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75 Years of Editorial Freedom
Volume 75, Number 67
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1967
Founded Februarv 23. 1803-
ici&e i
t
i V
i
i m ties a s b
Center
P
By BILL AMLOXG
of &tlv Tar UI
RALEIGH - Some 7 0
demonstrators mostly
students began a week of
anti-draft protests here Mon
day morning by picketing the
Armed Forces Induction
Center to a weak chorus of
Hell No, We Won't Go."
The shivering picketers, who
came mostly from Duke and
the University of North
Carolina, paraded in front of
the center to begin the North
Broughton Announces For Governor
RALEIGH A "new" J. Melville Broughton Jr., wise-cracking
and nimbly side-stepping questions on issues, announced for
Governor Monday setting up a Democratic primary between the
sons of two f ormer chief executives.
In the crowd applauding Broughton's verbal jousting with
reporters were prominent figures from elements of the
Democratic party who supported Dan K. Moore for Governor.
Broughton, age 45, sonof the late Governor J. Meville
Broughton Sr., pledged "a viorous and intensive campaign in all
sections and in all the one hundred counties of North Carolina."
His entry in the race, widely anticipated, will pit him against
Lt. Gov. Robert Scott in the May 4 primary next year. Scott, son
of the late Governor and Senator Kerr Scott, has not made a
formal announcement but is in fact already running.
Greeks To Withdrmv Troops
ATHENS Greece sent ships Monday to Cyprus to begin
evacuating Greek army troops under terms of the agreement
won by White House mediator Cyrus R. Vance which averted war
with Turkey, diplomatic sources reported.
Greece and Turkey announced Sunday they had acceptedU.N.
Secretary General Thant's call for the "expeditious withdrawal of
their excess troops from Cyprus. Withdrawal of these troops was
one of the key provisions in the; agreement worked out in the
crisis negotiations by Vance in two weeks of shuttling between
Athens, Ankara and Nicosia.
President Makarios, the Greek Orthodox archbishop who has
been president of Cyprus since the island was granted in
dependence by Britain in 1960,
however.
In a letter to Thant Monday,
work out the future role of the
there since a similar crisis in 1964.
Heart Transplant Working Well
CAPE TOWN, South Africa A dead woman's heart pumped
life Monday through the body of a Lithuanian-boni grocer who
gambled on medical history's first human heart transplant opera
tion even though he is a diabetic.
A 30-member surgical team took the heart from a 25-year-old
woman killed in a traffic accident Sunday and transplanted it in
the chest of Washkansky.
Dr. J. H. Louw, chairman of the Cape Town University
Department of Surgery, said another crisis would come in about
a week when it would be determined whether Washkansky's body
would accept or reject the foreign tissue of the new heart.
Strikes, Disease Ravage Britain
LONDON A nation-wide slowdown by railroad engineers in
volved in a feud with brakemen over a government streamlining
program delayed or stopped thousands of British communters
Monday and caused big traffic jams 'during rush hours.
The government warned of "mounting chaos" if the inter
union dispute were not solved quickly.
The labor strife and a deepening epidemic of hoof-and-mouth
disease that hiked already high beef, pork and lamb prices pro
duced pre-Christmas gloom in this island nation beset by pinched
pocketbooks and a devalued pound.
'Monitor' Used To Attack VC
SAIGON U.S. Army troops, attacking from Navy assault
boats named "Monitors" after the Civil War ironclad, knifed into
the Mekong River delta Monday to break a Viet Cong
stranglehold on the highway linking Saigon to its rice bowl.
Field reports said the U.S. "'Riverine" -force killed 199 uer
rillas. The drive was described as a major success.
Total U.S. casualties were not immediately reported, but at
least two Americans were killed and several wounded in the first
staes of the assault.
Space Workers To Lose Jobs
SPACE CENTER, Houston More than 100 workers connected
with the Manned Spacecraft Center will lose their jobs at the end
of the year because of congressional cuts in the space budget, a
center spokesman said Monday.
The spokesman said 40 to 50 Civil Service workers at the
Houston Space Center and 10-15 workers at the White Sands,
N.M., Test Site will receive their termination notices Jan. 1.
Their jobs will end the first of February.
Vietnam Plane Crash Kills 26
SAIGON A twin-engine U.S. Air Force Caribou transport
plane carrying 26 Americans and classified documents crashed
last Thursday in the coastal lowlands south of Qui Nhon, Saigon
headquarters announced Monday.
There were no survivors but the documents were recovered
intact.
Vlasits, Tieger
Carolina prong of a second na
tionwide Stop the Draft
Week.
Two of them George
Vlasits, 25, a former second
year sociology graduate stu
dent who disenrofled from
UNC two weeks ago, and
Joseph H. (Buddy) Tieger, 28,
a second-year law student at
Duke presented the center's
commanding officer with a
statement that they plan to
refuse induction next month.
"We have received induction
ljr Dailti aaf i?rrl
World News
BRIEFS
By United Press International
balked at some of the terms,
he called for Security Council ac-
U.N. oeacekeenine force stationed
Among 70
notices and expect to be
ordered to report to this center
for induction into the Armed
Forces sometime in January,"
the statement read. "We here
and now announce our in
tention to refuse induction.
"If the President wants to
kill more people in Vietnam,
he can do his own shooting. We
aren't going."
The demonstrators pickeing
in support of Vlasits and
Tiger, carried sings reading:
"Rich Man's War Poor
Man's Fight," "Don't Lose
Your Life to Save LBJ's
Face," and so on.
They marched in circular
file on the four corners of the
intersection of Cabarrus and
Dawson Streets, under the
watchful eye of about 10
Raleigh policemen and State
Bureau of Investigation agent.
There were no incidents or ar
rests. "One of the reasons we
deckled to be non-violent today
- is that this is the first time this
has happened in North
Carolina," said Lyn Wells of
Greensboro, and 18-year-old
campus worker for the
Southern Student Organizing
Committee (SSOC).
"If we tried to block the in-
ductees, this could really turn
Recruiting
Negroes
Is Topic
A panel with student, ad
ministration and athletic
d e partment representatives
will discuss recruitment of
Negro students tonight at a.
meeting of the UNC chapter of
the American Association of
University Professors.
Charles Morrow, dean of the
College of Arts and Science
basketball coach Dean Smith,
law student Robert Gruber,
'and undergraduates Phil Clay.
David Robinson, and Jed Dietz
will be on the panel for the
discussion, scheduled for 7:30
P-i. .in the faculty lounge
of
Morehead Building.
Morrow will outline the
University's present recruit
ment policy. Smith will discuss
recruiting in the athletic
department.
Gruber will explain the Stu
dent Bar Association's Talent
Search Program.
Phil Clay, director of the
Carolina Talent Search, which
was denied funds by Student
Legislature three weeks ago,
will talk about his recruiting
proposal.
Robinson, co-chairman of the
Scholarship Information
Center, will discuss available
scholarships and Student Body
Vice President Jed Dietz will
explain Student Government's
position on the Clay pro-'
posal.
Questions and answers will
follow the talks, and then the
AAUP chapter may consider
making a policy statement on
Negro recruitment.
' !
N
,vv
' 1 . .
Chase Saunders (second from left) mans a
DimeA-Pack table in Y Court. Dime-A-Pack
contributions for cigarettes for American
Demonstrators
people off," she said.
"Also, we really don't have
enough troops to stop the draft.
Even in January (when Vlasits
and Tieger refuse induction), if
we have a sit-in, it will have to
be just a token," Miss Wells
said. "We just don't have
enough people."
One batch of about 40 in
ductees from the Fayetteville
area arrived at the center, but
were not blocked by the
demonstrators.
Picketing, which began at
7:10 and ended at 9 a.m. will
eiiioF Cjonnpete
For
Two Carolina seniors fly to
New Orleans this morning for
the final competition for
Marshall Grants, British
sponsored scholarships which
offer two years of post
graduate study in Europe.
The students are Parker
Hudson, who is doublema
joring in history and
economics, and David D.
McFadden, a history major
and president of Phi Beta Kap
pa national scholastic frater
nity. Twenty-four Marshall grants
are awarded each year four
from each of five national
regions and four chosen at
large. Hudson and McFadden
will compete via interviews
with other leading un
dergraduate scholars from the
southern region; for the
grants. .
Though the final decision ac
tually rests with the British
Ambassador in Washington,
D.C., the choices are virtually a
- confirmed by the regional
directors.
Hudson, 20-year old senior
from Atlanta, is writing for
honors in economics. Since he
is graduating in three years in
stead of four, he has not com
pleted the five-semester re
quirement for Phi Beta Kappa,
but his overall 3.92 quality
point average makes him a
candidate at the close of the
fall semester.
Hudson is governor of Mor
rison Res idence College and is
a member of the Chancellor's
Advisory Committee on
Residence Colleges. He is also
a candidate for Fulbright,
Danforth and Wilson grants,
and is a member of the Society
of Janus, the Order of the
Grail and the 1967 Toronto Ex
change. McFadden, who is writing
for honors in history, leads the
senior class with an overall
3.96 quality point average. He
is president of both Phi Beta
Kappa and Phi Alpha Theta,
the history honorary.
He is a member of the
Residence College Com
mission, and like Hudson, was
a delegate to the Amherst
Conference on Residence
Colleges last fall in Amherst,
Mass. He yas governor of King
V
r?ERATtON
(
A A
Schoi
Dime-A-Pack On This
resume Friday morning, after
which the protestors plan to
march to the state Selective
Service headquarters and
present three petitions a
faculty support petition, a "We
Won't' Go" petition signed by
draft-eligible college students,
and a "Resister Sister" peti
tion signed by women.
There is also a teach-in
scheduled on the UNC campus
for Thursday afternoon and
evening, Vlasits said. Ar
rangements for a hall are incomplete.
taps
College last year, and serves
as a house adviser in James
Collee now.
He is in both the Society of
Janus and the Order of the Old
Well, and is presently the
University Director of Educa
tional and Cultural Affairs, a
cabinet post in student govern
ment. McFadden, who was a
member of the Toronto Ex
change in 1966, sings with the
Bayside Singers, a popular
folk-singing trio patterned
after Peter, Paul and Mary.
He is also a candidate for a
Rhodes Fellowship.
By PAMELA HAWKINS
of Thm Daily Tar Hl Staff
William Allen Bennett -Butch
for short had a dream
come true this fall when he
made the Carolina freshman
basketball team.
But he never got a chance to
play with that team.
Butch decided when he was
11 that one day he would wear
a Carolina uniform. He loved
Carolina, as all young boys
pick a college to love.
Some young boys want to
grow up to be doctors or
lawyers, but Butch wanted to
grow up to wear that blue
A
77n
13
Exp. College
Sluted WeduesddY
Representatives from each
class in the Experimental
College will meet Wednesday
night at 8 in Roland Parker
I.
Buck Goldstein, director of
the college, said the purpose of
the meeting will be to evaluate
the performance of the Ex
perimental College this
semester and to discuss the
possibility of the publication of
a journal. V !
The class representatives
will divide up into small
discussion groups once the
1
J
IP :
v
DTH StaS Photo by MIKE McCOWAN
Week
soldiers overseas win be collected all this week
in the Y Building and at other points on campus.
f t . i
I ' - . .- - A :
V- x
- y
r-
Demonstrator Carries Placard In
... the President can do his own
uniform.
His father Williams was a
high school coach in South"
Boston, Va. where Butch grew
up. Butch tried all the sports,
but basketball was the one that
stuck. At the end of his
sophomore year at South
Boston's Halifax High, he gave
up football and turned all of his
energy to playing basketball.
His 6'3", 185 - pound build set
him up as a rough competitor
on the courts.
But Butch began having
trouble in his junior year. Not
with basketball. . .but with his
health. He tired easily and had
meeting gets underway, Golds
tein said, in an effort to
"reduce the problem to in
dividuals." Each of the group sessions
will probably be recorded. The
purpose of this, according to
Goldstein, is to allow for better .
notes to use in evaluating fne
college.
The evaluation of this
semester's college will be used
in setting up the program for
next semester.
Goldstein said that, although
the registration for next
semester's courses will not
begin until the third week of
the semester, he already has
expressions of interest from
some people in the com
munity. He hopes that the college will
then include high school
students, graduate students,
community citizens and retired
professors. He wants to make
"a major assault on Chapel
Hill and make this a . com
munity project."
The Wednesday night
meeting will only be open to
Experimental College
enrollees.
Di Phi
On Women
"The Role and Status of
Women in Society" will
be the topic of a debate
sponsored by- the Dialectic
Phlanthropic Societies tonight
at7p.m in the Di-Phi Senate,
third floor New West.
Carol Smith, Martha Rainey
and Susan Riggsbee will speak
from the woman's viewpoint
and the senators of Di-Phi will
enpak from the man's view
point.
All interested persons are in
vited to attend.
a hard time getting through
practice sessions.
He went to some doctors" in
South Boston and on their
recommendation, he came to
Dr. James Bryan at Memorial
Hospital here.
The doctors never told Butch
why he , got tired, but they
didn't have to. .
Butch had leukemia and
he knew it
He wasn't the type of guy
who would talk about it,
though. His father said he
never mentioned it to him, but
he told his girlfriend once.
The leukemia was typed
"terminal," which would be
controlled to a degree by
medication. The doctor told
Butch's father that his son
should be allowed to live a
normal nfe.
And with the guts of a guy
who loved life but realized that
he could not have it for long,
he did.
He lived in a limelight
through high school, not
because of his illness but
because of his sports ability.
He made conference all-star
teams and received
scholarship offers from several
small colleges.
But he still had a dream to
realize at Carolina.
Butch, 18, got a letter one
day last soring from Dean
Smith asking him to come try
out for the freshman team. His
UNC Junior Killed
In Durham Accident
A UNC junior was killed
in an automobile accident Sun
day in Durham when his -car
skidded on a wet highway and
overturned.
Richard Sperry Koehne Jr.,
20, of Lawrence, N.Y., was
killed at 9:40 a.m. when his car
went out of control on the
Chapel Hill Blvd. at the Old
Chapel Hill Road bypass.
He died en route to the
hospital.
A UNC coed, Miss Janet L.
Sachazeski, sophomore from
Charlotte, was a passenger in
the northbound car. She was
admitted to the Duke Universi
ty Hospital and was transfer
red to the University
Infirmary Monday where she
was in satisfactory condition
late Monday.
No other vehicle was in
volved in the accident.
An attendant at Elliott's Fill
ing Station near the scene of
the accident said there was a
light drizzle Sunday morning
Raleigh Protest
shooting'
And so, even knowing the
nature of his illness, he saw.
the door open to his dream.
He reported to Carolina for
tryouts under freshman Coach
Bill Guthridge this fall, along
with 80 other boys.
And he was scared. . .scared
that the coaches would find out
about his disease. He asked the
Memorial Hospital doctors not
to tell anyone about the
leukemia. He wanted to be
treated the same as any other
freshman candidate.
Coach Guthridge was told,
though. The doctors had
assured the coach that playing
basketball would not affect the
boy's condition.
And so Butch, his condition,
unknown to to the other
players, ran the wind sprints, '
worked out, dribbled, shot and
passed.
When the cutting was over,
Butch made it.
Not only had he made it, but
he was seventh man on the
roster.
The opening game was get
ting nearer, and Butch worked
harder.
"He never mentioned his Il
lness to me," said Coach
Guthridge. "It was important
to Butch to make the team on
merit, cot on sympathy.
. "He gave it all he had every
minute he was on the court,"
Guthridge said.
"He never
had more
complained. He
but the roads were very slip
pery."
Koehne, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard S. Koehne, was an in
ternational studies major.
He lived in the University
Heights Apts.
'--""""-'
Draft Topic
Of Speak-Out
"Gen. tiershey and the
n i ... i . i i .
open forum at 11 ajn. today
in Y-Court. The "speak-out
is tne nrsi in a weeaiy series
sponsored by the ITXC debate
tMm
Open forums" will offer
students an opportunity to
voice opinions on current and
provocative issues.
"The Black Man in
America" wiU be discussed
on Dec. 12.