L U:'C Library trials Dept. '0 Carolina 14 Ohio State 3 Of wLL J U Inn OOPS! The names of two Phi Ma Sorority pledges were omit ted from the list In yester day's DTXI. They are Evelyn Gail Patrick, Raleigh and Lin da Ann Jenkins, Pollocksville. Sorry girls! - 4m no- iU CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA ailgGlar wrr ..aw r ir t V Vi 9 From The Associated Press Monroe Attorney Neiv YDC President Robert Huffman, a personable, cigar - smoking Monroe at torney, took over as president of the North Carolina Young Democrats Saturday, pledging to heal any party splits. "But I don't believe there is this split they talk about except in the minds of a few," Huffman said. "After all, we are a party of factions." Huffman was elected by acclamation after thw withdrawal of A. J. Stephenson Jr., a Lillington insurance agent and the more conservative of the two candidates. "The Democrats won today, just the Democrats no pre fixes," Huffman told convention delegates. "I will work fiercely for the party." County delegations caucused Friday night and Stephenson admitted, "It became apparent we wouldn't win." Before calling for the election of Huffman by acclamation, Stephenson again charged that 20 clubs committed to him were deprived of voting rights by the convention credentials com mittee. A committee spokesman said only five of the 20 tried to get credentials. "I have withdrawn and this decision was not easily made," Stephenson said slowly. "Needless to say, I'm disappointed." U. S. Plans World's Largest Plane WASHINGTON The Defense Department probably will set in motion next week the development of the World's big gest transport plane an aircraft that eventually could bring drastic changes in U. S. troop disposition overseas. After months of studies, the Pentagon is expected to award a contract for development and later production of the C5A, a monster jet - powered plane which could carry up to 600 sol diers or tanks and other heavy military gear more than 6,000 miles at about 550 miles per hour. Thf C5A will outstrin anvthine now in being. - - r y o w Its ability to carry a load of up to 250,000 pounds compares with Russia's huge Antonov transport which is reported to, have a cargo capacity of about 100,000 pounds. The biggest U.S. transport currently is the C141 Starlifter jet which can carry 154 troops or 90,000 pounds of cargo. Herald Tribune Breaks N. Y. Strike NEW YORK The New York Herald Tribune bolted the city's Newspaper Publishers Association yesterday the 10th day of a strike shutdown and prepared to return to publica tion Monday morning. Both sides said the development would not affect the dead locked negotiations between the New York Times and the AFL CIO New York Newspaper Guild. The other affected newspapers withheld action. The Guild's strike of the Times Sept. 16 stilled the presses of seven of New York's eight major dailies, idled 17,000 em ployes and stopped circulation of 4.4 million daily and 6 million Sunday papers. Only the New York Post, an afternoon tabloid not a mem ber of the Publishers Association of New York City, remained on newsstands. In a letter of resignation from the Association, announcing the Herald Tribune's plan to resume publishing with the Mon day morning edition, Walter N. Thayer, the newspaper's presi dent, said: "Economic and other considerations make it impossible for us to continue inside the association." Saying he had no idea what effect the Herald Tribune's action might have on the stalemate, Special Mediator Theodore W. Kheel pointed out "issues are still unresolved and have to be resolved." Solid-Fuel Rocket Scores Success HOMESTEAD, Fla. The World's largest known solid fuel rocket motor scored a spectacular success on its first test firing yesterday, shooting a towering pillar of white-hot flame more than 1,000 feet into the sky. The success was a major milestone in a space agency pro gram to determine whether large solid-propellant rockets can be effectively used as boosters for giant space payloads. The rocket, 80 feet tall and 22 feet in diameter, was strapped down firmly in a 160-foot deep pit, its 20-foot exhaust nozzle pointed skyward. . . The nose-down position enabled the rocket to vent its Game upward, eliminating the need for costly ground equipment that would have been destroyed if the rocket were in a nose-up Atprecisely 11 a.m. (EST), after a perfect two-hour count down a radio signal was sent to an ignition system and the huge motor with its 840 tons of rubber-like fuel flashed to life. For 140 seconds, the tower of flame spewed upward as the motor generated thrust of more than 3,000,000 pounds and sent a great thunderclap rolling across the swamps of the nearby Everglades. A huge mushroom-shaped cloud of black smoke rose from the flame and hovered for several minutes over the site. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration an nounced later that the firing was completely successful. The rocket, a test vehicle, as yet has no name. mi WORLD NEWS DD1CCC i rAv.v..v.v.v.v.v.v-x-:w:o:-:-:-:-:v i mm .ar Heels Cool-The ' , " X J' ohio STATE'S John Fill stops Max Chapman while All America Mike Kelley (53) comes up to help. Chapman was the game's leading rusher, gaining 127 yards on 13 carries including a 48 yard touchdown run in the closing minute of yesterday's game in Columbus. The mighty Tar Heels simply would not be defeated even though odds- Moody's Last Dictum Ralph Moody has issued the latest dictum in a barrage of new rulings concerning the State's public schools: Beatle haircuts must go. The "hair-razing" rule gives local boards of education the power to eliminate either shag gy - headed students or their hair, depending on the stu dent's acceptance of the mandate. New Course Puts Speed In Reading How wen do you read? About this time each year, many UNC students discover that they are going to be faced with a ghastly amount of reading and a ghostly amount of time. To help students improve their reading and studying skills, the University reading program offers a 30-hour class during each semester. According to the Reading Program staff, this is the way the course is set up: Since the program is set up on an individualized basis, class hours are schedule so that a student may register for any combination of class hours during the week. A minimum of three hours per week for ten weeks is sug gested for most students. However, in cases where class schedules will not per mit a student to spend this much time each week, other arrangements can be made. Because of their heavy aca demic load, some students at tend only two hours per week. Others attend as many as four, five or six sessions per week. Regular classes may be scheduled between the hours of 8 a.m. and 4 p.m., Mon The South's Largest V V In the past week the deputy attorney general has taken the stand for private enterprise, ruling that "pink soda pop" cannot be sold at athletic events if the sales are in com petition with local business. The advisory opinion, issued Friday, also gives boards the power to ban Bermuda shorts and bluejeans as school attire. Early last week Moody ruled days, Wednesdays and Fri days; between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thurs days; and between 9 a.m. and noon Saturdays. No course credit is given for the program, and schedules are set up independent of reg ular University registration. In a survey taken of 123 stu dents who participated in the program one semester, the av erage reading rate was 225 w.p.m. and comprehension was 86.1 per cent before the course. After taking the 30 lessons, the group's average reading rate had more than doubled 464 w.p.m. while co prehension had fallen less than three per cent 83.4. In a re-test given five months later, the student were reading 447 w.p.m., and com prehension had climbed back to 85.3 per cent a net gain of 222 words per minute with a drop in comprehension of only .8 per cent. Students interested in partic ipating in the program this semester may register at 106 Peabody. A $2 supply fee, to cover the cost of materials, is payable at time of registration. mx mm. College Newspaper Sunday, September 26, f 5 - v:s makers put their money on the Buckeyes with as many as 20 points. The final outcomewas a proud one for Coach Jim Hickey's team Carolina 14, Ohio State 3. AP Wirephoto, courtesy of the Raleigh News and Observer. that the Southern Association of Schools and Colleges can't conduct any more "business" in the State without a permit. None of the other 11 states in the association's domain have any' such ruling. Deputy Atty. Gen. Moody re leased his opinion in response to a letter from the principal of the Joe P. Moore School in Lumberton, Haywood Davis. He had asked Moody if a principal has the authority to require his students to "dress properly," referring to several male students "who definite ly need haircuts." Moody's reply stated: "We think that the board of edu cation can pass a regulation that male students must have a proper haircut which con forms with the normal and ac cepted practices and fashion in such matters. "They can pass a regulation excluding wearing long hair like the Beatles, duck-tail hair cuts and Indian-head hair cuts." On public schools, Moody said, a school "is not a bistro, a joint or a pad where beat niks gather, drink espresso coffee and substitute odd be havior and bizzare dress in lieu of brains." Moody based his opinion several years ago by former assistant attorney general Claude Love, who said: "If pupils should persist in coming to school dressed in such extreme fashions as to become a menace to the school, the board of education would have the authority to adopt reasonable rules and regulations to prohibit such practice." Moody's statement did not make it clear whether he con siders Beatle haircuts a "men ace," or whether they should be classified as such before a school board can pass a ruling. 1965 Valley SOU - , , 'V.- ::::S::?S:w UNC Ohio S. ft: First Downs - 14 19 xj Rushing . 5 8 Passing ... 9 10 :: Penalty 0 1 ; Rushes 35 47 $ Net Gain (Rushing) 181 66 j-j: Passing & Attempted 16 35 Completed . . 11 19 g Intercepted 1 2 jij: Net Gain (Passing) 127 178 ?j: Yards Gained flMrtl 308 244 S: Score by Quarters: :j:j UNC 7 0 0 7 14 j Ohio State 0 3 0 0 3 & ft: Michigan Ohio All By ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer Amazing! Terrific! I can't believe it. Wonderful! Great! But what it really was, was guts. It was football at its best. And the Tar Heels were better than the best. The sports writers were sur prised at Michigan's narrow victory last week. Bump El liot, Michigan coach, said it was the heat. Some said the Wolverines just let up. But now they know. The sports writers were shocked yesterday. Ohio State, ranked by some as high as third and a 13 point favorite over Carolina, fell before a fired-up Tar Heel Team, 14-3. The Blue and White proved they were a football team last week. This week they proved they are more than that. Carolina is a good football team. Before this season ends they may prove to be a great team. They have made more than their share of .mistakes in their first two games. How ever, they have proved two very important points. They aren't quitters. They came back last week after be ing down 21 points to give Michigan a good scare. They 01 Thunder By PAT STITH DTH Sports Editor COLUMBUS, Ohio If North Carolina teams con tinue to play football for 1,000 years, still they may say that yesterday was their finest hour. The Tar Heels defeated Ohio State 14-3 before a near capacity crowd of 80,182 who stood quietly in stunned disbelief after Max Chapman's 48-yard touch down coup de grace with a minute to go in the game. They call Mammoth Ohio Stadium the Valley of Thunder, where Ohioans, who take their football like other people take life and death, come to see their Buck eyes devour people. Yesterday they were not only dissapointed, they were shocked by these Tar Heels, who were billed as warm-up material for upcoming Big Ten battles. The mood of the game was set in the first four minutes. Ohio State had first crack at the ball from their own 23 yard line. First it tried to go right and was thrown for a two yard loss. Then the Buck- eyes attempted to sweep left and lost two more. Again they went right and again they gave up ground. North Carolina took their short 31 yard punt on the Ohio State 49 yard line and Danny Talbott scored five plays lat er on a five yard sweep of his left end. Max Chapman, who ran tteough and around Ohio State all afternoon, started that drive with a 13 yard gain on North Carolina's first play. A play later he went eight yards to the Ohio State 28 and then on the next play, swept around UNC's right side on a 23 yard run to the five. F?:: The Way might have won, nobody ac tually said it, but looking back, especially after yesterday, you know its true. And the second thing the Tar Heels proved is that they come through in the clutch. Numerous times yesterday Ohio State started a drive only to meet a continually stiffening defense. The closer the Buckeyes would move to paydirt, the harder the going would get. They managed a field goal in the second quart er, and that was all the get ting they got. The offe:ise . . . well it was an offense. They ran, passed and did jat everything. They moved the ball, and they scored. That is the only way to describe it. To name the outstanding players would require the names of every man that play ed. All we can say is, thanks. Many fans came to school skeptical over the coming sea son. The squad was the brunt of jokes. But they held them selves together an displayed their confidence. They have now given their fans that con fidence. This story is an example of confidence. It was over before the game was. Almost; Otis Redding What ever happened to Otis Redding? Otis didnt say. in fact he never showed np for Friday night's concert in Me morial Hall. founded February 23. 189$ Max was the leading rusher of the game, carrying 13 times for 127 yards and one touchdown. He almost doubled Ohio State's entire rushing effort (66 yards on 47 plays). Except for Tabott's touch down, Max's brilliant up-the-middle 48 yard backbreaker with 56 seconds left on the clock and Ohio State's 26-yard field goal early in the second period, there were no other scores. But there was a whale of a battle. It featured the Buckeyes famed three - yards - and - a cloud - of - dust attack against a North Carolina defense that put up a fight for every foot. The Tar Heels cured Ohio State from going outside on the first series of downs and finally forced the Buckeyes to give up their ground attack altogether. A jubilant Ronnie Kaplan, North Carolina's defensive quarterback, said after the game that UNC's victory had hinged on just one factor: De sire. "We wanted them, we want ed them much more than they wanted us," he said. "How were we able to stop them," he said, "we just stuck it in there. When somebody tried to come right up the middle, like they did, you don't stop them with finesse you just stick it at 'em. You don't let them move you, you move them." And that's exactly what North Carolina did all after noon. Old time Ohio sports writ ers, who time and again have watched Coach Woody Hayes' machine-like offense grind op ponents into so many pulver ized pieces, could not say enough for the Tar Heels. At his post-game interview Hayes referred to North Car- (Coctisoed ea Page 4) Consolidated U. Queen Will Be Selected Applicants for the Miss Con solidated University Day con test should submit their names to the Consoidated University Student Council in GM before Oct. 1. Judging by elimination will be as follows: Any UNC or ganization may enter the con test by submitting the name of the contestant along with a $1 entry fee and a photograph. Entries must be submitted to Faryl Sims, CUSC Chair man by noon Oct. 1. The com mittee will then review these entries and fial judging will be held for the 20 finalists Oct. 4 in the Morehead Planetari um. CU Day coincides with the UNC-N. C. State game this year, Oct. 9. Carolina will send two girls to Raleigh af ter the judging here. The winner, to be announced during the half-time of the game, will represent the Con solidated University, which now consists of UNC, State, . UNG-G and UXC-C.

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