Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 17, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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'eh2 Matador" Drops Hot Tamale as Bulls Richy Zarro (60) and Jerry Cabe (68) Combine r For Goring Fumble. Offices in Graham Memorial JAM State Intern Program Set For Summer The State of North Carolina will again irr 1964 conduct 1 its ; Summer Intern Program in Poli tical Science.The program will last from June 15 through Aug. 21 and will allow twenty college students to work in some fifteen state agencies. In the past, UNC has been well represented in the program. In addition to their work, the interns will have intensive, co ordinated discussion on govern mental and related problems of the state in evening seminars to be held twice each week, and in weekly luncheons. These will be. supervised by a political scientist and will have state of ficials, leaders and political scientists as guests, speakers and resource personnel. All interns will live at one cf the dormitories at North Caro lina State, in order to share their experiences on an informal basis. Rent will be $6 per week without linen. To qualify, an applicant must have completed two years of undergraduate work and be eith er a resident of North Carolina or enrolled in a North Carolina college. Graduate or profession al students are also eligible. Salary will be $75 per week. Application and descriptive materials will be available short ly at the' placement office, stu dent government offices in GM, and from the chairmen of the political Science, History, Eco nomics, Business Administration, Education and Sociology Depart ments, or may be requested from the Governor's office in Raleigh. All applications must be re turned to the Governor's Office by Dec. 15. Applicants will be nctified of their acceptance or rejection by the last of February. Selection is to be made by a committee which includes prom inent political scientists teaching in North Carolina. NIGHT OF MODERN DANCE Graham Memorial will present "A Night of Modern D3n.ce," fea turing three film presentations, Monday night at 7:30 p.m. in the Roland Parker Lounges in GM. The films include "Marceaus Pantomimes" in color; "A Danc er's World," starring Martha Graham and her company and "Lament" with Jose Limon. Foster Fitz-Simons of the Drama Department will give a short lecture between films. A reception will follow. RELIGIOUS GROUP A group of students and faculty will meet tonight at 6 p.m. in up stairs Lenoir Hall lo discuss possibilities of forming a reli gious group interested in devel oping religious insights on a non denominational, non - dogmatic basis. , M Ole! M I U 1 Judge Bounces Carter Case Back To Faculty Council -- .: -By: JIM ?NEAL ' The Anne Royal Carter case has been remanded to the Facul ty Review Board, the Daily Tar Heel learned yesterday. Superior Court Judge Clawson Williams, Sr., of Sanford, said in a telephone interview yesterday that, although it is not the policy of the court to disclose judg ments until they are received by the Clerks of Court, the sub stance of his judgment ordered the Faculty Review Board to re view the case. The text of the judgment was not available from the Clerk of Wake County Superior Court Sat urday. Miss Carter was convicted of a charge of cheating on a make up examination by the Women's Honor Council in 1961. Her ap peal was denied, and she took the case to the Board of Trustees. The Board appointed a special committee to investigate the case, and the committee report Illegitimacy Not Short-Term Affair North Carolina's illegitimate children are conceived by cou ples "going steady or with mar riage plans" in 90 per cent of the cases, a University of North Carolina study showed this week. Dr. Hallowell Pope of the UNC Department of Sociology and An thropology said in a preliminary report of a study of unwed moth ers in the state that "contrary to popular belief, illegitimate births usually do not result from fly-by-night sex affairs." Dr. Pope said the relationships which generated illegitimate children in the state "are stable between the boy and the girl." He said 50 per cent of the 900 Recruiter Here Lieutenant James G. Moore, USCGR, will be here from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. Nov. 21 to ex plain the Coast Guard Officer Candidate Program to interested January graduates. Lieutenant Moore will be pre pared to administer Officer Qua lification tests to qualified ap plicants. The Coast Guard Officer Can didate School, located in York town, Va.. prepares officer can didates, through a four-month course, for positirns of leader ship and responsibility in today's Coast Guard. Upon graduation from the school, students are commissioned With tie rank of Ensign in the United States Coast Guard Reserve. EM ed back to the Board a recom mendation that the "Board of Trustees take no action; that the question . . . should be left where it (had previously) been placed by the Trustees and where it properly belongs with the Chan cellor and faculty at Chapel Hill." It was then that Miss Carter took the case to Wake County Superior Court, where it was heard by Judge Heman Clark. Judge Clark upheld the basis of the Honor System here, but or dered a review of the case by the then Scudent-Faculty Review Board. According to Chancellor Wil liam B. Aycock, Miss Carter's lawyer took the case back to Wake County Superior Court when the Review Board offered a hearing. Judge Williams was then sitting on the Wake County bench. Friday's judgment is the re sult of a hearing held at Williams' unwed mothers interviewed said they were in love with the man involved before they became pregnant. An even higher per centage said they were in love, "thought they were in love or liked him a lot," said Dr. Pope. The study began in 1961 and will continue for another year. It involved white unwed mothers in 26 Piedmont and mountain counties and Negro unwed moth ers in 20 counties in the Pied mont, the eastern tobacco area and the northeastern peanut sec tion. Dr. Pope said his study also indicated: 1. The Negro unwed mother was more likely to remain un married than the white unwed mother. 2. Broken homes are not the only reason why girls "get into trouble." 3. Most unwed mothers remain unmarried and keep their chil dren. 4. The unwed mother and the father are usually of the same age and educational background. 5. Two of five unwed mothers have "gone steady" with the fathers for over six months be fore they became pregnant. 6. Two of every five white un married mothers, said they and the fathers planned marriage be fore pregnancies. 7. The Negro fathers were twice as likely as the white fathers to provide support for the illegitimate child and its mother. CANE CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER Sanford h o m e, ; attended by Chapel Hill attorney John Man ning, representing Miss Carter, and Assistant Attorney General Ralph Moody, representing the University and the Board of Trustees. Four plays for $3.50, is the deal currently being offered Carolina students by the Playmakers. Opening night performances for the four remaining productions of the season are reserved as Stu dent Nights. Season tickets at $3.50 or single tickets at one dollar per play are now on sale at Y-Court and GM. Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey Into Night" opens Tuesday night. Tickets will be on sale until curtain time. If the special price on student tickets finds popular response, advantages for play-going stu dents will be increased next year. Folk Sins On 'Encounter' . "Encounter" will encounter folk music and students addic tion to it Monday night at 8:30 on WUNC-TV (Channel 4), ac cording to Dr. John Clayton of the RTVMP department, modera tor of the show. Dr. Wil.ton Mason,, director of the Folk Music Institute here, will join three students on the panel. Dr. Clayton said the students will sing and play folk music, and then they will discuss it with Dr. Mason. "Encounter" is a weekly panel show which discusses students' "Minds, Manners and Morals." Dr. Clayton said the idea for the show grew out of a class room demonstration planned by a graduate student. He said the graduate student found a girl folksinger, and brought her to the class one day to sing. The girl sang so well and seemed so enthusiastic about folk music that Dr. Clayton de cided to discuss folk music on one of his "Encounter" shows. Two boys are scheduled to ap pear as well, Dr. Clayton said, and one of them may bring along another person. Sfenr i HUFFS, Ken Willard Storms Miami Beach. 2 7-1 6 ; By CURRY KIRKPATRICK George Mira's first pass meant six points here yes terday, and some guys started cancelling holiday resev Uvations south. But Ken Willard, boy catastrophe, wasn't one of them. . With or without shoes, the big guy can roll and yes terday Willard picked up North Carolina and rolled it right past Miami, 27-16, and right back into the national bowl picture. They call Miami the Hurricanes but Willard was the one who stormed Miami's beach in this one. He carried the ball 25 limes, once with no shoes, gained 112 yards, continually got the Tar Heels the big gainer when it counted and scored the clinch ing TD as the final seconds ex pired into history. For all the brilliance of Wil lard, Bob Lacey, Junior Edge UNC Miami First downs 28 .17 Yards rushng 196 185 Yards passing 223 191 No. of passes 30 26 Passes completed . . 19 11 Passes int. by 0 2 No. of punts 4 5 Aver, distance punts 36.3 30.6 Fumbles lost 0 2 Yards penalized 63 94 Miami 7 0 3 616 UNC 0 7 7 1327 Scoring: Miami Spinelli 23 pass from Mira (Cifra kick) UNC Edge 1 run Braine (kick) Miami FG Cifra 32 UNC Tuthill 19 pass from Black (Braine kick) UNC Jackson 21 pass from Edge (kick failed) Miami Bennett 7 pass from Mira (pass failed) UNC Willard 1 run (Braine (kick) Attendance: 28,000 and the rest of UNC's first unit, it was the second team, called on midway the third period to see what it could do, that gave Caro lina a sorely-needed score and the lead for ever and ever. Coming from the half on a 7-7 draw, UNCs first squad could get no further than the Miami 47 despite three six-yard thrusts by Willard and a beautiful shoe tops catch by Lacey. Billy Ed wards had to punt from that point, and the Hurricanes let it roll to their own one where La cey controlled to put them in the hole. Carolina has seen a lot of fine quarterbacks this season, but this Mira is somethin else. Though the Tar Heels did contain him somewhat (11 for 25 and 191 yards), their defensive backfield got a lot of help from the Miami receivers wIk wince every time they have to go after one of their Matador's bullets. But, from his one, Mira play ed "clutch performer," " and this Wi A A 17, 1963 PllffS9 BIOWS Itself Out -rfjffffftti time his catchers decided to help him out. He took the club down the field to the UNC 11 in nine plays, before finally being stall ed. He threw long (23 yards to fullback Pete Banaszak, 47 to end Hoyt Sparks), short (six yards to halfback John Bennett) and everywhere, before, with third and six from the 11, UNC center Chris Hanburger crashed through and hit him from the blind side for one of the biggest plays of the day. For it meant the Hurricanes could only get three (which they did on Don Cifra's 32-yard field goal), not six or seven, and gave the Tar Heels a chance to come back and lead it. The second unit took care of that detail, but it wasn't easy, and Gary Black, who in a football uniform resembles Mira anyway, had to steal some of the thunder of Miami's real George to bring it about. Down 10-7, Black and the rest of his backfield mates scrambled their way to the lead TD with some plays that had to have an indelible impression on the color minded post-season bird dogs. From its own 29, UNC drove for three first downs featured brilliantly by a Black-to-Joe Rob inson 12-yarder over the middle and a scatter run for 11 yards by Ron Tuthill. With the ball at the Miami 46 and a second-and-24 (due to a clip by Clint Eudy on the preceding play), Black call ed a tackle-eligible pass, and co-captain Gene Sigmon took it for a 17-yard gain to the Hurri cane 29. It took two plays for them to score, the first a 10-yard diving catch at the right sideline (first down) by Robinson, the second a play which made even Mira look on in awe. Black faded back from the 19, was hit by three men and look ed like a goner, but he shot-putted the ball 10 yards down field where Ron Tuthill leaped up and got it. Tuthill, too, looked trapped, but he, too, got away and scampered through several other sunshiners and into the end zone. It gave the Heels a 14-10 lead with 3:57 left in the third quarter when Dave Braine kicked good (his 17th straight and a tie for the con ference record). But a four-point lead on a George Mira is far short of enough, and an estimated 28,000 knew it. . . The Hurricanes got the ball once more in the quarter, but I "A X If V 7, ' 'if TOUCHDOWN ! An unidentified spectator finds the excitement too much, executes a spreadeagle cheer despite the close quarters in th Carolina stands. Photos by Jim (Ole! Ole!) Wallace Mira fumbled it away at the UNC 31 when Richy Zarro hit him and end Jerry Cage fell on the ball. They got it again shortly after the final period had started when an . Edge-to-Lacey deep pass was intercepted by Banaszak at the Miami 18. But a Hurricane drive once" more was stopped after moving to the UNC 29 when Mira, on a fourth-and-eight, could get only seven with a sweep right to the 22. Here, UNC took over and march ed to a little more insurance with a 78-yard blitz. First downs were four in number and were handled by Willard and the Edge-to-Lacey dynamite. After Edge's four-yard gain had been nullified by a 15-yard hold American Legion Calls NSA Pink The American Legion National Convention opposed the U. S. National Student Association on the grounds that NSA policies and programs embrace the im portant line of the Communist Party. In a resolution passed by the Legion's national convention at Miami Beach in September, NSA stands against communist speak er bans and against firing teach ers who are members of the Communist Party as examples of "Communist infiltration" were given. The resolution also stated that "adult leaders, speakers and ad visors of the USNSA represent a high degree of left-wing and pro Communist infiltration of this organization." Today9 s Weatlver Hurricane Warnings Down; Moon Over Miami United Press International Service .4 "r 3f ??fc '4 t t f X 1 i J 'to r ii , T ip' -. :: "Uv.-v-' rni.ii.tii ing penalty, UNC found itself with a second-and-25 from its own 44 and decided this nonsense had gone on long enough. This big meal ticket, Lacey, took a look-in pass down the left side lines from Edge and began to play the Big Cat to Miami de fender Tom Coughlin's little mouse. The magnificent end, trapped by Coughlin, doubled back, gave Coughlin a feint and was off to the races for a 35 yard first-down gem to the Mi ami 21. After Eddie Kesler could not gain on a tackle bur.st, Ede again called the pass play, only this tim Lacey went on another pattern, sucked two men short, (Continued on Pace 4 Jim Duerr, NSA national co ordinator, said "NSA is not a voice for any one faction. . . . Opinions expressed are simply those of student leaders elected by student bodies and it is dif ficult to conceive of it being a tool of one set of influences." USNSA is the chief sponsor of a world youth convention which rivals rhe World Youth Festivals held by the communist countries, according to Ducrr. Chairman of the national Amer icanism commission of the le gion, Daniel O'Connor, was re cently asked what the NSA was. He replied he wasn't sure but thought it had something to do with the students who went to Cuba defying the State Depart ment travel ban.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 17, 1963, edition 1
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