Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 7, 1968, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page 4 Grail Mural Field .Narrowed To 20 By ASHLEY THRIFT DTII Sports Writer Grail-Mural Basketball is still the big news in intramural play. The field for the huge tournament has been trimmed down to just 20 teams and the competition is now assured of being really stiff. Thursday's games offered some surprises. The Independent Nads, last year's champ, were eliminated by a fine Aycock Aasvogel team by the close score of 26 to 24, Jack Hooks led the winners with his double figure scoring of 10 points. Mac McGee had a game high of 12 points in the 1 oosing effort. The Sig Ep Black team won by a single point over the DU Turkeys. In the close game, 23 to 22, neither ,nv was able to get a lead and the outcome was not settled until the final minutes. Fred Hutchinson was the point leader for the winners with 8. The DU squad featured balanced scoring in the low scoring contest with ScottWallace leading the team with 8. Phi Delta Theta Blue turned on the point machine and crushed the Aycock Boot tho gift hauling problem! Choose books from the Intimata! Have 'em pre pared for mailing at no extra charge and ship on shead! it'i'i"ii!i'iiiiirMMWM,'w"wMa,,,rwwwPMywM It'saRING-A-DING t J21ST LAUGH AFFAIR! (Ml xdr1 L. I V-.. iimM DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Name In tennis lore 6. Baden, for one 0. Plant of the celery family 10. Whetstone 12. Seaweed 13. Kind of account 14. Describing: some blouses 17. Scoreboard duo 18. The way out 19. Bakery product 20. R.R. stop 23. Certain player ' 24. Rumanian coin 25. Multi-eyed giant 27. Spiritual center of Islam 28. at hand 29. Companion of large 30. Opposite of stag 31. Road surface 32. Dietary substance 34. Preposition 35. Shriveled 39. Discharged 41. Part of Maine's nickname 42. Arthurian lady 43. Rio 45. Kind of mask 46. Counts in canasta DOWN 1. Poet's dire evil 2. Goad 3. Armada conqueror 4. Depart 5. Latin conjunction 6. Word to the unwanted 7. Luau food 8. Give notice of 9. Put on the finishing touch 11. Graduate of Harrow's rival 13. Iota 15. Line of revolution 16. Small part in a play '1 1 ' ( Sin? irS Tr Ir) 1 f REALLY LIKE V"? I I F 1 SNOlOOMTHE I BREAD CRUMBS J Tp2 P FEED JC IP .DECORATING EH?) X ICOUL&TAKEA J ON THE y.- ,1 V SAMPLE 'OMErS 5 CINTUcT) - Aardwolves 47 to 2L Frank Kelly had 16 first half points and finished with 19 to pace the winners. Harold Pollard chipped in 14. Murray Pool continurally set the plays up and controlled the tempo of the contest Bill Adams got 9 points in a loosing effort. In one of the runaways of the night, Ehringhaus A Blue blasted the Pi Kap Phi White team 33 to 7. John Wilson led the winning effort with his all around and game high 9 points. John Rudisill and Jesse Sigmon contributed 8 and 7 points respectively. Judiciary (continued from page 1) circumstances, to initiate action. "We must come clean with what's going on in the Judiciary and face up to the assumptions behind our positions. The Student Body desires to have more than empty phrases and emotional rhetoric. It is entitled to an understanding of the impact and consequences of each proposed course of action. "To fulfill this obligation, we must get on with the hard work of developing a whole new concept of the Judiciary. "All those interested are urged to attend the meeting this Tuesday." iiimiri r rwwnnn M1i ftUCN VtT fMtTRiftUTlON CO. INC. IMS WW Oiwwy PndufcHlW 1:474:086:298:50 WED.-SAT. 19. Music 20. Capital of the state 21. Caring for J0 M RTS T HO R EJR III" p sL Yeaterday'a Answer 36. Outer peel 37. Parts of the earth 38. River in Scotland 40. Narrow inlet 22. Cul ture medium 24. Exist 2& Biblical city 27. Fable 29. Slugger's weapon 32. Splicing . tool 33. Flower part 35. Takes the plunge 43. Initials of an American labor leader 44. Music note Technicolor? 1 "1CL01SEr"3l IRp) ; iqy mjFBQsR i ft ' "tg map s jex: :t! ' siaIr oWvOlKicIe' ' e me Nphi b S A W L. A g ., IclRlElAlKQSla 1a1n1d1vHau P Mos1eUwee w HIT i llilll" KV IS lb . y17 25 2b n 25- yv 7y? is y n h H 1 IN 1 rrfe Morg By BOBBY NOWELL DTH Staff Writer State Attorney General-elect Robert Morgan said Thursday night he agrees with UNC Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson that laws concerning drug usage, particularly marijuana, carry too severe penalties. Speaking before a small audience in Carroll Hall, Morgan declared, "I agree with the Chancellor that penalties for the users of certain drugs are too severe. For example, a user convicted of a second drug offense automatically goes to prison for five years. "However, I definitely think using narcotics illegally ought to be punishable by law, and I don't think that the present laws are too stringent for suppliers of the unlawful drugs," he added. Morgan said that unlawful drug consumption in North Carolina "Is much more prevalent than most people think." He noted that, among his plans for the Attorney General's office, he is to provide for a full-time narcotics squad, which the state currently does not have. "Right now the State Department of Investigation (SBI) is too overworked to have a group concentrate on the narcotics problem," he said. "But in order to combat the rising amount of usage, I hope we will be able to develop a squad which can detect the suppliers as its main task." Drugs was one of several subjects handled by the State Senator from Harnett County, eel H f , v - , (continued from page 3) days, because the younger coach has been mighty uppity lately. Three straight times Smith's Tar Heels have defeated the Baron's best, and two years ago UNC won at Lexingtbn, where Kentucky once won 1 2 straight games. ' -,'; That kind of foolishness is enough to start one of Kentucky's ' famous family quarrels which sometime result in running gun battles, except this time it would be between two nasal-twanged flatlanders from the plains instead "of the nasal-voiced mountain breed. Kentuckiaris have been out for Carolina's hide ever since the Tar Heels' 84-77 win in Greensboro last year. From Ashland to Paducah they have been sharpening their knives and stuffing muskets, readying to give Carolina a Daniel Boone-style welcome. The opposing players need no more incentive than the fact that UNC is second-ranked nationally, Kentucky third. But to Kentucky natives it means more than that. The prestige and honor of the whole state is on the line, because Kentuckians claim their basketball is the best in the country, better than Indiana and certainly better than what those city slickers have in New York and Washington. Another loss to Carolina would sorely hurt their pride, and when hillbillies are personally affronted, they shoot before they talk. And Rupp, who many claim is too old and surely can't outrun buckshot, may go out with the two-handed set shot. RIALTO, Durham "A brilliantly conceived 'Cosmic sdventure." Cue DAILY SHOWINGS (Non-Continuous) 1:00-4:00 -8:30 M0N.-FRM. Matinees . . $1 JO Evenings ': $1.75 SAT. -SUN. Matinees $1.75 Evenings ... $2X3 THE DAILY Speaks On um Presents Views in a brisk question-answer period following his address to the campus Young Democratic Club. He remarked that he does not believe the present penalties for resisting the draft to be too severe. "I don't think that it is fair for one man's son to be drafted and serve two years in Vietnam, when another boy can refuse induction and serve a lesser time in jail," he said. Morgan, who was once one of the main supporters of the now-defunct Speaker Ban Law, also disclosed that he is not in favor of re-enacting the law in more specific terminology. "I think the old law served its purpose to college administrators," he said. He pointed out that while the -N.C. Attorney General stands ready to respond to local authorities in requesting help for handling student unrest, "it has no specific duties" in counteracting riots unless summoned. "However, I believe it will be my responsibility to visit college campuses around the state and to know what young people think," he added. Enumerating his plans as Attorney General, Morgan said he has devised a program to "bring the fundamental principles of criminal law into the public high schools," as a method of counteracting high teenage crime. Also he called for more ' attention to training of law-enforcement officers, for Prints VGM mst-Ts STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION """ IL,III,"LI-I,J" ' 3r SUPER PANAV1SI0N. METROC0L0R mm TAR HEEL Drugs, Riots more jail reform and for more involvement by qualified young people in government. A conservative, Morgan commented that the Supreme Court "has made law enforcement more difficult, Today's ANY INTERNATIONAL STUDENT who will be unable to go home or get away during the Christmas Holidays and who would be interested in spending part of that time with an American family should call the International Student Center, 933-5097, or should stop by. YW-YMCA International Bazaar needs folk groups to perform during the Bazaar on Saturday and Sunday. Anyone interested should stop by the Y office or call 933-5097. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SEMINAR at 10 a.m., Room 228, School of Public Health. Thomas Bott will speak on 'The Occurence of Clostridium Botulinum Type E in the Great Lakes.' FU MAGGA CRUD will hold a short brother-pledge confrontation today at "the House." at 7:30 a.m. Any persons interested in going through Fu Mag's informal rush may contact Rebel Good, Rush Chairman. SUMMER JOB SEMINAR to be held Monday, 4 p.m., 105 Gardner. Open to any UNC student needing a summer job in 1969. The program is sponsored by the Placement Service and the YMCA. LAMPSHADES met in side parlor of Nurses Dorm at 7:30 Tuesday night. Very important. ROBERT JOHNSON will deliver the sermon fof the Morning Worship at Wesley Foundation tomorrow. LATIN AMERICAN COLLOQUIUM invites you to attend 'The . Church in a PLAYER G MADE ATT PCT MADE ATT PQT REB PF . TP AVE CharlieScott 2 24 42 ' 57.1 vf 4 1"6?; 87& ,19 '.,gr 4 ' ' " 62 31.0 Bill Bunting 2 ,13 24 54.2' 2U5T 45-2 6 , 31 15.5 DickGrubar 2 12 ; : 21 57.1&nk 0 1A ,,0,0 -5. 0 7 ,24 12.0 Rusty Clark 2 8 ; 23 7 34:8' ':l : BnL8J lMp v.li; ,6 : ' 24 12.0 Joe Brown 2 8 " 15 53.3; Ju "2 m3l2L mM lOX'l 'iS . '9.0 LeeDedmon 2 5 14 35.7' ' '6 ' -W j70 , 12 v 8 - 16 8.Q Eddie Fogler 2 2 6 . 33.3 , 2 .2 1Q0.0' , 4 ' 0 6 3.0 Gerald Tuttle 2 2 4 50.0 70 7 0 0.0 0 ,1 4 2.6 DaveChadwick 2 1 1 100.0 ' 2 l'xZ: 66.7 3 0 4 2.0 Jim Delany 2 1 3 33.3 0 f0' 0.0 0 1 2 1.0 Dale Gipple 2 0 0 0.0 2 2 100.0 0 0 2 1.0 Richard Tuttle .2 1 2 50.0 0 0 0.0 1 0 2 1.0 Ricky Webb 2 0 2 0.0: 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0.0 DonEggleston 2 0 1 0.0 0 1 0.0 0 1 0 0.0 UNC TEAM REBOUNDS (Included in UNC Totals) 12 UNC TOTALS 2 77 158 48.7 41 54 75.9 98 34 195 97.5 OPP TOTALS 2 62 141 44.0 27 42 64.3 90 42 151 75.5 OPP TEAM REBOUNDS (Included in OPP Totals) . - 8 :w:-::::ra - llllll JWIilHIIMIUMWWMIWII Ill 't We'll Wrap It Pack It ...andMaaitToo! ONLY 14 MAILING DAYS LEFT- 3 1 I w &32 Place Your Order Now For Mailing . . . And We'll Be Happy to Mail It for You on the Exact Day You Specify. but not impossible. "I think we have neglected the area of prevention of crime. Our greater concentration or apprehension of law-breakers has made enforcement more difficult" Campus Calendar Revolutionary Society, Rev. Blase Bonpane, 8 p.m., Newman Club, Sunday. AMERICAN FIELD SERVICE win hold a meeting Monday at 7 p.m. at 205 Dey Hall. Slides of Germany will be UAWMF (Continued from page 1) Mann says that of the three servicemen who originally contacted the UAWMF, two have been court-mart ialled, and the other is under investigation by the OLD. (Criminal Investigation Division) in preparation for a possible court-martial. According to Mann, "the reason given for these court-martials is that they as soldiers exercised their right to jnestev . (Continued from page 1) resistance up by' Chapel HiH merchants who fear that sending the students home early would . seriously.; curtail the storeowners', profits from student Christmasshopping. The Techniccian said that "it is not befitting a major university to be hamstrung fh: its efforts at self-betterment by the avaricious efforts of small, external pressure' groups" and suggested that Chapef Hill merchants "should resign themselves to running a 'Shop Early advertising campaign." Se FIELD GOALS s 1 1W 3 . . cordially invites you to sample before you buy! EASTGATE SHOPPING CENTER Store Hours: Monday thru Friday S:M-3 P.M.; Saturday 9:30- 6 P.M.; Sunday 12:C3 Curriculum Revision Discussed By Group The Merzbacher Committee on curriculum reform held an open hearing Thursday afternoon to enable all students to express their views on the subject of course revision. Student Body President Ken Day, in a formal statement to shown. All interested persons are invited to attend. FREE FLICK is "Long Day's Journey Into Night." At 6:30, 9 & 11:30 p.m. in Carroll Han. March freedom of speech by criticizing the war in Vietnam." Mann is among the students who were arrested at Ft. Bragg. Their case is being reviewed with the aid of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). Mann says that the purpose of Saturday's march is to demonstrate the "wide support" UAWMF has gained on the issue of freedom of speech for GI's. Mark-Up The Daily Tar Heel learned Friday that the 40 per cent price mark-up estimated by Dr. C.S. Longsdon was incorrect in the, context in which it was used. 1 , According to Tom Rogers, jajjVo interested student, Logsdon's percentages were jcflmputed. as the ratio of list Tprice minus wholesale cost over list) price. The : : DTH computations were made over wholesale cost. If . Dr. Logsdon had computed his percentages by the DTH method, he would have , , come up . with a merchant's retail markup of FREE THROWS U C J. I of Ohio - 6 P.M. Saturday, December 7, 1963 the committee called for greater flexibility in the curriculum so that individual students could assert those factors which make him an individual in his academic affairs. Day asked the question, "What is the rationale behind the requirements for the General College such as language requisites?" He proposed structuring the courses in such a way that students would gain insight into the three major divisions of the Curriculum at UNC social sciences, natural sciences and humanities, but he left with enough options to pursue his own interests. Questions from others present at the hearing centered on the relevacy of some areas of required courses to the major field of study for students. Talks centered on such subjects as the foreign language requirements and the English requirements for the General college. While it was generally felt that there should be courses required for these areas, the courses should be of a different form than now exists. The Merzbacher Committee will continue its hearings and on occasions will hear experts in several fields of education such as a representative from the State Board of Education. Viewed about 66 per cent or slightly higher. This can be compared with the 95 per cent figure from the Book ex. Dr. Logsdon's figure of 40 per cent average retail markup may be compared with his computation of about 48 per cent markup at the Book-Ex. Bob Manekin, of the Student Stores Committee met with Tom Shetley, head of Student Stores, Friday to discuss the figures. SUPPORT THE DURHAM BOYCOTT The Black Community in Durham needs your help. Don't shop in Durham help make this a black 2nd white Christmas. ItSTr Es? Ford Gortk OT. Etctllot condition. Obtest Istlnj" t&ittry. or BSfitst oGxx. 23172 ifter 6 For S2r. '67 Hrij Ultra. Zrota, ,WTOn ttiff tront r63 Pint FUt voods. Cn Jol ADcsn. Pot salt: 1950 ttfrstouiS Vsnt $175. CiD 923-4 2M. For Sale: i960 Corvair. Engine OK, but needs body work. Any reasonable offer. Call 942-2704. HEAP'em good firewood for sale. For home delivery call 942-2811 or 942-251 8. Wai&dT:'. rtoonsSiIa tike oter low monthly payment on a spinet piano. Can be. asen locally. Write Credit Manager, P. O. Eca. 41 Matthews; N. C. GOOD OPENING FOR ACCOUNTING CLERK lith 5J5b;ht- uxc office Nr; stfte benefits. Please and AJbinapplkratioitoPO Box 481 Chapel Hill, as basis for interview. Salary baseHn trainmg and experience complex bUci3;;J.'S: near Arrx r, . C2I i a
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 7, 1968, edition 1
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