jf0mmm m Star Him Wat I Mississippi Justice Mississippi Justice prevails, ? J? St I" panty raids- lhal Kead about uhat happens when you gat caught with a pair of yellow panties in Mis sissippi in Ernie McCrary's editorial, page two. Soccer Tomorrow Come to Vetur Field tomor row at 3 p.m. to see soccer coach Marvin Allen and his team play in the AC cham pionship. If we win. it will b? coach Allen's 100th victory. rvu o r v Tie South s Largest College Newspaper Vol. 74, No. 41 CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1965 Founded February 23, 1893. ith Bis F AH Q t1 6 nO ins our jLi jrerioo. mm Georgia W W Bulldogs Carolina By ED FREAKLEY DTI I Staff Writer Sad, sad city. The boys in red got togeth er in the fourth quarter and decided to march through Car olina like they hadn't been doing it all afternoon. Football is hell and so it was again for the Tar Heels yes terday, 47-35 hell. General Talbott, Cols. Riggs, just promoted, and Lampman along with the rest of Caro lina's finest poured through the Georgia defense all after noon. Trouble was the so called "lame" Bulldogs poured back and did so two extra times. But the Tar Heels can't blame the bad breaks. It was the Bulldogs who fumbled and all but gave away the after noon. Again yesterday it was a leaky secondary and poor kickoff and punt coverage that resulted in the Tar Heel's fourth loss. Dave Riggs, who replaced Max Chapman at running back, drove time and again through and around the Georgia de fense. Several times he was within an inch of breaking clear. Danny Talbott w as in his us ual top shape. Tom Lampman also looked good. r LIEUTENANT - GOVERNOR Robert VV. Scott will deliver an address at today's dedication ceremonies for Scott Residence College. He will speak on the subject of North Carolina and higher education. The dedication cere monies begin at 3 p.m. Scott College Scott's father, former governor and U. Scott. SDS Presents Speakers On University And State The UNC chapter of Students for a Democratic Society will present a forum on "the free university in a political state" tomorrow night in Carroll Hall. Three half-hour speeches will be given by law school profes sor Michael Katz, Norman Gustaveson of the UNC-YMCA, and Wesley Foundation chap lain Banks Godfrey. Katz will speak on the topic "should the student dissent, Gustaveson will speak on "the student of the future" and God frey will speak on "the gift of the speaker ban law." SDS President Jim McCorkle assured the University admin istration yesterday that the fnrum would not be used to violate the "speaker ban" law "We are not going to concen trate on the speaker ban law itcoif" McCorkle said, "but rather we are interested in an anaivsis of the issues behind aaui;"" - . the law. such as why it is lm portant to have free speech on a camDUS. "SDS is of the opinion that the campus should always be a f debate, a forum for ent and dissent," he said. Questions from the floor are entertained auer ine sf aVe their addresses. ctHonts and faculty are in interf to attend, and those wish- na to continue their discus :r ...;tv, the sneakers may re- sum WIUl k"- "I Trample Defense The 82 points amassed by the two teams provided the near capacity crowd with thrill af ter thrill. If you didn't care about the ball game there were plenty of pretty girls wearing their mums, and little white foot balls you could try to catch on the crisp football afternoon. There was the band too. They were the best they have been all season they did much better than their oppon ents yesterday. Truthfully, Fauntleroy was right in his pick, they did win. Lovely Mary King, sponsor ed by Maverick House, was crowned Homecoming queen at halftime. She also won the Miss Consolidated University title earlier this season. It was a disappointing loss for the Tar Heels. They played hard football, but in the end the inspired Georgia team couldn't be beaten. It is just too bad the Tar Heels don't play all their games the best they can, as they did yesterday. Three opponents are left, Clemson and Frank Howard next week, Notre Dame and then the big one Duke. You can bet the Tar Heels are go ing to be "up" for those, if they aren't it will be 3-7. was named for S. Senator, Kerr tire to the Wesley Foundation after the program. Playmakers In Rehearsal A talented and experienced cast is now in rehearsal for the Playmakers' second pro duction of the year the world premier of "The Sum mer Tree" Nov. 9 through 14 in Playmakers Theater. "The Summer Tree" is set in Raleigh in 1919, and con cerns the loss of innocence of a 16-year-old girl. The young girl, Mare, is played by Kristine Hoover of Virginia Beach, Va. Bill Smith of Raleigh and Anne Peacock of Charlotte play Mare's par ents, and Ben Jones, Chapel Hill, the grandfather. The cast also includes Pat Tone of New York City, Wen dy Farer, Manchester, N. H., Paul Baker, Clintwood, Va., Janes Lenz, Scarsdale, N. Y., Jene Williams, Weissport, Pa., and Sandy Linker, Kannapolis. Reserved seat tickets w ill be available for season ticket holders Monday, Nov. 1, and for the public Thursday, Nov. 4. They may be purchased at the Playmakers' Busines Of fice, 214 Abernethy Hall, and at Ledbetter - Pickard's in downtown Chapel Hill. r TAR HEEL Quarterback Danny Talbott streaks for some of the 102 yards he gained rushing against Georgia. Turning to pursue Talbott is Bulldog Tackle George Pat- 'New Wine' Deals With Morality rc,frir,T rnuf r ..... By PETER COWAN Special to the DTH Editor's Note: The Fall is sue of "New Wine" goes on sale tomorrow. The cost is $.50 per copy. It can be purchased at Y-CHrt, Lenoir Hall, Chase -Cafeteria, Bull's Head Book shop, Kemp's, Carolina Coffee Shop, and Graham Memorial. It can be ordered by mail from Box 509, Chapel Hill. Fol lowing is a review of the magazine. "New Wine," a publication of the Westminister Fellowship of UNC, offers in its Fall 1965 issue several essays relating to the controversial "new mor ality," defined by Bishop J.A.T. Robinson in chapter 1 of his "Christian Morals To day." The discussions and literary critiques which follow the lead article all pertain in some as pect and in varying degrees to Robinson's definition of "new morality." "New Morality" In its simplest terms, Rob inson's thesis states that there is no place in society today for a list of inflexible "do's" and "don't's" by the degree of adherence to which we are judged to be moral or immor al. The action, Robinson says, must not be judged on a stand ard of absolutism, but rather by virtue of the contextual set ting. Political, sociological and MARY KING (left) receives the crown of Homecoming Queen from last year's queen, Zacki Murphy, at halftime of yesterday's game. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. Km Nr. . H r04 xr s psychological factors must be considered in judging action. This, then, is the "new mor ality," which Robinson argues is not antithetical, but compli mentary to the "old morality," the two providing mutual sup port. Rebuttal James Doone, book review editor of "Christianity Today," attempts a rebuttal of Robin son's argument. This critic ei ther has conveniently ignored or has failed to understand the concept he argues against, and in so doing, reacts against a distorted and generalized ver sion of Robinson's premises. In short, the result is a false conclusion of his own point, re inforcing Robinson's primary reason for giving a detailed defination of "new morality." In "The Problem of Legal Censorship," Kenneth Penegar, an assistant professor of law at UNC Law School, discusses the solution toward adherence to the philosophy espoused by Robinson. Penegar suggests an increas ingly important area for re search the psychological ef fects of a weak or strong ethnical system upon the de veloping individual. "Dirty Words" Howard Moody, a pastor in New York's Greenwich Village, attacks the "peddlers of prud ery" who, he says, entertain a misguided view of the con cept of obscenity. f V if ii Atl k r. iv ; ,x -14- i - ,i r: r ton (76). Talbott set a new school total offense mark for a single game with 318 yards. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. His view is that what is ob scene is what debases humans. "Dirty words" are no more ob scene than blasphemous ut terances, he says. Moody crit icizes traditional absolute val ues pertaining to communica tion and aligns himself strong ly with Robinson. John Clayton, an associate professor of Radio, Television and Motion Pictures at UNC, heroically aligns himself with what he presumes to be the minority opposed to "ends just ify means" ethical standards. If the success of his attempts at wit are questionable at times ("Back before the last ice age when kids wore cor duroy knickers . . ."), Dr. Clayton does present an orig inal analogy between his con cept of the archetypal "cor poration man" and James Bond. UNC Law Dean In "Civil Disobedience and the New Morality," Dickson Phillips, Dean of the UNC School of Law, points to the dangers posed by our legal system by groups which place their goals (whether worthy or not) on a foundation which they consider more firm and abiding than the one on which the existing order rests. Phillips defines civil disobedi- ana 1 sororK- -' 1 V V t 1 1 ence as a pitfall prevalent to I 1 I T , . " - . J r' " 1 f 7sA, V PRESTON RIDLEHUBER, (12). Georgia qu.rtrtek, drives for tough yardage in the Bulldog-UNC huber gained 84 yards rushing-DTH Photo by Warren Nve. the new morality, although the latter philosophy is not entire ly devoid of worth. ! Scott McMurray's failure to sustain a logical coherence in his argument and his refusal to define terms central to his thesis make "to Bed! or Not To Bed" a vague and rather unin teresting bit of reading. Misuses of terms (e.g. sexol ogy) and undocumented sociol ogical references only serve to confuse the reader to the ma jor issue at hand. ! Harold G. McCurdy, profes sor of psychology at UNC, Banks Godfrey, associate methodist chaplain at UNC, and Christopher Jencks, a noted sociologist, offer criti ques of three recent books pub lished in 1964. I The words reviewed are: "Sex and the College Girl," Gael Green; "Ethnics in a Christian Context," Paul Leh- mann; and "No New! Morality: Christian Personal and Several Morali las Phymes. Morality y," Doug- Display Winners Chi Psi Fraternity won the best homecoming dis play on campus yesterday. Other awards were: Ehring haus, best men's dorm; Nurses, best women's dorm; Sigma Nu, best fraternity; and Tri-Delt, best; sorority. . ... t j, -m f i Talbott Justice's By GENE RECTOR DTH Asst. Sports Editor A legend was broken. A rec ord was set. And a game was lost yesterday in Kenan Stad ium as the Georgia Bulldogs outscored the Tar Heels 47-35. Dandy Danny Talbott, Tar Heel quarterback deluxe, cracked Charlie "Choo-Choo" Justice's single-game total of fense record against the Bull dogs. The Rocky Mount junior rushed for 102 yards in 11 car ries and passed for 216 yards on 12 completions. The 318 yard total broke the Justice mark of 302 set in 1948 against these same Georgia Bulldogs. The Kenan Stadium goal line had its busiest day in history. The 82-point total easily broke the 69-points scored in a 49-20 Tar Heel victory over Mary land in 1948. Records are nice but they are little consolation. Poor Defense The Tar Heel defense, por ous all season long, was non existant Saturday. The Georg- la show was ntue Deuer. Georgia struck for 436 yards to tal offense including 25 first downs. The Tar Heels had 448 yards and 19 first downs. The Tar Heels set the scor ing pace from the opening gun, driving 74 yards in seven plays. A 64-yard pass play from Talbott to end John Atherton was the big blow. Fullback Tom Lampman had the clincher hitting over left tackle for three yards and a touchdown. Talbott added the point after for a 7-0 lead. The Tar Heels wrote the same story the next time they had the ball. A bad snap from center resulted in an eight yard Georgia punt and the Tar Heels were in business on the Bulldog 38. Running back Dave Riggs gained 11 yards in two carries. Then Lampman struck for his second touchdown hitting off tackle again for 27 yards and the score. Talbott booted the point after and the Tar Heels were ahead 14-0. But the Georgia giant was only sleeping. Georgia quart erback Preston Ridlehuber re turned a Bill Edwards punt 38 yards to the Tar Heel 24. Five plays later massive fullback Ron Jenkins hit for the score with 23 seconds left in the first quarter. Bobby Etter added the point after 14-7 UNC. Set Tempo That three - touchdown first FULLBACK TOM LAMPMAN stirs op the dust in the end tone as he scores one of Carolina's early touchdowns. Despite Lampman's heroics. Georgia came from behind to beat the Heels by two touchdowns. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. Shatters Record quarter was the scoring tempo and both teams worked hard to keep it up. With 9:45 left in the half, Georgia second-unit quarter back Lynn Hughes hit Jenkins for 30 yards and a touchdown. The point after was good, and both teams had 14 points. The last nine minutes of the half were action packed. Tal- UNC 11 232 24 12 2 GA. 17 285 14 11 1 151 436 20.5 50 3 47 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Net Yards Passing 216 Total Offense Gained 448 Punting Average 35.8 Total Yards Pen. 60 Fumbles Lost . 0 Final Score 35 bott capped a 71-yard drive with a scoring toss to end Charlie Carr. The point after was good. Georgia came right back, driving 42 yards in nine plays with Jenkins driving for the fi nal three yards. Etter's place ment was perfect and the score stood 21-21 at the half . Georgia kept up that scoring pace in the second half the Tar Heels could not. Four For Eight The Bulldogs had the ball eight times. Three fumbles and " a Tar Heel interception took care of the first four. Four consecutive touchdowns were the story in the final four. Quarterback Lynn Hughes had three of those touchdowns scoring on runs of one, four, and one yards. Alternate quart erback Ridlehuber added the other on a 31-yard run. The Tar Heels on the other hand could salvage but two second-half touchdowns, both coming in the third quarter on seven - yard runs by Dave Riggs and Talbott. The Bulldogs had more thorns to offer than the Tar Heels had sides. Ridlehuber rushed for 84 yards in 16 carries and return ed six punts for 179 yards. Tail back Randy Wheeler added 115 yards in 15 rushes. Jenkins hit for 81 yards in 19 carries. Running back Dave Riggs joined Talbott in the Tar Heel offensive gaining 74 yards in 19 carries. End John Ather ton caught two passes for 83 yards.