U::c Library w w - -L i- i Box 670 9 - , hp t TTjx! zjA v" ; S.C. TcJ.cfj Tickets for reit Wednesday , basketball game with SosCi Cart is a may be picked cp at Camkhae! Anditorian startis at S:C3 a.m. today. 0 4 The Student Partv;Advisorv Board will meet at 4:20-this afternoon in Iloland Parker III 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 106 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CABOA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1963 Founded February 23. 1S33 - Poll To 11 n - Poli JLZ o cyp jfff j)1T I) A "II Anal (ROM ...... Win By WAYNE JIURDER.V of The Dally Tar Heel Staffs Student Legislature Ap propriated $92 , at a special session Tuesday night or, a poll to analyse student political behavior. , The poll , a survey pf 'al titudes of 535 randomly selected students, is '. .'bejng designed by ' Noel Dunivant. - director of the Student' Govern- participation of the average Joe College," according to Dunivant. If he can get the use of a computer he hopes to con-elate this data : with seven other statistics. These are general interest in politics, type of residence of. respondent, year in school, how ment Leadership Development' thev , rate themselves..' as Commission; '): 7 v VoVrals J or ,conservatiyes,;-sexi quaiuy poinc average, ana ? ? ' Half the m)aiS by mail and halfbyOfe - - , Dunivant said; VAV , 11 is the firstbneoP u?;?Xt nature conducted MX&W"; ' . send v 15 The poll is the first n4 of such a m Student Gover'nme n YnrS aeiegai.es 10 me w rnrHint tn nnnivanf ..Va ' ,'dent Association; S o u t h e r n asiirz to should "be a great help for ' whoever is elected tlje;vnejct student body president,'!1. ";Jie - said. ' V, ,V- One section may reveal who : will be the next student,' body'' president, Dunivant said.- In it students are select from a list of potential candidates who ; they think -; should be the next president. ' ; Dunivant will mail out the questionnaires Friday : a n d begin interviews Monday.- ; lie hopes to have 75 per centv ot the results compiled within 10 days. "The poll is going to even tually mean a more effective Student Government and a bet ter campus life for students," according to Dunivant. Regional Conference and $819.29 to the International Stu dent Center. A special resolution to enable , Zeta Beta Tau fraternity to . borrow money from- Student -Government under an old law , was defeated 11-10. ; ; The old law required residence halls, fraternities, and sororities ' to keep their money with the .Student Activities Fund in order to bor row money to buy television sets. The defeated resolution would have allowed the ZBT's, who don't keep their funds with the Student Activities Fund Of fice, to borrow the money anyway. 0 -rr A 0-1. i i A t4 w r v- ri3; . 4 J J J . prn Ela3 Fho&9 by STS7S ADASTa? Clark Moves In For Two As Terrapins Look On From Below four immediate the survey, he There are purposes ' to said. One, "to ascertain the at titudes, orientation, and beliefs toward certain national and campus issues and leaders." Two, to measure students -awareness of issues - and leaders; Three, to determine the 'direction, degree, and intensity of these attitudes, orientations, . and beliefs, and; Four, "measure the level of W TTK Closed ITS jTt U Overnights CAUo:Yq$&' tady By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Dally Tar Heel Staff The Women's Residence Council Tuesday night ii 1 mmmm Wcrld News BRIEFS By United Press International Marine Planes Hit Palace At Hue liberalized freshmen women's rules by abolishing closed study and allowing unlimited overnights for all freshmen. The unanimous vote to abolish closed study came after almost a full semester of . study on the issue. Freshmen overnights, had a maximum of eight for the first semester and twelve for the second. Both changes will be sent to the Dean of Women's Office for approval for next fall. A referendum on closed study sent to all undergraduate women two weeks ago showed that of 1842 girls who respond ed, 1344 had lived under closed study and over 1000 of these said closed study did them lit tle or no good. SAIGON U.S. Marienes Wednesday caught Communist holdouts in Hue napping, bombed and napalmed their en trenchments around the Imperial Palace, dropped rein forcements into The Citadel by helicopter and made steady ground progress against a suicidal Viet Cong force. It appeared the 22-day battle for Hue was nearing an end. But the U.S. Marine commander, Lt. Gen. Robert E. Champman Jr. wanted enforced quiet hours, a warned the Viet Cong were being resupplied and could hold out proposal the WRC will take up for several more days. next week. At last report the Marines were driving steadily toward the Tne group southeast corner of the battle-scarred Citadel, and were within 150 yards of the south wall. 194 women said closed study was of significant benefit. A total of 1337 girls polled also voted to in clude a reference to a student's academic record in the preamble to the WRC con stitution and to have the Freshman Co-ordinator b e responsible for developing a program of emphasis on study habits. Nancy McCharen, chairman of the Freshman Rules Com mittee which did the survey, explained the reason for" required freshman signouts after 8 p.m. had been "to lo cate a girl in case of emer gency and to help assess her plans for the evening." She said neither purpose was now being served by the ruling. A motion to have freshmen restricted to the campus for the first four weeks of the fall semester was defeated. A Panhellenic rule that freshmen who plan to participate in sorority rush may not enter a sorority house for a full year prior to rush was voted by the WRC to re main in the rule book as now stated. WRC also passed a moti . that those residence halls not involved with the women University Trustee's visit to the campus Feb. 26 (Granville East and Alderman) and the sororities will have regular closing hours. Other dorms will have 10:45 p.m. closing hours for required house meetings to allow individual girls to meet the trustees. Based , on a constitutional change passed by WRC, all dorm and sorority v i c e -residents will become members of the residence ad ministration. This change, too, is subject to approval by the Dean of Women's office. Bv LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Rusty Clark, playing like the seven-footer no one will admit he is. shattered the school rebounding record and his Dersonal scoring hieh in an 83-60 basketball waltz ost Maryland Wednesday night The 6-in (ahem) traibr from Fayettevflle collared 40 strav shots and scored 27 roints in onlv 32 minutes of clay. He deputed to a standing ova tion that lasted a full , two minutes with 4:43 remaining. BiHv Cunningham, the All American Kangaroo Kid who lumped into stardom with the Philadelphia 76ers, held the previous high of 23 against the same Maryland Terps in 1984. Hitting on 11 of 29 field goal attempts and five of eight free throws, Clark top ped his previous scoring best of 24 made last season against Ohio State. Except for Clark's heroics, the capacity crowd at Car michael Auditorium (8,800) had little to be enthused about. The easy but dull victory, Carolina's 19th straight and 21 in 22 games, came on a very bad shooting night. UNC, 11-0 in the conference, could make only 32 of 85 field goals for a poor 37.2 per cent. It was much more efficient at the charity stripe where 19 of 27 were sunk. Maryland, 6-14 overall and 3-9 in the Atlantic Coast Con ference, had trouble scoring from anywhere. Paced by Pete Johnson's 19 points, the Terps were 26 of 72 from the floor and eight for 17 from the line. .. Tar Heel Coach Dean Smith cited his ball club's "excel lent first'',hairtv'and'the'''all-' around play of Clark as the keys to the win. "We were happy to . see Rusty get the rebounding re cord," Smith said, "even though we hated to see Billy's record broken. Maybe this will help Rusty get the per sonal honors he deserves." Carolina held an 18 point halftime advantage behind Clark's 17 points and 16 rebounds. the Tar Heels an 8-5 lead with two minutes and 16 seconds gone. It held up, although Maryland came within one point three times before Caro lina took a 10 point margin midway through the period. A 10-0 scoring stretch that included four points each from Clark and Grubar, put the game on ice, 45-23 with 2:31 remaining in the first half. . Early in the second period the Terrapins threatened a minor comeback when they -scored six straight points on baskets by Pete Johnson, Rick Drescher and Will Hetzel. But the Tar Heels rocketed - away again to a 22 point ad vantage, 62-40, with 13:3S to play by outgunnning - Mary land 10-1. " The biggest lead of the night was 26 points, 81-55, on a bas ket by Joe Brown with 2:30 to play. Smith, who went to his bench frequently throughout, plaj-ed everyone. Larry MUler, held to five of 13 field goal attempts, trailed Clark's 27 points with 15. The only other Tar Heel in double -figures was sophomore back court reserve Eddie Fcgler who h3d 11, his career high. Grubar scored all of bis seven points in the first half and Charlie t Scott, -sadded by fouls and on the bench for 18 of the 40 minutes, was held to a season low, three baskets. The'cTerrapins had gotten . 23 points from Hetzel earlier ; in the' ; year .when Carolina worked - hard "for a 73-67 tri umph but , hie 6-6 sophomore ' scored:' only ,12- points last night. . AVv. . i - He fouled' out with 7:12 to play -just about the time Clark snared V his V record-breaking 28th rtbound V Picketing Pluunei For Clark SiBQeck By BILL AMLONG of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Anti-war activists will picket U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark when he comes to speak to the UNC law school next Thursday. The planned picketing which will protests the Depart ment of Justice's prosecution c, of draft resistors was an nounced at a Tuesday night meetig of some 65 students, faculty members and Chapel Hill townspeople seeking big ger and better ways ofoppos ing the Vietnam War and the draft. by The score was tied times before a three play by Dick Grubar Other forms of protest plan ned for this spring were an nounced by George Vlasits, a former UNC sociology grad student from New Jersey who refused induction Tuesday in Raleigh. They include: two Guerilla Theater, or im point promptu anti-war skits which gave will be staged without warning D rug Policy Gets Support e 9 Goes Before Toni ght drug's effects." Bill Miller, chairman of the Men's Honor Court, raised ob jections to the policy, the area ot Jetliner Hijacked, Floivn To Cuba TAMPA, Fla A Chicago-to-Maimi jetliner with 109 persons aboard was hijacked in flight Wednesday by a gunwielding passenger who grabbed a stewardess as hostage and forced the pilot to fly him to Havana. The Federal Avaition Agency in Miami said the plane, Delta Airlines flight 842, set down 'at Havana airport at 4:29 p.m. EST. U.S. government officials immediately asked the Swiss Embassy to arrange for return of the passengers and plane. The U.S no longer maintains diplomatic relations with the Communist Fiedel Castro regime and directs all such communications through the Swiss. . The jetliner left Chicago at 11:25 a.m. and was due to arrive in Miami at 4:30 p.m. after stops in Tampa and West Palm Beach. The hijacking occurred about 3:37 p.m. 25 miles west of West Palm Beach, according to F. J. Schawemmle, a company spokesman in Atlanta, where the line is headquartered. Bomb Explodes At Soviet Embassy JEiirin Meei:W.S.: Orders By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The proposed drug policy, which will be presented to Stu- Jn.t t i j. a : l- i. ucm legislature louigui, specifically m received tne support of Dean jurisdiction, of Men James Cansler and "The policy should limit its University Psychiatrist Clif- jurisdiction to this campus," ford Reifler today. v said Miller. "It should include bpeakmg to an open meeting oniy the residence units of the Umversity, the illicit use ana This is cooperation ficials and the benefit dividual" just a case of between state of the University to of the in- in the centers of campus fully costumed cast. Draft Resistance: Youths throughout the nation are being encouraged to mail back their draft cards, en masse, April 3. Two similar protests in the past five months have resulted in aobut 2,000 cards being returned to the Selective Service System, Vlasits said. " ' International" Student Strike on April 26, on which day students throughout the world are supposed to boycott their, classes as a protest against the war. A War Crimes Tribunal, to be held at Duke University. One of the defendants will be Duke President Douglas M. Knight, who will be accused of complicity in Vietnam war crimes because of that university's "owning 3,300 shares of stock in Dow Chemical Co., the namufac turers of napalm. The persons were also told about the already active draft counseling service on the UNC campus. Dr. Forrest Young, a professor and one of the 13 counselors, said he had counseled five persons this past month as many as he worked with during all of last semester, before publicity began. " A petition was also passed around to gain support for anti war pediatrician Dr. Benjamin Spock, who now faces federal charges advising young men to resist the draft- Four other persons are accused with him. By RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The University has, ac cording to Director of Person nel Fred Haskell, complied with most of the recom mendations for fair employ ment set forth by the Office of Federal Contract Compliance, and compliance with others is "on schedule." The recommendations were made by the federal office after investigation of a charge submitted to them by Dr. B.T. Elliott, Jr., a Negro pediatrics resident at N.C. Memorial Hospital. ... The complaint, filed in a let ter to the Labor Department dated Sept. 17, 1967, accused the University of "persistent department, the laundry department end segregation by occupation (The complaint charged that certain functions were being performed by whites while ' 'egroes were assigned to others), the University furnish all employees with information concerning employment pro of the Judicial Committee. Cansler described the policy as "the most equitable we- can devise given the reality of state laws. v Cansler said the policy was the best possible considering the situation in the state and the views of the university ad ministration. Cansler reaffirmed his earlier view that the approval of the NSA resolution on drugs would make no difference to the drug policy. "The resolution doesn't alter the law one whit," said Cansler. "It just expresses visions of the 1965 Civil Rights certain people's views on the WASHINGTON A bomb damaged the Soviet Embassy Wednesday while Ambassador Anatoly F. Dobrynin was ap parently asleep on the third floor. In rapid succession, the Soviet News Agency Tass charged U.S. officials with "connivance," President Johnson order a vigorous investigation of the "senseless act," and the Kremlin charged the Embassy lacked adequate U.S. protection. There were no injuries in the predawn explosion in midtown Washington less than five blocks from the White House. But win dows on the embassy and adjacent buildings were shattered and electrical departments a ground-floor embassy office left in smoky disarray. Recommendations made by The bomb, which exploded about 5:45 a.m. EST, apparently John Hodgson of the Contract was placed on a window sill of the ground-level office. Chunks of ComPHance office included: stone were blown from the sill and the iron grillwork covering the TT desefreSatlon j window was torn and twisted. g KCOvenng tne jjmv rest rooms and snack bars m the laundry over discrimination" in hiring Negroes. The complaint men tioned the laundry, building and grounds, telephone and Act and the University increase the staff of the personnel office so that it can handle job ap plic at ions "more ex peditiously." Haskell said that Negroes are being "actively recruited' for jobs on the campus police force and that the recom mendations concerning rest rooms, the laundry office have been carried out and reported to Hodgson and his office. The federal recom mendations will be followed up next month when Hodgson wiu confer with University of ficials, Haskell said, "to note the extent to which we have followed up on theses recommendations." drug question. Dr. Reifler of the University Health Service, said hp had transfer of drugs and involve any persons representing the University." Miller also urged that drug cases be brought before the student courts which "could adequately handle problems arising from drug use." Dr. Reifler raised objections submitting drug cases to stu dent courts on the grounds that the issues in drug cases were loo complex. Dr. Reifler would not accept the argument that student courts could handle case in volving alcohol and therefore should be allowed to handle drug cases. "Society has certain shared traditions regarding alcohol, 1 'A been involved in drafting the said Dr. Reifler, "not so with drugs." Dr. Reifler was also against limiting the jurisdiction of the drug policy. Under the present system,' policy and approved it because it "involves an educative ex perience for people involved in drug use." Dr. Reifler said the re quirement for medical con sultation was necessary to in sure that drug use would not be carried on to the "limits of the body." "It is important to have such a policy," said Dr. Reifler, "to give the individual a guideline within the system, so he will know the penalties and conse quences for his conduct." "The individual will also be insured of a knowledge of the 1 said Dr. Reifler. "that's like saying you can't do anything else off campus, but you can use drugs." Miller questioned the legality of the policy, "if the University is in some way hiding drug abuses it should stop." Dean Cansler, defended the policy of turning a first of fender over to medical, authorities on the grounds that it was "beneficient justice." X Judicial Committee's Last Drug Hearing . . . drug policy proposal goes to SL tonight 1. rr

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