c y Supremes The Supremes will perform today at 1:30 p.m. in Carmi chael Auditorium. Backing them up will be the Lovin' Spoonful and Earl Van Dyke and his orchestra. Wm Mm ft M The South's Largest College Newspaper Basketball Read about Coach Dean Smith's cagers on page four to FukI out the problem of "the fifth man." Smith has tost four starters this year. Vol. 74, No. 59 CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 21. 1965 Founded February 23, 1893 I, ,,,,, , . .,. U ! . I "" " "" " " Everyone Cheered For Blue Devils Bv ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer DURHAM More than 45, 000 fans packed Duke Stadium yesterday to watch the Blue Devils roll to an easy 34-7 vic tory over Carolina's Tar Heels. It sounded like everybody in the place was hollering for Duke. There was light chill in the air but it was warmed by the hot blasts coming from the Devil den. Duke coach Bill Murray, who resigned yester day, said he had never seen more school spirit than he had in the past week. It was the first time this year that the Tar Heels weren't in a game at the end. But the Tar Heel fans had long been dead when the merciful horn sound at the end. You wouldn't have even known that anyone from UNC was there if it hadn't have been for the Marching Tar Heels. They came through with a very fine performance. Ilameses never did show, al though the Duke cheerleaders , brought some lamb chops over and threw them to Carolina students before the game start ed. Duke officials promised it really wasn't our horny friend, but he is still missing. Blue paint and the letters "UNC" were on several signs on tne Duke campus. The init ials were also burned into the football field. But the paint and the band were the extent of Carolina spirit. One cheerleader sum med it up when she said, "They cheered more up at Notre Dame than they did here." Following the game jubilant Duke fans ran across the field and claimed the Victory Bell which had resided in Chapel Hill for two years. The Tar Heels only clicked once all afternoon. After their first quarter touchdown they just couldn't do anything right. It wasn't because they did try or put out. It was just Duke's afternoon and their ball game from beginning to end. The players walked off the field with their heads hanging low and their uniforms splat tered with dirt, and blood. Duke had hit and hit them hard all day. All the disap pointments of a long season were on their shoulders and it was a heavy load to carry. The curtain on Carolina's 1965 4-6 season came down hard. But as Fauntleroy said, Tar Heel fans just didn't care and apparently they still don't. It is not how you play the game, who you play or the fi nal score. It is who wins thai counts and people, we just don't count, not this year. ' ' - -" :jf.z w-s -; v' ';,v ty" v.v-- A - 7,7:,, '' -c- YvSv "... 4 XsJ I Hi y MkN Murray Resigns, Shares ACC Title 1" , . Av Jt , iB Kail to reaen tne Dan in ume. DUKE r ULXJiAii Jay aiaurtrsc vow in yesterday's game. Tar Heel halfback Gene Link (23) is unable DTH Photo By Ernest Robl. President Wants To Make ECC Separate University One Of Siamese Twins Has Severe Blood Clot East Carolina College wants to become an independent uni versity, ECC President Dr. Lee Jenkins said Friday. Adding that he would rather leave it as a college than be come part of the Consolidated University, Jenkins said at a meeting at the North Carolina State Faculty Club there is a 'as soon as it ' .J i ' ""rl1"T I II LE BOGGS, Congressman from Louisiana and Major ity Whip in the House of Representatives, will speak on The Future of Southern Polities" Monday night at 8 in Carroll Hall. Student Party Meets At 8 The Student Party will elect a new party chairman, admin istrative vice chairman, policy vice chairman and fill three vacancies on the SP Advisory Board at a meeting tomorrow night at 8 in Gerrard Hall. A vacancy in Student Legis lature for the Women's District composed of Mclver, Kenan, and Alderman halls will be Outgoing Chairman Frank Hodges will address the party on his departure and will name SP members of the fair cam paign practices committee which he proposed earlier this week. Partv leaders expected that o rphiittal of recent charges against the SP will be made bv one of the speaker. "Anyone interested in run ning for party offices are ask ed to contact Hodges before the meeting. The public is invited to attend. need for action is feasible." Citing the lagging economic growth of the Eastern part of North Carolina, Jenkins said: "The people of eastern North Carolina look to East Carolina College ... and they say, 'Here stands a university.' Why not then declare it so?" "We hold that the word uni versity is a more apt decep tion of this institution than the word college," Jenkins said. He emphasized that ECC should not be made a branch of UNC, noting that the state legislatures of 1963 and l96o felt the state can support only one full university operating on several campuses. Attempting to anticipate ar guments against his proposal. Jenkins said: "The people of the East in dreaming of the university want merely to shake free of the shackles that hinrt us in a non-competitive position. We want to develop ourselves to our greatest ca pacity." Jenkins said he would choose remaining a college, rather that become the Uni versity of North Carolina at Greenville. "Since the eastern universi ty should be a whole univer sity equipped to offer a whole university program, it should continue to operate as a sep arate unit rather than as a branch," he said. Gov. Dan Moore opposed Jenkins' proposal, recalling his remruks made to the lyto General Assembly in Febru ary. "I am convinced of the val up of the one - university con- rpnt rnd 1 will visorously op- nose anv effort to deprive this state of the positive benefits of consolidation. The seDarate university iHpn Jenkins said. would qualify ECC for many more federal foundations and grants. Moore said Jenkins' sugges tions "de-erve careful consid eration bv the trustees of East Carolina, the Board of Higher Education and all oth ers interested in providing the best possible system of college and university training for our voung men and women." East Carolina, the third lar gest school in North Carolina. will have an enrollment of 15, 000 in 1S70 if the present rate of growth continues, Jenkins said. "Wh"t is envisioned," Jen kins said, "is not the mere changing of the name, an empty and meaningless thing in itself, but the creation of a dynamic regional university. The additional cost would not be great." By The Associated Press One of the twin sisters sep arated by surgeons last Nov. 8 after being born with their bodies joined at the buttocks, has developed a blood clot. Officials at North Carolina Memorial Hospital reported covery period would extend a week or 10 days. The girls, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. David Allen of High Point, were born last summer. The apparently suc cessful operation followed sev eral weeks of study ana iesi- By PAT STITH DTH Sports Editor DURHAM Duke thrashed arch-rival North Carolina 34-7 here yesterday and won a share "of the ACC champion ship in a game Blue Devil coach Bill Murray called the "greatest" of his career. It was also his last. Murray, head coach at Duke for the last 15 seasons, resigned im mediately after the game. "This is a day of great joy and tremendous gladness," he told a crowded press confer ence. "It is also one of the sad dest moments in my life." Duke scored the first time it had the ball, fell behind 7-6 early in the second period on a six yard run by Danny Tal bott and then pushed over three touchdowns in less than six minutes just before the half to take a commanding, 28 7 lead. The Rain's back, and Chief Arthur Beaumont said last night that Duke officials "knew about it all the time. I'm very disappointed with them. They promised to get him back for us." Rameses VIII arrived at Ho gan's Farm, his home, about 6 p.m. "He seems happy and healthy," Beaumont said, "horns Carolina blue." Two Duke students turned up with the ram about the third quarter. They were inter cepted by Duke campus police. Saturday that TnTof thTgirTs 55 .t the Chapel HiU hospi- urt m-ohnpri a moaeraieiy lai a 1 t A 4- l iv-l severe blood cioi in me uy per arm. . After the operation, physi cians had said the crucial re- A Umversity spokesman said the doctors do not know when both twins will be able to return home. The Blue Deivls then took the second half kickoff and drove 68 yards in 14 plays, mostly on the ground, to put the game out of reach. "We thought we could come back in the second half even though we were behind 28-7," UNC Coach Jim Hickey said after the game. "But Duke came back and scored that touchdown in the third quarter and killed u." Hickey offered no excuses. He said that the virus, with which 12 of his players were confined to the infirmary Fri dav night, had absolutely no effect on the performance of his team. Had the game been devoid of breaks the score might have been a little closer, say, 28-14. Calabrese had a big day, leading both taems in rushing and scoring three times on runs of one, five and one yards. The Blue Devils earned two scores mostly through the air, another mostly on the ground, picked up two ethers on Caro lina miscues and lost a sixth on a controversial referee's de cision. Except for their 89 yard go ahead drive in the second r,ortr th Tar Heels never got inside the Dufce 30 yard line until the final period. And then they threatened continually but could never push across a face - saving score. In that quarter they drove to the 30, then down to the seven, then to the 13 and the 19 yard lines. Both Talbott, who suffered an eye injurv in the first quart er end Jeff Beaver, the num ber two quarterback, had turns at directing the UNC at tack but neither could discov er a scoring combination. Duke's crushing victory was the biggest since 1954, when the Blue Devils' 1954 Orange Bowl squad won 47-12. It was the first time in his seven years here that Mickey's team lost to a Big Four rival by more thin three points. UNC . 0 7 0 07 DUKE . 6 22 6 0-34 Sharp Designates Residence College Areas rT W;;,m a prat,n? during the ture of the university. educational side, he m Rv RARRY JACOBS DTH Managing Editor Chancellor Paul F. Sharp yesterday designated provis ional residential college areas for the 13 men's residence halls not now in such colleges. In a letter to several ad ministrative and student fhanrpllor Sharp said icamii r that thp final establishment ot the residence colleges is con- tinapnt uDon the "resoiuuon of many proDiems. He referred to tne seiung uF of sound college governments and to the establishment of an acceptable "structural rela tionship between Student Gov ernment and the residential college areas." Chancellor Sharp requested that the funds designated for the use of the colleges be held in escrow until the permanent governments are set up and full recognition is granted. The Chancellor referred to the money which will be pro vided if Monday's referendum approves a raise in the resi dence hall fees. Sonny Pepper, Mens Resi dence Council president, point ed out that only S2 of the pro posed S3.20 increase will be held up. One dollar will go to the residence halls immedi ! atelv. I Five Areas ; Five residence college areas have been designated. ine are as follows: Connor. Jov ner. and Alexander; Ruff in. Mangum. Manly, and Grimes: Ehringhaus: Craige; Old East. Old West, Battle - Vance -Pettigrew, and Carr (with Carr as an independent unit within the college grouping). ro, nf Mpti wimam Vx. Long said that this is the sec ond step in the campus-wide establishment of the residence college system, following the setting up last year of three pilot colleges, Morrison, More head and Scott. Dean Long added that Mon day's referendum will have no effect on this step. However, Britt Gordon, Student Govern ment vice president, and head f u ah Hnn Committee on Ul LUC . , Residential Colleges, pointed out that if the referendum does fail students desiring to set up the residence colleges will have to find some other way to finance them. Long, Pepper, and Gordon all emphasized the necessity of working out a permanent re lationship between the resi dence colleges and the Student Government. . , co?h thut a task force r a Unr Committee will work on plans for such a re lationship. Pepper reported that the MRC is also concern ed with this problem, ne siu he thinks the residence col leges should be recognized by Student Government. The pres ent residence halls are not. Changing MKC Pepper said that toe "entire shape and form" of the MRC is being changed bause of u r-iAno mlleses. tie caa not elaborate on the changes The MRC President said he didn't know how long it.wou take to set up the residence college government, but aaaea would be aone 6'" f -? - The possibilities are aimosi a tutoring service ana SPDeagnSSn? pointed out that unlimited," he said "for in- nars conducted by a faculty Dean Lone, P"u'cu 5H tezratine the residence col- member as possible ways lor IS rlTncrXes" LTefiX the educational fat, Se coUeges ,Said the students. . .. , i: rtm. r-io nf thp univerbuy. -" part of tne eaucanuuai 1 II I I I i- mmm mm iW im mm mm f I HI T If I I I I ' T ASTR ON ALT-AQU AN ALT SCOTT CARPEN TER shows Consolidated University President i:n;om r rriilav yesterday a certificate sent wm hv Chancellor Paul F. Sharp making T-vrwciKli Ofjrdon S&id the Au J uir-i r-i.- alumnus of L"NC. Car F""" r 4-;u make I carpenier u Hoc Committee was in North Carolina to attend the rr" in ret uiiw-i. etrr ciiuiw - governments so that they can Third International Conference on Hyperbaric Medicine. Carpenter's previous visits to Chapel Hill have been as a part of the astronaut training program at the Morthead Planetar ium. Looking on is Anthony Jenzano, plane tarium director. DTH Photo By Ernest RobL

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