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U"3 Library Csriala Pspt. .bunny drjccsai , N. C. rJJisaj. .cnny and a liuie Per Partly cIoady a d warm Thursday. Volume 75, Number 74 1 no (Dill 11 jT Tf CD' By LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff GREENSBORO It was like reliving history here Tuesday night as North Carolina got guarenteed satisfaction from a favorite formula to roast Kentucky in an 84-77 pressure cooker. The Tar Heels had to come back in each half from five down early in the first and three down midway of the sec ond to blister the nation's fourth ranked team and atone for an 82-76 loss to Vanderbilt Saturday night. But, said Coach Dean Smith afterward, "We can't pat our selves on the back too much. Princeton is coming Saturday night and probably undefeat ed." This evening was meant TTTT cm House Passes Military Pay Boost WASIHNGTON UPI-Oongress strode toward adjournament Tuesday by giving final approval to pay raises for servicemen and federal workers and starting on its way a bill to pay for the war on poverty. But lawmakers, hopeful of getting away by the weekend, faced the possibility of a Senate fight by liberals opposed to provisions in a Social Security increase bill that cracks down on welfare payments. ' But working toward and hoping for quick adjournment, the House gave final approval tq a 5.6 per cent military pay boost. The Senate, meantime, voted final okay of a bill mcreasing the salary of white collar government workers by 4.5 per cent and postal workers' salaries by a 6 per cent hike. Percy Escapes VC Mortar Attach SAIGON Communist guerrillas, striking anew after a Viet Cong mortar attack narrowly missed U. S. Sen. Charles Percy and his wife, ambushed a government pacification team near Saigon Tuesday, killing 12 of its 35 members. A Saigon government spokesman said the South Vietnamese team apparently was not armed when the Viet Cong attacked while it walked along a road from Thu Due to Binh Chunh village, about eight miles from Saigon. Sen. Percy, a cautious critic of the Vietnam war and a darkhorse Republican presidential prospect, went ahead with plans to tour Vietnamese war zones despite his narrow escape Tuesday. Although a mortar shell exploded within 15 feet of him, Percy emerged with only a few scratches and bruises on his arms and logs. W-S Police Case May Be Pursued WINSTON-SALEM Negro leaders indicated Tuesday they ! may take the case of a white police officer freed in the death of ; a Negro to the U. S. Justice Department. Negro city alderman Carl Russell said Tuesday he had heard reports that the Justice Department may be asked to enter the Case of Officer W. E. Owens, freed of a manslaughter charge Monday in the death of James EHer. He said Negroes had predicted the decision by the Forsyth County grand jury, which Monday found no cause to indict Owens for EUer's death. Stokely To Be Tried For Riots ATLANTA-nBlack Power militant Stokely Carmichael will be tried next spring on a riot charge in connection with the Sum merhul disorders of 1966, Fulton Sol Gen. Lewis Slaton said Tuesday. Carmichael, who returned to the United States Monday after a five-month tour that included stops in Cuba and Hanoi, will be tried in Fulton Superior Court next March or April, Slaton said. The Georgia law prohibiting riot is a misdemeanor with a maximum penalty of a year in jail. Gov. Lester Maddox plans to i ask the legislature to increase the penalty by raising the crime to ; a felony. ' NATO Sets 'Flexible' Policy BRUSSELS The United States and its allies agreed Tuesday ! on a new "flexible" NATO strategy, the first departure since 1956 from the strategy of "massive nuclear retaliation" advocated by the late John Foster Du'jles. The ministers of all member nations except France also adopted for the first time in NATO history a 'five-year goals plan and agreed to establish a small NATO task force fleet in the Atlantic. Arthur Hockaday, NATO assistant secretary general for defense planning, said the new "flexible" stategy marked a step away from ihe more rigid strategy of the late Secretary of State Dulles. Hockaday said the new strategy did not mean overrigid dependence on nonnuclear weapons. "It involves a blanced and effective mixture of conventional, tactical nuclear and strategic nuclear weapons so that a potential aggressor remains uncertain exactly what NATO's response would be to an attack," Hockaday said. ITI M TNOv E epp9 for Kentucky, a team that Coach Adolph Rupp has billed "one of my best ever." That endosement seemed worthy in the early going when the Wildcats bolted to an 8-3 lead. Then the Tar Heels be gan penetrating the Kentucky defense with easy baskets by Rusty Clark, Larry Miller and Charlie Scott. A 15-point scoring spurt, made possible by sharp, hit the - man - underneath - the - -basket passes, lifted the Tar Heels from one point down to seven points up at 39-32. The Wildcats rallied in the final three minutes and two seconds of the first half to cut that lead to two points. Caro lina's slender halftime margin of 43-41 was possible only when Clark got his 15th point of the El;r Daily (Ear Ijrrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International St 0 o f CHAPEL Repeat Wilde first period on a tap just be- 53-57, Carolina, and 62-59, Ken fore the buzzer. tucky. That Carolina had the lead At 8:07 a Clark layup gave at halftime gave no reason for the settled Tar Heels the lead any cf the 8,743 enthusiasts to lay money on the line for the Heels. There was still a long way to go. North Carolina, showing its displeasure with this week's number seven national ranking. led by as much as five (43-44) in the second half before Ken tucky started a comeback that resulted in a 60-57 lead at 10:33. The reason is unknown,, and it would be considered strange even if it was, but baron Adolph halted his charges' progress twice in their come back attempt with two time outs. He had the whistle blown at Symposium Lists Fourth Speaker By STEVE KNOWLTON of The "Daily Tar Heel Staff A noted lecturer at the University of California at Berkeley and expert o n Chinese relations has joined the list of speakers for the 1968 Carolina Symposium. Dr. Franz Schurmann, direc tor of the department of . Chinese Studies at Berkeley and author of "Idealogy and Organization in Communist China,'' will speak Tuesday night April 2, 1968, Symposium chairman -Taylor; Branch paid Tuesday. .. Schurmann has been active in the Vietnam issue and was a strong proponant of the student free speech movement at Berkeley in 1964, Branch said. Shurmann's latest work in "The China Reader," published in three volumns in May Recruitment Appropriation Receives OK By WAYNE HURDER Of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A bill to appropriate $640 to the Carolina Talent Search for the recruitment of Negro students passed out of the Stud ent Legislature's finance com mittee favorably Tuesday. The bill will go before legislature Thursday night. A similar bill introduced in the 43rd Assembly o f legislature asking $820 was defeated 18 to 16 on Nov. 14. The new bill is completely re-worded. The wording of the old bill was the subject of much of the debate over the bill, primarily over whether the wording made the bill (Continued on Pace 6) Tuesday was one of those warm, sunny days and a couple when you put your books aside, took a guitar sang. 75 Years of Editorial Freedom HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, again at 63-62. They took it for good with 7:21 remaining on a Miller layup and stretched it to 12 in a period just short of six minutes. Miller, who finished with 19 points, .second best to Clark's 23 and a game high 13 re bounds, was the key performer ' in the surge. He scored seven points while Clark and Dick Grubar, in the midst of a fine second half, put in six each. Kentucky got another look at Carolina's famed "four corn er's offense" and Lexington born Gerald Tuttle again when the spread reached nine points. 1967, is considered an authoritive work in the field, Branch said. Schurmann has also publish ed several tracts on the Viet namese question largely op posing the war and was a visiting professor at Columbia University last year. . The addition of Schurmann brings to ; four the list of speakers announced to date to ; speak on various topics on the board heading of "Red China and the West" ' William P. Bundy, assistant'" secretary of state of East Asian and Pacific Affairs and, ' according to Branch, "the man who, along, with Secretary of State Dean Rusk, is the most responsbile for American policy on both Vietnam and China." Alexander Eckstein, a member of the National Com mittee on Chinese Relations, and author of "The Moscow Peking Axis." Edgar Snow, who wrote the now-classic "Red Star Over China," a study of the (Chinese " war wrhen the Communists came to power. Snow, Branch said, "is the only Westerner who talked with Mao- Tse-tung before he rose t o pro minance." Branch also announced that 20 student "shadows" are needed to accompany all the speakers during their stay in Chapel Hill. Each of these shadows will stay in close association with a particular speaker and will have the "invaluable op portunity to discuss with these noted men their field," Branch said. No formal interviews will be conducted for these positions, but interested students should contact Symposium Co ordinator Hal Rainey at 968 3206 or Parker Hudson, at 933-4273. ? . U .j-';f - -v'L' yy t V ' i i It Was One Of Those Days WEDNESDAY. DECEMBER 13, 1967 ,"! Hi"3 6 0 Ahead 79-70 with 3:10 to play, Smith went to the same game-delaying tactics that helped stick the Wildcats 64-55 i last year when Kentucky was ' fourth ranked and North Caro ; lica was going nowhere but up. v.v-'-- ' For nearly a full minute j Tuttle moved the ball in, out and through the bewildered WSdcats. Then he broke for 1 the Ducket, and fed Clark un 1 derneath for an easy layup I and an 11 point cushion. ' ! Grubar made it 12 at 2:01, f and following a Mike Casey ! basket, Tuttle keyed another stall worth another minute of playing time. Kentucky got dissappointing play from its two super sophs, 6-4 Casey and 6-8 Dan Issel. The former, who carried a team-high scoring average of 16 points, got 10 less and a whole lot of defense from Scott, a fair-to-meddling first year man also. Issel, who was supposed to run circles around the 6-10 Clark, finished with 13 points after making nine in the first half. He had a 15.8 average. His rebounding statistics suffered even more, as he claimed 12 against a 17.2 per game yield. The Kentucky scoring leader was Thad Jaracz, who scored 13 of his 19 in the first period. .Presidential or- By TERRY GINGRAS of Trie Daily Tar Heel Staff Choice 68, a national col legiate Presidential primary involving nearly 2,500 colleges has not been able to recruit UNC despite three weeks of ef fort. Bob Harris, executive direc tor of Choice 68, said Tuesday that his office tried to contact Student Body President Bob Travis in a written request for participation three weeks ago. "In a foltow-up of those col leges that didn't respond," said Harris, "we called at least fif teen times from Dec. 4-6 and weren't able to reach Travis. I did talk to Jed Dietz once." He made the comments in a telephone interview from his office in New York. (Tuesday afternoon, Bruce Jolly, chairman of GM's Cur rent Affairs Committee, step ped in and said his group would direct UNC's participa tion in the primary.) CHOICE 68 is a national pro gram sponsored by a grant ifrom Time Magazine. Harris said the project is completely independent of any control by the Magazine, "The primary will give students a chance to voice their opinions on the can -OTH Staff Photo by GENE WANG of girls and sat on the grass and if K F ft I- ! 1 , v.. didates and the issues," said Harris. "We feel that this program win have an effect on the Presidential elections and will influence the candidates to spend more time on college campuses," said Harris. The primary, according to Harris, will involve at least two million students. 'AH colleges participating in the program win vote on a standardized ballot which they would first approve. Choice 68 would supply all essential funds, ballots and posters. The colleges would supply . the ballot boxes and the man power. The results of the primary will be tabulated by Choice 68 and the results made available to news media. Harris said negotiations were being made with a national television vy 7 n rrn WRC Reroort Reco: sing By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff No closing hours for senior coeds next year moved into the realm of the possible Tuesday night. v- A report made to the Women's Residence Council by the Senior Hours Committee advocated the installation of a magnetic key-card system to maintain dorm security while releasing seniors from closing hours. This electric system was selected above a regular key system and a night watchmen system by the committee as the most economically feasible and safe. The main drawback to a regular key system, in which each girl is given a key to the dormitory, is that the keys can be duplicated. The cost of hiring night watchmen for every dormitory to let girls in probably would be high enough to prevent its adoption. The cost of a magnetic key card system would be only slightly higher than im plementing a regular key system, and it would be prac tically impossible to duplicate the cards. Under this system, each dormitory would have an "electric eye" lock installed. CI 4 I if ! - Kentucky's Argento shoots over Primary network to announce the results. Student Body President Bob Travis said Tuesday, "No one has talked to me about that program.". He said he would be glad to Journalism Society Women in the School of Journalism have organized a pre-petitioning society of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority. The society, now called a matrix society, is awaiting ac ceptance by the national sorority as a petitioning group. If it is accepted, the group will become a legal chapter of Theta Sigma Phi in two years. The Matrix- Society will operate as the UNC chapter until that time, and its Hoots Alternative and girls would be issued IBM type cards that, when inserted into a slot by the door, would open the lock. According to estimates by Card Key System, Inc., of Burbank, California, the initial cost of installation would be $25 per dormitory. The cost of the cards would be 50 cents per it was recommended to WRC that only seniors with parental permission or girls 21 be allowed to use fee system, Bettie Groate, chairman of the Senior Hours Committee, said feat there would be no economic reason to limit it to seniors, since the cost of in stallation will remain the same regardless of how many persons use it. The cost of installation could be financed through the girls Don 9i Ride It Home James Wadsworth, director of housing, Tuesday requested that whoever borrowed his bicycle from the front steps of Bynsxa Hall, return it before Christmas vacation. "It's the second time in two nights that it was borrowed, only last night it wasn't returned," Wadsworth said. The bicycle is a red English racer with a large basket ca front. Wadsworth's phone number is 933-13S3. ID Deadline Tie List day far exchirjl- the c!i ID card f:r trw cres is Frifay. CM cards asJ social se-csrity rszswers sicJ be breast ta Swala IU3 betweea S and 1 azd S L hare phst-rajis takrs. Folded February C3. 1S3 Bunting o 71 have UNC participate , i f enough students showed in terest but added, "I'd have to get Student Legislature to ap prove before I'd ask the elec tion board to conduct the primary." For Women Formed members will automatically become members of Thet Sigma Phi then. At the organizational meeting officers were chosen. They are Lynn Harvell, presi dent; Jane Howard, vice presi dent; Pat Hughes, secretary; Camille Bass, treasurer; and Dianne Cochran, keeper of archives. Mrs. Dot Ridings is fee group's professional adviser and Dr. John Adams is faculty adviser. .ends themselves, Miss Groate said. The girls who would be using the system could agree to tax themselves the installation cost for their dorm, or fee campus wide cost of installation could be tabulated and shared by all of fee girls. Penalties for abuses of a magnetic key-card system were also in fee committee's recommendations. Lending a key-card to a girl not authorized to use it pro bably would result in the "privilege" being taken away from fee lender, and would prevent fee borrower from ever receiving it. There also would be a penalty for not reporting fee loss of a card immediately, wife a Use accompanying the loss of fee card. h..r Mr
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 13, 1967, edition 1
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