the com mittee serves in an advisory capacity to the chancellor. The final decision will be made by the chancellor after it is considered by the provosL The recommendation itself came from the chancellor's of fice last May. In his last statement, Bernard said that "the way things are running now" the total number of freshman coeds will also be reduced for next year, though less sharply than the percentage from out-of-state. The admissions Office is authorized to accept only 300 freshmen girls at present, but this figure is subject to change. Bernard also stated last week mat he expects the com mittee's recommendation to be that next year's freshman class contain only about 30 per cent of the number of out-of-state freshman coeds that this year's class does. Hilt Daily Sar-fyrl World News BRIEFS B Unitkd Prtss International .liieaivy (PC By STEVE KXOTVLTON of Thm Daily Tar Bl Staff South Campus Weekend four weekend concerts spon sored by the four south cam pus residence eollebes 1 ost more than $2,000, Morrison's Social Lt Governor said Mon day. "It seems like a perfect ex ample of apathy on the part of the students, particularly those living on south campus," said Richard BlackweH, who has been social Lt. gov. of Mor rison for more than two years. 4Maybe we were charging too much for the tickets, but in any event, there were just not enough people attending to pay for the bands and other ex penses," he said. Tickets for Friday night featuring Clifford Curry and the Inman were $3 per couple. Tickets to the Is ley Brothers featured Saturday night were going for $3 JO per couple. Both concerts were held in Chase Cafeteria. Willie Tee and the MagniScents and the Embers, were presented in the James social lounge Saturday and Sunday afternoons, free to students. The biggest single financial outlay was for the Isley Brothers $1,750. ($783 was taken in at the door for the concert.) Blackwell said that "everyone who went had a really good time and all the bands put on great shows. It's just too bad that so few people So Public Sale Of Cage U. S. Infantry Routs VC Guerillas SAIGON American infantrymen Monday caught up with guerrillas who overran and hoisted the Viet Cong flag over a US advisers camp and killed about 55 of the Communists in heavy fighting near the Cambodian border. Military spokesmen said two companies of the 1st Infantry " Division closed a ring of fire around the fleeing guerrillas and ' then called in air strikes. The planes roared in at treetop level and hit the trapped Communists with napalm and anti-personnel bombs which explode into thousands of jagged fragments. The action ran the Cdmtounist toll in two days of savage fighting to about 243. The cost Monday was four wounded to run the toll for the two days to six killed and 14 wounded. South Viet namese troops suffered 14 killed and 37 wounded. Banana Nose Staff Photo by MZKZ McCOWAN Pinocchio Pumpkin is alive and well on a bench outside Old East. At any rate, some jacko lantern makers decided their pumpkin needed a real, three-diminsional nose oot just another hole in its head. So they inserted a banana for breathing purposes only. Birth .Control 4 . MilMoii W oinen By HUNTER GEORGE of The Daily Tar Heel Staff More than four million women in the United States 'Short Chan ged tor of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York, said the birth con trol movement is trying to get British Repulse Chinese Mob HONG KONG Ccjnmumst Chinese militiamen buried hand grenades into British Hong Kong Monday after attempts to tear down a British barricade were driven back by the tear gas. Communist border guards shut off their spotlights after the afternoon mob-led assaults, plunging the Chinese side into total darkness. British authorities prepared for possible night The attacks on the only vehicle crossing point on the frontier were carefully filmed and tape recorded by Communist techni cians. The mob later posed for group pictures. German Refugee Wins Nobel Prize STOCKHOLM A German-born professor who found refuge from the Nazis in the United States became the 27th American winner of the Nobel Physics Prize Monday for his work in unlock ing some of the sun's secrets. ' He is Prof. Hans Albrecht Bethe, 61, of Cornell University, who helped develop the hydrogen bomb and whose work on the source of the sun's energy has enabled space engineers to protect astronauts from radiation hazards. ' In Oslo, the Norwegian Parliament decided to award no Nobel Peace Prize for the second consecutive year. As usual, the parliamentary prize committee gave no reason for its decision. Rolling Stone Gets Drug Conviction LONDON Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones was sentenced to jail on drug charges Monday, despite &e tears of hysterical fans and a defense plea that jail would rum his mental health. Magistrate R. E. Seaton gave the 24-year-old musician nine months after he pleaded guilty to Possessing marijuana and Slowin it to be smoked in his London apartment. He is the third member of the popular rock and roll group to be convicted on drug charges. Sin-er Mick Jagger and guitarist Keith Richard were sen tenced earlier this year but freed after successful appeals to Bri tain's lord chief justice, Lord Parker. Brush Fires Rage In California ORANGE, Calif. Major brush fires, whipped into un controllable 'infernos by Santa Ana winds, exploded across Southern California Monday, charring more than 60,000 acres, destroying more than 50 expensive homes and forcing thousands of residents to flee. The worst of the fires, a 23,000-acre blaze raging in heavily populated areas of Orange County, was declared a major disaster bvstate officials. A fire spokesman said the blaze was "burning like hell" with no hope of control while the high winds continued to blow. Five of the six fires which broke out in five Southern California counties since Sunday were designaed as "major." are "short-changed'' as far as a broader base of popular sup- regard. Guttmacher said that while parts of the South have not been receptive to the birth con trol movement, North Carolina was ''progressive" in this oDoortunities for birth control are concerned, an international population control expert said here Monday. x Dr. Allan F. Guttmacher, president of Planned Parenthood-World Population, the world's largest organization for birth control, said surveys by bis group have shown that as many as seven million women in this country are medically dependent and of reproductive age. Some of these, he said, can obtain birth control advice and contraceptives, but at least four million cannot because these means are not always available to the poor. Guttmacher made the remarks before a group of sVv-TTf Rrt nArsnras from th North Carolina Population Center here port. "It still appears to be on the wrong side of the tracks," he said. However, increasing federal support makes him optimistic for the movement's future. Guttmacher, who claims to have the "world's largest pin practice" (about a quarter million women in his care) disclaimed arguments in re cent magazine articles con cerning ill effects of birth con trol pills. The articles contain ""half truths," he said, explaining that chemical changes in a woman's body due to the pill are only temporary, and that the body reverts to its normal state when pill usage is stop- He said it was one of the first states to begin distributing family planning advice. He also commended the state for passage of it's abortion law last spring. The UNC Athletic Business Office announced Monday that there will be no public sale of tickets to the Tar Heels' home basketball games in Carmichael Auditorium this season. Vernon Crook, Business Manager of Athletics, said the full supply of tiekets will go to . students, faculty and members of the Ram's Club. Carolina has a student enrollment this year of 14,700 and Carmichael seats only 8,800. . Crook said that Carolina does have tickets available to the general public for its games at Greensboro and Charlotte. The Tar Heels face Kentucky at Greensboro on Dec. 12 and Princeton on Dec 16. Games at Charlotte are against Georgia Tech on Jan. 27, Clemson on Feb. 16, and South Carolina on Feb. 17. UNC Athletic Director OP. ( Chuck)Erickson announced that 3 of Carolina's 9 home games will be shown on Tickets regional television. These are the games against Wake Forest on Jan. 3, Duke on Jan. 6 and N.C. State on Feb. 13. showed up." Graham Memorial presented no entertainment ca either night "just so we could have South Campus Weekend," Blackwell said. The only other entertainment on the campus was Germans weekend which Blackwell said "should not have interferred too heavily with our shows." He said the shows were well publicized, both through posters and in the Daily Tar HeeL "so people knew shout it. I don't really know just why nobody came, unless it's just apathy." "The students in South Cam pus knew about the shows, and they knew it was their money we were spending, so it was up to them to keep it from being such a financial failure." Blackwell said he was afraid the poor turnout would hurt the two-year old residence college system here. "But everybody who came had a good time and this will help a great deal Everyone who came to any of the four concerts knows that colleges can put on good parties for the students." Blackwell commended the wxsrk that many put into the weekend, . particularly the social boards of Morrison and James Colleges. Greeks Colled ' For UNICEF By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Would ; you believe a cool, sophisticated sorority pledge not only asking for a date, but also asking that date to go trick-or-treatirrg with her? Thanks to the fertile mind of Randy Myer, president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, this strange situation has come to pass. Frais Ge& Awards He said that of the women in this country who do use birth control methods, 70 per cent are white, most have finished the 11th grade, and most have two children. Guttmacher. a former diree- "I feel strongly that we don't want to oversell the pin. I'm not completely comfortable that there are no potential pro blems, with i t "But," he added, "I am con vinced that the pill does not do irreversible damage. D oug David To Run or Sophom ore VP UNC football player Doug David has decided to run for vice president of the sophomore class on the Independent Reform Move ment ticket, it was learned Monday. " Bob Tyndall, the party's can didate for president of the sophomore class, made the an nouncement. "A lot of people will just say this is the old trick Of running a football star," Tyndall said, but this is a case of a very competent person running." David, who started at wingback in three games this year, is running because he is concerned with a situation in which Student Government plays an important role on campus but students know lit tle and care little about it, ac cording to Tyndall. David was unavailable for comment because of football practice. Tyndall called David's con stituency (Ehringhaus) one of the areas left out of Student Government David will be "committed to the same ideas the party is ia reforming Student Govern ment," he said. The platform' of the third party calls for examining the SG bureaucracy, examining and evaluating the honor system, studvins the rela- By PAMELA HAWKINS Of The DTH Staff Phi Delta Theta and Delta Upsilon tied for large fraterni ty first place in the R. B. House Outstanding Fraternity awards presented at an Interfratermty Council (IFC) banquet Monday night. Phi Kappa Sigma and St Anthony's Hal were both give lirst place trophies in the small fraternity division, Chi Psi and Zeta Beta Tan took second and third place awards, respectively, in the large fraternity division, with Sigma PM Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha taking se cond and third places in the smaller division. Scholarship awards for the 1966-'67 school year went to Delia Upsilon, first place; Zeta Beta Tau, second place; Phi Delta Theta, third place and Chi Psi, fourth place. Most Improved Scholarship "were St. Anthony's Hall, first Place, moving from 22nd place to eighth out of the 24 fraternity's, quality point averages Sigma Nu, second Place, advancing from 18th to tenth position, and Chi Phi, third place, moving from 19th to 12th place standing. Phi Delta Theta captured first place in the Intramural Awards with Delta Kappa Epsilon, second and Delta Upsilon, third. houses," said Randy Myer, IFC president. "The smaller houses just were not able to compete on the criterion that the House awards are made." The R. B. House Outstanding Fraternity Awards, in honor of the past university chancellor, are based on scholarship, im proved scholarship, campus representation in ex tracurricular activities, IFC and intramural participation, house appearance, faculty-stu-munity and University service projects. A committee composed of the chairman of the faculty committee on fraternities and sororities, the dean of men and the assistant dean of men made the selections based on accumulated points from the list of activities. Dean of Men James O. Cansler made the award presentations at the 6 pjn. banquet in the Carolina Inn. Myer spoke on Vanishing Rushee," on the fallacies of the rush system. 'The focusing It's all part of the Greeks' UNTCEF drive which will start tonight with a trick-or-treat fund drive. The Chapel BUI area has been divided into sections between the high schoolers of Chapel Hill and the sororities of UNC. Each sorority pledge has been given an area to can been asked to get a date to go with her. "We decided that this was a good way to continue our pro ject and mix it with a social event," said Myer. "We're also going to try to have a party after the drive is finished." The drive will be from 8-10 pjn. The girls will be given milk cartons with which to solicit contributions. 'The money we get tonight will not be counted toward our goal of $8,000. It's extra." The IFC fund drive will of ficially begin with a carnival from 2-5 pan. Friday. The carnival will be either in McCorkle Place or Ehr inghaus field. There will be eight booths run by teams composed of three fraternities and one sorority. ft . tionship of legislature to cam- xaus is the first year taat dus. and investigating student distinctions of large and small that pus, ana investigate, fees. . The party has nominated six candidates for class of ficersfor the president ana vice president of the freshman, sophomore, and jtnior classes. VfmM NX v -.-.h-H it .fN- : - ."TIT Fin - - - f : X ' ' r T; p II ;T xt IX"' t'-iVTrV i k- i :- : ' VIU -vurSv x: -w - X J :, ., l vsC,.i. .t S.j' mi fraternities have been made tor the House awards. The divisions are based on membership. 4Traditionally the House awards i went , to the larger Inner Space This is a USAF Titan n trans tage spacecraft one, however, will never reach outer space. That's right a real live space vehicle. And it That maze of pipes is only a mock-up for 's parked outside Morehead Planetarium. This display. DT3 staS Phato 3nKE 3IcGOWAN