Wednesday, April 24, 19C3 THE DAILY TAR HEEL V v estera. Carolina Drops From Carolinas Conference JriaiKD 3i CULLOWHEE (UPI) Western Carolina University pulled out of the Carolinas Conference Tuesday and an nounced plans for an expanded athletic program. The action is effective at the end of the 19669 academic year. Appalachian State University announced similar action in January. Western Carolina and Appalachian were the two largest schools in the conference, whose of f i c i a 1 name is the Carolina Conference. WCU's action le a v e s member teams in the con ference Atlantic Christian, Catawba, Elon, Guilford High Point Lenoir Rhyne Newber ry Pfeiffer and Presbyterian. Atlantic Christian High Point and Pfeiffer do not compete in football. The board 'of trustees, Sigel Edges Campbell To Win N-S Golf Title PINEHURST (UPI) Jay Sigel of Narberth Pa. upset defending champion Bill Campbell of Huntington Va. one up on the 19th hole in the second round of the 68th annual Men's North and South Golf Tournament here Tues day. A former Pennsylvania state champion Sigel played Champbell to a standstill after the regulation 18 and won the extra hole when Campbell three-putted. Campbell has won the tournament four times. Issac Holds NASCAR Point Lead DAYTONA BEACH Fla. (UPI) Bobby Isaac holds a slim lead over stocky Clyde Lynn in the latest driver point standings released Tuesday by the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing. Isaac, of Catawba, N.C. has driven his 1967 Dodge to high finishes in his last two races to push his point total for the yet-young season to 835. But Lynn of Christiansburg, Va., is right behind in the grand national point lineup with 813. Isaac, 31, won a 100 -mile race April 18 at Columbia S.C. and was third in a 250 miler last Sunday at North Wllkesboro, N. C. --Lynn, 32. finished 11th at Columbia ana 10th in the longer race. Richard Petty of Ran delman N.C. who is having an off year after a fantastic racing record last season is in fourth place with 782 points. The top five: 1. Bobby Isaac Catawba N.C. 1967 Dodge 835. 2. Clyde Lynn Chris tiansburg Va. 1067 Mercury 813. 3. David Pearson Spartan burg S.C. 1968 Ford 799. 4. Richard Petty Playmouth 782. 5. Lee Roy Yarbrough Columbia S.C. 1968 Mercury 690. meeting here Tuesday, voted to withdraw from the con ference. Tha board also an nounced that a new director of athletics will be named to succeed Tom Young, who re quested that he be relieved effective June 30. 1968, and assigned to other duties. The board said present con tracts for athletic contests in volving other Carolinas Conference schools would be honored. Other members of the conference were notified of the action Tuesday aftenoon. The trustees also approved an increase of $5 per student per quarter in the student ac tivity fee with the full proceeds of the increase going to the Ahtletic Department for development of an expanded athletic program. They halved the first two holes of the match with bogeys. Sigel took the third with a 15-foot birdie putt. On the 4th hole Sigel called a penalty stroke on himself when the ball moved while he was preparing to hit it. Then the match was all even. Campbell went one up on the fifth with a par. That lead held until the tenth when Campbell three putted to go even. Campbell took the 11th with student participation." j . m . 1 par out again iosi n on The changes m the Western Carolina athletic program were based on recom mendations of the Faculty Athletic Committee. Withdrawal from the con ference was recommended on grounds that an expansion of the sports program was "desirable to allow for greater By JURY BURCH Of The DTII Staff UNC Volunteers for McCarthy are planning a massive student fund raising drive for the Indiana primary, announced the group's Presi dent Charles Moore. The Chapel Hill McCarthy group received a telegram from the Washington head quarters stating that funds for the Indiana primary are desperately needed. The UNC Volunteers have set their fund raising goal at $1107 the number of votes McCarthy received in the Y mock primary. "It is a big goal," Moore said. "It will take 220 students willing to give an average of $5 each." Primaries are expensive, Moore noted. It cost McCarthy and Nixon about $450,000 to finance their Wisconsin cam- pain. "I think we can afford it" Moore said. "Those who can give more are urged to do so." Pr- G. E. Lenski chief fund raiser for the Chapel Hill town group, said that the $50,000 spent on the McCarthy cam paigns in New Hampshire and Wisconsin couldn't have been spent better. "That money changed the political picture" he said. "We are beginning to see the results in American foreign policy." Mike Curtis, a member of the group's steering com mittee, said that the current Gallop and Harris polls show that .McCarthy runs just as strongly against Nixon as Ken nedy does. Curtis pointed out that Ken nedy traveled aroung the coun try charging his massive cam paign bills. "Our candidates father was a small farmer. He couldn't give McCarthy millions to campaign on." Curtis said. "There is nothing wrong with Kennedy using his money to finance his campain" Curtis said, "but there is something wrong if a candidate who runs just as well as Kennedy, and who will probably nut better when he is better known, is unable to campaign because he wasn't lucky enough to have money." "McCarthy depends on con tributions." Curtis said. "He has done and will do a great deal for us." Though the campaign is primarily aimed at student support faculty members are urged to contribute. Con tributions will be accepted at Y Court and Lenoir Hall booth and by uher persons stationed in the graduate departments and in the dorms. "We hope to have the money ready to send to Indiana by Monday" Moore said. The primary is coming up soon and we" can't delay." Smith Pitches South Carolina To 5-1 Victory S . C . l UPI ) Sophomore righthander Jimbo Smith went the distance for South Carolina allowing onlv five hits as the defeated The Tuesday af - Gamecocks Citadel 5-1 ternoon. Smith struck out 10 batters and walked three to collect his third win in four starts. The Gamecocks collected 11 hits, nine from starter Dong Pounder who took his second loss in five decisions. Use The DTH Classifieds a the 12th when he picked up the ball after several bad shots around the green. Sigel took the 13th to go one up but Campbell paired 14 to go even. The remaining holes of one regulation 18 were halved. In other matches: Jerry Courville of South Norfolk, Conn., defeated Dr. John McKey of Orlando Fla. 3-2. Bill Harvey, Greensboro, defeated Al Sams, Macon, Ga. 6-5. The committee also said restrictions of the conference on the number of athletic scholarships for football and basketball place Western Carolina in an unfavorable position. In addition to these two sports WCU also competes in baseball, tennis, track, cross country and golf. The committee said plans are being developed to create teams in swimming soccer, wrestlin and gymnastics. Sports Briefs Gymnasts Compete Faculty Golf Set leatles-EyeView offtheGerMo The Maharishi Mahesh Yogi spiritual adviser to the Beatles and Mia Farrow, architect of Transcendental Meditation, leader of the Spiritual Regeneration Move ment. A frail man who sits cross-legged among cushions high in his own ashram a Himalayan retreat where believers practice meditating and exist on boiled rice and vegetables. The Beatles were there, and Mia, and a score of celebrated and not-so-celebrated believers from around the world. Why? To find out, Post writer Lewis Lapham talked to the Guru's followers in the U. S., then went to India. You can see the Maharishi, his retreat and his message as the Beatles see them in the May 4 issue of The Saturday Evening Post. Get your copy today. On newsstands now. 1 1 NAKED? H See Us & Dress Up At The SUIT OUTLET Durham, Chapel Hill Blvd. DIRECT FACTORY PRICES SAVE UP TO 50 ft m w, mm mm mm A CURTIS MAGAZINE ON SALE NOW It's been almost two decades since the University of North t Carolina Gymnastics team has , entered into competition. But, they'll do that here Thursday night when they meet the Wake Forest team in Woollen Gymnasium at 7 p.m. Up to this time, the UNC gymnastics club has been "real informal" according to a team spokesman, but the team has hopes of becoming a varsity sport in the near future. At this time, it is a club only and is not under supervision of the Athletic Department. The club is coached by Bill Kellen. The Tar Heel squad is led bv Skip Lantz, Bob Adams, Bill Reid, Craig Miller in the men's division. Top Women competitors are G a y 1 e Whitaker and Carol Skinner. . The Sigma v. Phi Epsilon fraternity's foruth annual faculty golf tournament is scheduled for May 8 and 3 at Finley Golf Course. All faculty members from ail departments of the University are eligible to com pete in the tournament for the four trophies which will be presented to first and se cond place winners with low gross and low net scores. "TWO SUPERB PERFORMANCES FROM THE FEM ININE LEADS SANDY DENNIS, ALL SOFT AN! 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