Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 23, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
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Library trials p3pt. Box 87 Q ChaDi Hill, H. C. Hope Tickets HnTrifkCtS f0r Thwsday's Bob ahff w Cert are stU1 avail awe, but pubUc advertisement nas begun. Students are ad Jjsed to purchase their tick ets now before the concert sells "v " e general public. Volume 74, Number 36 m P ,-r l'r. IT .MA t V MARK MAZZA (43) and Dick Wesolowski (40) Heel fumbles during yesterday's action. The look for the football after one of the four Tar ball is just above the arrow. "f H 11 f TIM KARRS looks for a receiver something held the quarterback spot for over three quar he found in' eight out of eleven tries. Earrs r ters. ; t ' ---... - ,; - , . t.- . . w, . , - r.t. - - - r s - ' - ' -X '"1 " ' - ,.' I - - c ' " V. , ' - '!, HALFBACK DICK WESOLOWSKI (40) struggles against a wall Late Yack Pictures Late pictures will be taken for all students except seniors Monday thru Wednesday from 12 to 7 p.m. A $3.00 late fee will be charged. Also, Medical School stu dents and Dental School stu dents will have their Yack pic tures taken at the Medical School Monday thru Friday from 12 to 7 p.m. Celanese Corp, Here Celanese Corporation has openings for foreign students from Colombia, Mexico, Ven ezuela, Peru, Belgium, Hol land, Germany and Canada. Students with bachelor's or master's degrees in chemical, mechanical, or textile engi neering are preferred but students in business adminis tration or related filds wille find excellent opportunities with the company, which is expanding rapidly in Latm America and Europe. A representative from Cel anese will be on campus on October 26, and any foreign student who thinks he can qualify should make an ap pointment through the Place ment Office, 204 Gardner Hall. frJT o Vc:5i efa 4 Campus Briefs Further information on the company and its activities is available in the office of the Adviser to Foreign Students, 216 Murphey Hall. Powell To Speak' Freshmen and Sophomore Honors Students will hear Bob Powell, president of the stu dent body, discuss the oppor tunities for completely - inde pendent study in a meeting in Gerrard Hall Monday at 7 p.m. . urograms in wnicn iresn ien. soDhomores and iuniors men can -nursue their own interests while not attending classes and not receiving formal grades can now be arranged. Powell is strongly encourag ing honors students who are at all interested in independent study to investigate the pos sibilities in these areas. He will also discuss some of the proposals in experi mental education which have come out of the Reids ville Conference and out of the Educational Reform semi nars. , The Honors Program, be cause of its smallness and ex ceptional students, is seen as an ideal proving ground for new ideas in college instruc tion. All freshmen and sophomore d 3 us n it I - ill - i - v I ui w .r-fuW J J4X ,3 of Wake Forest defensive men honors students are urged to attend this meeting. Birthday Celebration The twenty - first anniver sary of the signing of the Unit ed Nations Charter will be celebrated today with a "U.N. Day International Festival" at Graham Memorial. The festival, which will be held from 3 to 6 p.m. in the first floor lounge, will include a talent show from 3:30 to 5 featuring foreign students and display booths manned by UNC students from abroad. Peace Corps recruiters will also be present. The entire public is invited to attend the celebration, especially host families of Foreign Students. The festival is sponsord by the UNC chapter of the Col legiate Council for the U. N., the UNC Cosmopolitan Club and the Foreign Students Com mittees of the YMCA and YWCA and is coordinated by Miss Chini Smith, a senior from Greensboro. All Photos On This Page By Ernest Rohl CJf CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, Be By SANDY TREADVVELL DTH Sports Editor There's a very simple fact in football you don't win if you don't score. Everyone un derstands the fact. But no one has ever been more aware of it than the blue uniformed players as they walked slowly and silent ly into their locker room aft er a heartbreaking 3-0 loss to Wake Forest in Kenan Sta dium . yesterday. All that was needed was one touchdown to please the 37, 000 at the game, to make Homecoming the happy event that it should be, and to trans form defeat into victory. Danny Talbott is a star, and like all stars he gave the hometown crowd something to cheer about. When he entered the ball game the crowd cheer ed and they kept on cheering as he lead the Tar Heels deep into Deacon territory. The star almost pulled out a last minute victory. But almost isn't good enough. The drive was stop ped and the hopes of the crowd evaporated. Wake For est's precaious three point lead held up despite one final attempt to topple it, and the Deacons upset the University of North Carolina for the sec ond time in as many years. As the stadium emptied and the students walked away from Kenan one cold hard fact re mained. There was a figure three over the guests side of the scoreboard, and there was no number printed in McCrary Wins Latin American r - 1 r tn rl A tuorrl OlUUJt IVYciril ; Ernest S. McCrary, 1966 UNC Journalism graduate and former editor of The Daily Tar Heel, has been awarded the William P. Gray Foreign Correspondence Fellowship for a year's study and work in Latin America. Announcement of the award was received last week by Dr. Wayne A. Danielson, Dean of the School of Journalism here Five leading schools of jour- .nalism UNC, Northwestern, Syracuse Umversity, Universi ty of Missouri, and the Uni versity of Texas were in vited to submit candidates for the fellowship from the Over seas Press Club Foundation, a New York Club for foreign cor respondents. Candidates for the award were required to submit an es say to the foundation on why they wanted to go to South America. McCrary is presently work ing for the Norfolk-Virginian Pilot as a reporter. The fellowship will pay Mc Crary $300 per month plus transportation expenses for up to 12 months. "This award is especially valuable because the student has the opportunity to write and has many possibilities to have his work published." vide T good headtart on his career. We are very pleased that Ernest won this award." Danielson said the School of Journalism has many contacts in South America. "These contracts will help arrange McCrary's travels," he said. Terms of the award require that McCrary report his activ ities to the School of Journal ism on a regular basis, and that the School relay his re ports to the Foundation Com mittee at least once a month. In addition, the Foundation recommends that McCrary ob tain a reporting job for an American wire service or an English language publication. McCrary was born June 15, 1944 in Hickory, N. C. He graduated from Lenoir High School in 1962. He first en tered college at N. C. State as an engineering student. He became interested in journalism through working on the State student newspa per, The Technician, and in 1964 transferred to the School of Journalism here. He worked on the DTH, first as an Assistant Managing Ed itor and in the spring of 1965 he was elected editor of the DTH. OCTOBER 23, 1966 Wake Forest Downs Heels, 3-0 lights over Carolina's side. It was cold during the ball game. The crowd didn't have many opportunities to warm themselves from the 59 degree overcast weather. It had been a dull game. The Tar Heels . knocked repeatedly at the Wake Forest goal line, but each time they were refused entrance. Then with 5:17 min utes remaining in the ball game they finally had some thing to get excited about, something to warm themselves cheering about, and finally something to hope for. When the clock reached those numbers Danny Talbott entered the ballgame. He took the snap from cen ter and scrambled over right tackle for 16 yards and a first down. With the ball on Caro lina's 44 yard line Danny roll ed out to his left and fired a pass over 19 yards and into the arms of Charlie Carr. Two plays later the T a 1 Heels were on Wake Forest's 29 yard line in a third down and two situation. Talbott car ries the football across the lefi side for the first down. With 1:50 remaining the quarter- back again ran the ball for a first down to Wake's 18 yard line. With the clock ninning Tal bott ran for two yards and then passed to right halfback Tom Lampman for another three. With 54 seconds remain ing and the ball on the nine the Tar Heels faced another vital third down situation. Danny dropped back to pass but was caught for a nine yard loss by Wake's big left ; guard Don McMurry. The Tar Heels faced a fourth down and 13 situation with 45 seconds showing on the clock. they elected .to go for the first aown ana tne victory, xaiouti ran a deep reverse play to Lampman. The halfback ran arouid the left side down to the four. , The measurement showed that the Tar Heels were in-, ches away from the first down, win. The remaining seconds were just a formaliity. The Deacons ran out the clock. . Wake Forest's winning field goal culminated their first drive of the game. Sophomore quarterback Ken Erickson lead his team thirty two yards from his own forty - two yam uuc. xui ic&suu ciupwjr hiis throwing arm and the running of halfback Jimmy (Continued on "Pat e 5) Geologist Of Years A visiting professor here helps find oU for today's needs by reconstructing the world as it was millions of years ago. Dr. Albert V. Carozzi is studying carbonate rock which was formed 350 million years ago. Concentrations of this type of sedimentary rock are the world's greatest storehouse of petroleum because carbon- penetrated by underground Bobby Kennedy Gets Boos In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (AP) U.S. Senator Robert F. Kennedy encountered a band of deter mined hecklers yesterday as he campaigned for Democrat ic Governor Edmund G. Brown in a Southern California shop ping center. Kennedy also proposed a "new kind of peace corps" of experienced workers who would temporarily leave their jobs and bring their skill to other parts of the world. There were more cheers than boos when the Democratic se nator from New York spoke to a shouting crowd of more than 2,000 in the shopping cen ter of Lakewood in the Los Angeles area. Shouts of "we want Brown" were mixed with cries of "We want Reagan," the Democra opponent. "Carpetbagger" one sign read. Another said "we like our man," referring to Ken- op I . - r. Peach Pearce Homecoming Queen . IJTSC Prof Says Vietnam Military, Politica Ideological Testing-Ground LEXINGTON, Ky tViet nam was described as a "military, political and ideolo gical testing - ground" for Russia and China here Satur day by a UNC political scien tist. Speaking at the Southern Slavic Conference at the Uni versity of Kentucky, Prof. Ro bert A. Rupen of Chapel Hill pointed to Vietnam as the major foreign policy aspect of current Sino - Soviet rival ry. "Vietnam's importance in the Sino - Soviet dispute re minds us that the United Stat es is intimately involved in the conflict too," the authority on communism and Asian affairs explained. "China's losses may be partly Russia's gains, but 'Reconstructs' Earth Ago To Find Oil oil deposits. "This is a statistical inves computers and X-rays," said Dr. Crrozzi, who teaches geo logy at the University of Illi nois in Urbana. The invesigation, he said, is aimed at reconstructing the geological environment in which these rocks formed. Microscopes are useful m Microscopes are useful viewing thin slices of rock, he heps in determining whether nedy's clash with Los Angeles Mayor Samuel w. lony. Kennedy said Reagon oppos es federal aid to education. "But where, is he going to get the money from?" Kenne-. dy asked rhetorically. "The federal government. And if he doesn't get it hell have to raise taxes, and do you want that? "Send Ronald Reagan back to the movies," he said. Kennedy made his peace corps proposal in remarks dis tributed as he toured Los An geles. He said the nation should "enlist the thousands of the skilled workmen and mechan ics of america" with the skills they learned in years of hard work. "They need not be highly educated," Kennedy added. Kennedy said the workers should be able to serve "with out undue sacrifice for their families." ate Drive ; V they also represent gains for the United States." The outcome in Vietnam, Ru pen said, will influence future actions and policies of the U. S., Russia and China all over the world. "However, Vietnam in itself will not settle the Sino - Sov iet dispute, the U. S. - Soviet Union reivalry, or the demo cracy versus comminism con flict," he added. "Win, lose or draw, all these differences will continue after Vietnam and other tests of strength and credibility will arise. But right now, Vietnam is the testing ground for credibility." Reupen then discussed spec-i fic countries' interests in the Vietnamese conflict. "For China," he said, "Viet- the rock is composed of min erals or organic debris. X-rays, he said, allow re searchers to find and identify minerals in the rock which are present only in minute quantities and which cannot be distinguished easily be cause of similar optical pro perties. Petroleum industries should be doing resarch in this area because, according to Dr. Ca rozzi, "three - fourths of our petroleum reserves are in car bonate rocks." The Swiss - educated geo lgist (he received the D.Sc. degree from the University of Geneva) is visiting UNC this week. He will deliver three lectures here before return ing to Illinois. The first, "Statistical Petro logy of Dolomites," dealt with his study of carbonate rocks. "De Maillet's Teliamed, 1748: An Ultra - Neptunian Theory of the Earth" is the title of the second lecture, which deals with historical geography. "There sems to be a great renewal of inter est in this country for histori cal geology,"- Dr. Carozzi said. The third is a talk on "Geo logy and Mineral Resources of the Ivory Coast." Dr. Carozzi has been in Gold Coast for the past six years making a geological sur vey of that country. The sur vey involved mapping and looking for mineral deposits and ground water. 'It is an attempt to give the country a basic framework to industrialize," he said. SSL Meets Monday State Student Legislature will meet at 7 p.m. Monday in 203 Alumni. Attendance is required. Founded February 23, 1893 X Jf f nam"s greatest value is its use for embroiling "Russia against the United States. Its control over Russia's supply lines to Vietnam assures Chi na of significant influence. Its geographical proximity to Viet nam, and Russia's distance from it, gives China inherent advantage." But China's inability to sup ply heavy military equipment, and North Vietnamese nation alistic anti - Chinese senti ment he inserted,' limit Chi na's possibilities for exploit ing its advantages. "China's internal ideological struggle between revolutionary and revisionist forces furth er weakens its capability in the Vietnam situation. China cannot match its tough words with effective deeds. It talks loudly and carries a little stick It is a paper tiger." While Vietnam affords Rus sia an opportunity to oppose both China and the U. S., it also lessens the Soviet Union's freedom of action. This is be cause the Soviet Union's in volvement in Vietnam subjects it to Chinese control of Rus sian communications and sup ply lines, as well as to decis ions made in Hanoi and Pe king. Vietnam threatens Russia's "peaceful coexistence line" and hurts cooperation with the U. S., Rupen noted. China has vested interests in a U.S. -Russia dispute and will do whatever it can to promote it. Rupen views the United Sta tes' involvement in Vietnam as a threat to improved rela tions with the Soviet Union, but also as a warning to both Russia and China of its commitment to oppose their aggression. "Our involvement in Viet nam represents containment of Russia as well as of Chi na," he observed. "Our in volvement intensifies the Sino Soviet dispute. Our action may also, however, reinforce ag gressive communist tendencies and strengthen those elements in Russia and China which fa vor a tough line." Rupen feels that American containment at present "mak es sense", especially since China seems to be suffering from severe internal turmoil. "At this stage, let us not count on Chinese rationality to save us from disaster," he warned. "Instead, let us work to confine Chinese irra tionality to China itself. Chi nese fears that future China will 'go revisionist' and fall to pursue aggressive policies could lead it to run risks now and not to trust the future." Meanwhile, he added, the Si- E0 . Soviet dite has nraeti cal plications for the Unit states. Iff. Ml -. '.!" H I ' - - , . . y HiTl iTim. MMH1IW1IIMIMII.J"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1966, edition 1
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