Box 670
Tickets
DTH Editor Ernie McCrary
gives the Athletic Department
an approving pat on the back.
See page 2.
Meeting Today
The Publications Beard
will meet today in the Grail
Room of Graham Memorial
at 3 p.m.
The South' s Largest College Xeuspaper
Volume 74, Number 73
CHAPFX HILL NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1966
Founded February 23, 1893.
Ticket Chan
Made Bv Erickson
Talk
With Faculty
Milium, "", - - .
on
vr
Ban The Ram
Would someone please explain what good there
is in having a ram for Carolina's mascot.
Now we are called the Tar Heels. It's the March
ing Tar Heel Band, The Daily Tar Heel and so forth.
Tar Heel is official.
So where does this ram come in? A cheerleader
in the 1920s gave the University a ram and the tra
dition has been carried on and on. Now at all home
football games we have a ram with blue horns.
And our blue-horned ram gets swiped. All the ram
does is lay around on the side lines very uninspir
ing. Why not have a Tar Heel for a mascot? There
must be some way. This ram bit is rather ridiculous.
Don't you think so?
Majority Against Lawyer
Student Government's proposal to hire a lawyer
is opposed by the University Administration. Do you
think a lawyer should be hired?
The DTH asked this question of 184 students yes
terday. The majority, 84, said they were against the
proposed move. Fifty-nine favored having a lawyer
and 41 had no opinion.
Here are some of their statements:
Dave White, Hickory senior, "Why don't they vote
a carrier radio station and forppt thp l
Pat Barkley, Newton freshman, "If student gov
ernment thinks they need a lawyer, then they should
have the right to hire one.
Fred Thomas, Concord sophomore, "What would
they need one for? They don't have to have a full
time lawyer to get legal advice when they need it.
James B. Rush, Miami junior, "I don't see why
hiring one all of a sudden is a necessity. I think it's
a waste of the student's money.
Dave Mays, Durham sophomore, "No, I think it's
just an idea to give some hard up UNC law graduate
a job."
The Case Of A Freudian Pen
A popular history professor was showing his class
the other day a ball point pen he got for Christmas.
He said it was like the ones Pentagon generals
use. He showed the class how the pen could be pull
ed out and extended into a pointer.
As he pulled it out and pushed it back in again
and again, he remarked, "I wonder why no one has
ever made a study of the Neo-Freudian tendencies of
Pentagon generals?"
UNC Gets $5,000
For the fourth consecutive
year, the University of North
Carolina has been chosen to
award a $5,000 fellowship from
The Corning Glass Works to
one of it's students.
Carolina, aloni with Harv
ard, Yale, Vanderbuilt and
Kentucky, will award the fel
lowship to a graduating sen
ior. The award is to be used
for a year of travel and study
abroad but not for study in
an "institution of higher learn
ing." No special major or
field of study is required to
be eleigible for the fellowship.
Seniors interested in apply
ing for the fellowship should
contact Dean Claude George in
the School of Business Admin
istration. ' The final selection
will be made by a University
committee, with emphasis
placed on over - all excel
lence and capabilities as dem
onstrated by the student's
scholarship and proposed plan
for a year's travel and study
abroad.
Deadline for submission of
applications is Feb. 1, 1966.
Loan Recipients
All students who are to re
ceive loans for the second se
mester must attend one of nine
special meetings to be held
Jan. 11-13.
Student loans, repayment
agreements, and recent
amendments to the National
Defense Act will be discuss
ed. There will be three meet
ings on each day, at 9:30 a.m.,
11 a.m., and 2:30 p.m. in Ge
rard Hall.
All students who have re
ceived loans from the Univer
sity and will be leaving the
University at the end of this
semester must come by the
Student Loan Funds Office in
Bynum Hall for an exit inter
view. 'Hey I Knotc You9
Three North Carolina stud
ents are members of the se
ven man Monzas band which
has recently put out a rec
ord, "Hey I Know You".
The three are Ward May,
the drummer, Nelson Miller,
the writer - arranger, and
Mike Bowman, the promotions
manager.
Sorority Rush
All girls interested in spring
sorority rush should sign up
in the Dean of Women's of
fice in 202 South Building by
Jan. 11 according to Madeline
Here stand the masses who waited and waited, some more
than two hours, Tuesday morning to pick up their Duke
Campus
BY STEVE LACKEY
DTH Staff Writer
You are walking on cam
pus late at night. You not
ice smoke and flames in a
classroom building. Where is
the nearest place to report
the fire?
According to Chief G. S.
Baldwin of the Chapel Hill
Fire Department, there are
only four fire alarm boxes
in town. None of these is lo
cated directly on campus.
There is one box at Me
morial Hospital and one at
the sanitorium. Two boxes
are located on Franklin
Street: at the Post Office
and at Columbia Street.
Two fires have occurred
on campus this semester, but
neither was of major conse
quence. On Sept. 20, a trans
former in New East caught
fire because of faulty wiring,
and on Dec. 10, a light
switch in Woollen Gymna
sium smouldered until fire
men reached the scene.
The Kappa Sigma frater
nity house had a major fire
last year, doing extensive da
mage to the interior.
The same semester a
Kappa Alpha house hay par
ty was cut short because the
hay went up in flames.
Up until last year a plan
to place 35 fire boxes on
campus was under consider
ation. According to campus
security Chief Arthur Beau
mont, the plan got bogged
down between the adminis
tration offices and Raleigh.
Grant
Gray of the Pan Hellenic
Council.
Counsellors
Any girl graduate student
interested in working as a
graduate counsellor should
come by the Dean of Wom
en's office in 202 South Build
ing. The Dean's office needs two
counsellors for the spring se
mester and is starting to se
lect them for next fall.
Junior Class Heads
Mel Wright, president of the
junior class, yesterday called
a meeting of all class com
mittee heads at 4 p.m. in 101
Davie Hall.
All those interviewed for
committee positions are ex
pected to come, he said. New
committee chairmen are Da
vid Heacock and H. L. Pher
son, finance committee; Steve
Bennett, publicity committee,
Charlie Evans, social commit
tee. Aerospace
Representatives of the Aero
space Technology Division of
the Library of Congress will
interview students interested
in jobs.
Appointments for interviews
can be made in 211 Gardner.
Lacks Fire
These boxes would have
had their own power sys
tem. They would have oper
ated separately from one an
other. According to Beaumont,
all buildings on campus are
either semi - fireproof or
completely fireproof. All
buildings have at least one
fire extinguisher on each
floor; the more hazardous
have several.
Beaumont says that each
"janitor checks his extinguish-
ers daily, making a report
on those needing repairs or
servicing.
ON THE WAY Fire ex
tinguishers like this one are
readily accessible at strate
gic locations in most cam
pus buildings in the event
of a fire.
DTH Photo By Er
nest Robl.
I K v j-
A-
Lindsay Goes All Out To End Strike;
Tieup Costing S100 Million A Day
NEW YORK (AP) The
New Republican mayor, John
V. Lindsay, took a personal
hand in transit strike talks
yesterday with a bid for an
armistice that would set idle
subways and buses running
again. Union leaders prompt
ly rejected his proposal.
Lindsay's intervention was
described as signaling an all
out city hall effort to end the
five - day transit crisis.
The tieup is estimated by
business sources to be cost
ing the city's economy as
much as $100 million a day.
Nearly five million passengers
rormally use the 800 miles of
city - owned subway and bus
lines daily.
Highway and commuter rail
arteries continued to be clog
ged as millions sought means
of getting about the nation's
largest city. Many businesses
suffered near paralysis when
employes and customers sim
ply stayed at home.
The evening rush hour went
off far more smoothly than
last night the worst night
thus far in the strike. Mobs
of commuters at rail termi
nals were orderly and were
moved quickly to stepped -up
transportation facilities. The
Salvation Army served coffee
to waiting crowds at Grand
Central.
K 1
tickets. AH date tickets were gone by early morning and
student tickets were gone by 3:40 p.m.
Alarms
One precaution taken by
the safety office is having
night watchmen check aU
buildings on their beat for
signs of fire. The watchmen
are walking campus all
night, punching clocks at
various locations.
Although the fire depart
ment has a full - time in
spector to examine buildings
in town, fraternities and so
rorities included, he does not
inspect buildings on campus.
'Beaumont and the campus
police, in conjunction with
the State Insurance Depart
ment, visit all campus build
ings regularly.
Memorial Hospital, per
haps the best protected
building in town, has regu
lar drills on Fridays. A hos
pital official places a red
flag somewhere in the build
ing. As soon as an employee
spots the "fire," he places
the alarm.
Morehead Planetarium has
its own sprinkler system,
set into operation by exces
sive heat in any room.
There are two fire houses
in Chapel Hill, the nearest
to campus being on Airport
Road near the Police station.
Station One has three
trucks: a line pumper which
answers all calls on cam
pus. Both November and De
cember set records for hav
ing the most fires of any
months on record. Novem
ber had 32 and December
had 38 in Chapel Hill.
The flow of traffic on the
streets was reported lighter
and such jams as occurred
were not much worse than on
a normal evening. The exodus
from the city began in mid -afternoon-Traffic
Commissioner Hen
ry Barnes proposed, and May
or Lindsay concurred in a vol
untary plan whereby Manhat
tan was divided into four sec
tions, with separate and stag
gered employment hours re
commended for each one.
"It may have held traffic
down a bit," Barnes declar
ed. State Supreme Court Jus
tice Abraham N. Geller post
poned for 24 hours a schedul
ed afternoon hearing to deter
mine if the Transport work
ers Union should be fined for
calling the strike in violation
of a court injunction against
it.
It was Geller who yester
day sent union chieftain Mi
chael J. Quill to jail from
which he shortly was trans
ferred go Bellevue Hospital
after suffering a seizure.
Quill was reported much
improved today, with physi
cians claiming uncertainty as
to whether he had suffered a
heart attack. He was the tar
get of a barrage of nasty calls
from irate New Yorkers.
'Williams Recommended
Lawyer To SG'-Travis
By JOHN GREENBACKER
DTH Staff Writer
Student Discounting Com
mission Chairman Bob Trav
is told the DTH yesterday that
University Assistant Business
Manager and Attorney J. A.
Williams referred him to a
Chapel Hill lawyer last May
to handle problems in Student
Government contracts.
Travis said Williams had
recommended the services of
Chapel Hill attorney James C.
Harper to draw up discount
contracts between fraternities
and sororities and local fuel
oil merchants.
"Williams said he didn't
have the time to look into the
matter," Travis said.
Student Body President
Paul Dickson yesterday cited
Travis's statement as proving
the necessity for Student Gov
ernment's having full-time le
gal aid available if necessary.
Travis's charges are the
most recent development in a
Student Government-University
Administration battle over
the proposed retention of an
official Student Government
lawyer.
A bill approving a SG law
yer's retention was passed by
Student Legislature two weeks
before Christmas vacation,
but no student funds have
been appropriated yet to cov
er expenses.
The legislature's action
prompted an immediate and
sharp reply from Dean of Stu
dent Affairs C. O. Cathey, who
termed the retention of a Stu
dent Government lawyer "both
Hitherto, the mayor had kept
his base at City Hall, but to
day he moved uptown to the
Americana Hotel negotiating
words of an aide, "will stay
until there is a settlement."
Lindsay's first move was to
press upon the striking union
a proposition that their mem
bers return to work while de
tails of their contract dead
lock are threshed out with the
transit authority.
Quill's successor as chief
bargainer, Union Vice Pres
ident Douglas L. Macmahon,
turned down the armistice pro
posal, standing on the union's
traditional policy of "no con
tract, no work."
The Transit Authority has
offered a money package of
approximately $29 million,
while union demands add up
to about $216 million leav
ing a gap of S187 miilino to
bebridged in the peace talks.
Lindsay is reportedly under
heavy pressure by the city's
business interests to do some
thing about the strike.
In" Washington, White
House Press Secretary Bill
D. Moyers said Johnson al
ready had instructed Labor
Secretary W. Willard Wirtz to
offer federal mediation serv
ices, if such aid was wanted
in New York.
Leads
To
By PAT STITH
DTH Managing Editor
Athletic Director Chuck Erickson made five
changes in the distribution of basketball tickets yes
terday after an hour and a half conference with nine
members of the faculty.
He said the following changes would go into effect
beginning with the Wake Forest game here Feb. 3:
1) Up to six ticket windows will be open at 8:30
a.m., depending on the demand for tickets.
2) Of those windows open, one will be reserved
for faculty, staff and general admission sales.
3) An unlimited number of date tickets will be
available.
4) No one, without excep
tion, will have his choice of
seats. The best tickets will
be passed out on a first come
basis.
"'S) More security precau
tions will be taken against
line breakers.
David T. Lapkin, who
served as unofficial chairman
of the faculty group, told
Erickson that he felt that the
unnecessary and unwise."
Cathey said a lawyer's full
time retention might jeopar
dize future relations between
the Administration and Stu
dent Government and he rec
ommended that Student Gov
ernment utilize the services of
Williams.
Cathey refused comment on
Travis's remarks yesterday.
Williams was directed by
Chancellor Paul Sharp to seek
a ruling on the legality of
Student Government's propos
ed action from the State At
torney General's office.
Dickson defended the pro
posed full - time retention 6f
a lawyer Tuesday, and said
Williams didn't have the time
to work on Student Govern
ment affairs and was subject
to a conflict of interest.
Harper said yesterday that
Travis did see him about the
proposed contracts, but no
formal action was taken on
the matter.
Harper said he was a friend
of Mr. Williams.
Williams told the DTH yes
terday he "really didn't re
member" seeing Travis or re
commending Harper to him.
Briefs on the legality of the
retention of a Student Govern
ment lawyer have been sub
mitted to the State Attorney
General's office, and a ruling
is expected within a few days.
Deacons Fall
tw I
HTg TVfi HfP IK
1U X til liw
By JIM COGHILL
DTH Asst. Sports Editor
WINSTON-SALEM UNC's
Tar Heels baptized the Baptists
of Wake Forest last night 99-83
as the L&M kids and the LAL
kids matched total scoring with
59 points each.
Carolina took the tap and
scored to never lose the lead
in Winston-Salem's Memorial
Coliseum before some 7,600
fans.
Living up to their expecta
tions, Lewis and Miller kept
the nets burning especially dur
ing the last half. With only
nine points at intermission,
Lewis swished another 25 to
end the evening with 34 points.
Miller netted 25 fifteen of
them being scored in the last
20 minutes.
Individual scoring honors for
the Deacs went to Bob Leonard
and Paul Long. Leonard put
through 36 points while Long
had 23.
The Heels outshot the Dea
cons from the floor hitting 44
of 70 for 2.9 per cent. Coach
Jack Murdoch's men could
only make 32 of their 76 shots
for a 42.1 percentage.
2.111 .. .nd Lewis could not
be stepped in the latter half as
the two big guns made 26 of
43 for 60.5 per cent.
But the Deacons had httle
to be ashamed of from their
two big men making 17 of 33
for 65 per cent.
Other Carolina men found
the basket tonight with John
Yokley scoring 12, Gauntlett
eight, aiui Bennett seven.
Changes
system of ticket distribution
that has been used was inef
ficient. "At times there was only
one window Tuesday," he
said, "and most of us had
to wait in line more than two
hours. It seems to us that a
better solution to the problem
of ticket distribution can be
found."
Lapkin referred to the lines
that wound about in Carmich
ael Auditorium and stretched
out into the adjoining parking
lot.
People were seeking tickets
to North Carolina's game with
Duke, the nation's number one
team, here Saturday at 2 p.m.
"We've been unhappy with
what happened Tuesday too,"
Erickson said. "We want to
distribute tickets in the most
convenient way possible."
Erickson then asked for
criticism and suggestions.
He got them. All nine men
were in agreement that more
policemen should be on hand
to see to it that people do not
break in line and that when
new windows are opened, peo
ple who have waited in line
longest are given preference.
One professor said that the
two men Campus Security
Chief Arthur Beaumont sent
to the auditorium did not do
their job and only added to
the confusion. The others
agreed.
Business Manager Vernon
Crook defended the campus
police, saying that they made
the best of a bad situation.
"We went down there to do
the best we could without
hurting people I didn't think
it was necessary to hurt any
body," Beaumont told the
DTH yesterday.
"Most of the line-breaking
came from people who would
see a friend and say, 'Hey,
come and stand with me so
we can get our tickets togeth
er.' Newly built Carmichael Au
ditorium has a seating ca
pacity for basketball of 8,500,
including some 2,000 bleacher
type seats.
Of the 6,500 chair-type seats,
2'000 have been set aside toT
general admission and student
date tickets. The remaining
seats (6,500) are reserved for
the approximately 12,500 un-
dergraduates and graduates
and 4,000 faculty, and staff
members and their families
Until now, the Athletic De
partment has reserved 250 of
the $3 general admission tick
ets for sale as date tickets.
Students had never demand
ed this number until the
Duke game.
In the future, 250 general
admission tickets will contin
ue to be set aside for student
dates. If and when these tick
ets are exhausted, however,
the ticket office has been in
structed to sell student tick
ets as date tickets.
Mrs. Jean Keller, who is in
charge of ticket sales, esti
mated that a total of 450-500
tickets would have satisfied
the date ticket demand.
Erickson praised his ticket
staff for the job they did in
distributing some 6,750 Duke
tickets between 8:30 a.m. and
3:40 p.m., Tuesday when the
supply was exhausted, despite
the problems.
In order to make lines move
faster at future games, bow
ever, no one will be given bis
choice of seats. Each person
will be given the best remain
ing ticket.
Other members of the fac
ulty group, in addition to Lap
kin, were Danny J. Moffie,
Harold Q. Langenderfer, Wil
liam A. Terrill, George A.
Coltrane, Elmer R. Oettixsger
Jr., Kenneth S. Howard,
James L. Murphy, and Ed
win C. Hinsdale.