o Library Seial3 d-d ox 870 Market Report infPe oeled albatross was sell t $Z:5.0 a Pund Thursday ror fCh,cag mark, while corn - fed aardvarks were bringing $576 a herd. Orientation Chairman Sought Interviews for the Orienta tion Commission chairman will be held today from 2 to 4. The chairman will select a co ordinator for men. women and foreign students, commission members, and counsellors. To Fritp IFeZ IsBetterThan To Rule' rHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, miuay, DECEMBER 2, 1966 . Tl'n T-r-k Last In A Series No Truce Seen. In Guroiina Sex Buttle Hit WTO By LAUREL SHACKELFORD And KAREN BORROUGHS Special To The DTH And so the Carolina Conflict or Bat tb of the Sexes rages on. But, there are no white flags to be s:en on th:j horizon. In one corner is the Carolina gentle man gingerly nursing the fresh chip on his shoulder as his opponent passes with her nose in th3 air. He sees her as having no time to take up arms with him because she must rush back to her dressing quar ters to appraise th3 phon2 calls that have accumulated during thi day. Then she must slip into her print uniform so as not to keep her date waiting longer than 30 minutes. Bids Will Be Advertise Soon For By DON CAMPBELL DTH Staff Writer Bids will be advertised "probably within the next three weeks" for construction of a new student supply store, Arthur Tuttle, University Plan ning Director said Thursday. Tuttle said it is hoped' the bids can be advertised before Christmas. March is the deadl line for the advertisement. The Supply Store will house a new book exchange and Uni versity Duplicating Depart ment. It will cost an estimated $1,455,000. The building will have 54,000 square feet of space on three levels. It will be built in con temporary architectural style. The store will be centered in a four - building complex to be built in the area east of Wil son ' Library, extending' onto Emerson Field, parallel to Ra leigh Street. Other buildings in the com plex include an undergraduate library, a new student union and a mechanical building to serve the complex. Tuttle said that in the origi nal plans, it has been antici pated that bids for the com plete complex would be adver tised at one time but that there was some chance now that construction on the student un ion may not begin simultane ously with the other construc tion. Ideally, one contractor would do all the construction, Tuttle said. Costs for the student union, to be named for Dr. Frank Porter Graham, will approxi mate $2 million. A federal loan will be used to finance the Un ion and will be paid off by the University on a self-liquidating basis. The mechanical building will cost around $800,000. Its cost will be absorbed into the cost of the other three buildings, de pendent upon the percentage of service each building re ceives. The cost' of the undergradu ate library, approximately $1, 968,000, will be split between federal and state funds, with the state's share running more than $1,300,000. STUDENTS PAY When the construction on the Supply Store begins, Carolina students will finally begin to see where some of the money they have spent for books in the present book exchange has been going. Students here have been in directly .paying for this new store for many years, and will continue to pay for it for many years yet to come. The reason they are paying for it is because in 1952, the UNC Board of Trustees de creed that Student Stores in the Consolidated University would be owned by and operat ed for Educational Trust Funds. , . . - The Trust Fund would fi nance scholarships, fellowships grants-in-aid, television main tenance and replacement, m PaThe rest of the Fund would be put in a capital reserve fund to save for the eventual construction of a new book ex- TheFund, since 1953, has been divided in the following manner: Approximately 62 per cent has gone to Scholarships, Fellowships, Grants - m - Aia, and television maintenance and replacement. The other 38 The picture fades as the pretty young things passes from view and th? hearty lad carefully places the chip to rest with his growing collection. H2 reminds himself that she wasn't worth fighting anyhow because sh2 would probably deliver th2 same old punches nothing different among this bunch! On the other side of the arna, the pert coed looks hastily away as her antagonist fails to meet her shy glance and lifts her foremost weapon a bit higher as they pass. Typical, sh2 thinks. Probably rushing to slip into his place in th3 line at the phone to call the date ha is importing for the big weekend coming up. He wouldn't no Book. per cent has gone into reserve for the Supply Store. In the late 1950's, Chancel lor William Aycock froze the amount of the fund that could go into student aid. According to Victor P. Bowles, Director of Account ing, Aycock took the step to insure that funds for the book store would increase rapidly enough to insure a large enough financial base for book store construction without the .University having to go into debt to build the store. Since that time, the book store fund has increased at a much faster rate than has the funds allotted to student aid (scholarships, etc.). At the present time, there is some $700,000 in the book store fund. At "a Nov.; 17 meeting of the Campus Stores Committee, Thomas Shetley, director of Student Stores, said, "We try to maximize profits, but we never lose sight of our duty to College Says Rioters Will Be Suspended MURFREESBORO, (AP) Chowan College said Thurs day that it would suspend any student who participated in another demonstration like Wednesday night's, when, some students battled with police who broke up their picket line. The students picketed the Varsity Soda Shop, operated by William Vaughan, who had pressed charges against Ronald E. Davis, 19, a soph omore from Durham, for stealing half a frozen chicken from a storage room. Davis has been charged with shoplifting, but was al lowed to plead guilty to a charge of trespassing and was fined $25 and court costs in Hertford County Re corder's Court Tuesday. He was dismissed from the col lege the next day. He said he took the chicken on a dare from another student. An estimated 500 of the" college's 1,235 students, both men and women, milled around the store two blocks from the campus Wednesday night. Some 75 law enforcement officers from Hertford, North ampton and Bertie counties in northeastern North Caro lina were summoned. The of ficers had three dogs with them. Witnesses said some of the officers used nightsticks to move the students back to the campus and that some officers were hit by bottles. Police made no charges or arrests. The college issued this statement Thursday: "Officials at Chowan Col , lege have taken steps to pre vent recurrence of Wednes day night's demonstration by students protesting conviction of a student for trespassing at Murfreesboro's Varsity Soda Shop. W. Clayton Mor risette, dean of the college, stated a policy at Thursday morning's student assembly, emphasizing that any stu dent participating in another event of this nature will be suspended from Chowan College." Exch ange provide books at a fair price." Shetley was asked if prices of books would possibly be lowered after the new store was built, since it would large ly be paid! for when complet ed. The answer was no, not for some time, because inventory costs would keep book prices up for some period. There was general agree ment among the committee, though, that eventually book prices might foe lowered and more of the Educational Trust Fund could go to student aid. Carolina Students are not financing the new Supply Store completely. The Auxili ary Institutional Services bud get will provide $400,000 to fi nance the Duplicating Depart- . ment. , . .... . ..w At the time of construction, approximately $1,200,000 will be available for the construc tion. Bowles said Thursday that the Campus Stores Depart ment hopes to borrow the re maining $255,000 from the Uni versity to prevent having to go elsewhere for the money at a time when interst rates are so high. Theta's Turn Full Sorority Kappa Alpha Theta will be come UNC's eighth full-fledged sorority this weekend. The Delta Xi chapter, colo nized last spring, will become the 92nd chapter in the na tional organization with the installation of 17 charter members. The three-day program will begin with a Loyalty Service at 7 p.m. Friday and a coffee hour at the Theta House, 227 E. Rosemary St. Initiation will take place Saturday at 2 p.m. with the installation at 7 p.m. at the Ranch House. Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter son, Dean of Women Kather ine Carmichael, Assistant Dean Mrs. Larry McDevitt, and Rev. and Mrs. Vance Barron will be the special guests at the service. A model chapter meeting will be held Sunday morning and a tea from 2 to 4 p.m. at the Morehead building. The national president, Mrs. Harold G. Edwards, and two vice-presidents, Mrs. John McCelvey and Mrs. Frederick Hunt, will be on hand for the ceremonies. ' Theta, founded at De Pauw University, Green Castle, In diana, was the first sorority bearing a Greek letter name. Total membership is well over 60,000. Art Show Opens Kemp's Lot will become an open-air gallery on Friday and Saturday where student artists may offer works for sale, due to the efforts of a graduate art student Don Evans. Evans said he asked the Art League to sponsor a mid winter show, since the spring Ackland art show was the only outlet for student work and offered no opportunity to sell canvases. Evans said that Art League members can enter free and all other artists may pay a one dollar entry fee tice m 2 if I fainted aero;s his We;juns. Thus the problem is not how to ban dage the wounds received in battle, but rather how to get the opponents to gelh?r long enough to fight. There's even an admittedly remotJ possibility that th2 brave young war riors might decide to throw down their weapons and go on to more interesting pastimes. During the course of our survey, we have been offered siveral solutions to this campus problem. One gentleman suggested a "singles party" where no dates are allowed that is, not before everyone has a chance to meet. This would give the coed a chance to let the guys know she's interested CAROLINA'S Bunting (31) and Clark (43) team up for the first time in varsity competition last night against Clemson. The big sophs provided much of the needed rebounding strength in UNC's first basketball game of the season. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan YMCA Will Hold Handcrafts Bazaar Unusual and unique gifts will be available for UNC stu dents to purchase this year at the YMCA-YWCA Internation al Handicrafts Bazaar today through Sunday in the Y building. Items on sale include tapes tries from Equador, Eskimo soapstone carvings, East Afri can wood carvings, and Peru vian ponchos from Columbia. In its third year, the bazaar promises to be "the best yet". Chairman Sharon Finch of Thomasville says that au thenic world - wide products will be included from native craft guilds, Peace Corps Al liance for Progress and other ' sources. The bazaar was started two years ago by Norman Gus taveson, secretary of the Y, as a money making project. This year's items have been hand selected from buyers by YWCA President Peggy Paul, senior from Jacksonville, Fla. . She spent a weekend in New York last spring purchasing $10,000 worth of items. A new feature this year is a children's room with a varie ty of unusual toys. There will also be a coffee house with teas, coffees, and pastries from all over the world. A unique feature will be individual carvings by Issac Olatunde of Ibadon, Nigeria, including handcarved chess sets, vintage scenes and na tivity scenes which have nev er before been displayed in the United States. Also featured are ponchos, rugs and slippers from Peru. There will be authentic Es kimo crafts from Canada in cluding Eskimo dolls and Kwakiutl Indian prints. Wood carvings from East Africa, handpainted B a t i c and not all dated up for three months, : without having to scream a greeting at them from tcross campus. The fellows would have a chance to see th'.ir counterparts as somLthing be sides identical peas in a pod. Perhaps another solution is a date bureau such as the one set up by Scott College where each participant fills out an information card to be kept on fib at the respective dormitories. This is a step better than a blind date because the card not only asks what type date a girl prefers, but also the brand of liquor sha likes. And of course, there are always the . mixers combo parties, picnics, and re ceptions about which not too many people are wildly enthuiiastic. They A0M? (wall hangings) from India, home industries from Scot land and handicrats from El Salvador are among included items. There will also be North Carolina and Georgia moun tain crafts and woodworking crafts from Berea . College as well as crafts from Philip pines, Japan, India, Mexico, Italy, and France. The bazaar will be open from 7-12 p.m. Friday, 2-12 Saturday, and 1-10 p.m. Sun day. Mexicans Visit Eight Mexican medical stu dents, who have been talking with campus leaders in sem inars here since Monday, will hear Fred Gill, Director of the Institute of Latin Ameri can Studies, discuss U. S. -Mexican relations at 11 a.m. today in 115 Murphy Hall. The Mexican student lead ers have been here this week as guests of the YMCA-YWCA Foreign Students Committee on a month's tour of the U.S. financed by the State Depart ment. All are from the University of Michoacan, Mexico, and were chosen for their scholar ship and extra - curricular leadership. Accompanied by State De partment translators, they talked with Student Body President, and other Student Government officials this week. For two days they were guests in the UNC Medical School. A forum on civil rights at the Wesley Foundation at 2 p.m. today will wind up the Mexicans' five-day program at UNC. All interested per sons are invited to attend the discussion might work better if dormitories fol lowed the fratirnity-sorority pattern of week-night mixers, inviting different girls' dorms and arranging blind dates. However, it is our contention that these activities, although undoubtedly somewhat helpful, have more place in a junior high school than on a college campus. The dating problem here is an individual one and must be solved by each student for himself. Carolina gentlemen must first be willing and able to look beyond a girl's exterior, stereotyped as it may be. Striking up a conversation in class, fellows, is an excellent way to meet a girl and you might be surprised how well it rurns out. And you girls must be willing to 76-65 Victory Too CooF Heel 7TM1 r nay By SANDY TREADWELL DTH Sports Editor The UNC basketball Tar Heels defeated the Clemson Tigers last night by a 76-65 score. It was the type of game Housing Changes MnfflgStatemem is Two student leaders issued statements Thursday concerning the housing changes which begin in the fall. The complete statements of Student Body Vice President Bill Purdy and Bob Travis, administra tive assistant to Bob Powell, follow: BOB TRAVIS: President Powell is at this time in West Point, New York, representing the Uni versity at a conference. I have been in touch with Bob over this proposed housing change, and he is fully aware of its consequences. He was working with the Ad ministration on this problem before he left, and will con tinue to do so when he re turns. Let us first make it clear that this proposal concerning Joyner, Conner, Craige, Alex ander and Carr residence halls is not a new one, and President Powell was work ing on this housing proposal and others before his depar ture. He will continue to represent the students' inter ests in this matter, and will press for an equitable agree ment on the housing situa tion with the Administration. I would like to take this opportunity, however, to ex press both Bob Powell's and my personal regret that a variety of rash statements and irrational conclusions ' Continued On Page 6 A : x Vvt f-"" V : A4Sr jA aA-- A ' Ar On . i i t N - ..-w-w- I N - - S J Wmi.1- , , ,,. m l , . Lt . ,r , ... J A DECORATING PARTY? Yes, the Dec. 4, 2-6 p.m. Refreshments will be Christmas season is finally here, and every- served. Help make your student union beau one is invited to the campus-wide Christmas tiful. decorating party to be held in GM Sunday, A 1 1 that's to be expected in a sea son opener. Almost from start to finish both teams played unsure and rigid basketball. After the game, Coach Dean Smith said "We'll take t h e BILL PURDY: It is my opinion that the ad ministration was forced into making a regretable but neces sary decision about moving un dergraduate men from Wolfe Residence College. The state ceiling of $3,000 per student in Resident Hall construction costs prevented the adminis tration from building the planned women's residence hall. The objective of increased coed enrollment at Carolina is wise and beneficial to the stu dent body. Wolfe Residence College, under the circum stances, is the logical area for moving in women students. However, I take exception with the implementation of this policy in regards to graduate students and highway patrol men replacing undergraduate residents in Alexander. In the first place, I am appalled that students being directly affect ed by the administrative deci sion were not consulted and worse, not even notified. My feeling is that undergraduate housing should assume top pri ority. It is hardly fair that un dergraduate men in Alexan- Continued On Page 6 give a littb if you expect to get dates. Try smiling and speaking to the next 10 guys you pass; we guarantee you'll get some kind of response. And you, too, might try talking to the boys in your classes. This survey has shown that many girls, especially freshmen, are unhappy with the present social life at Carolina. Just remember, fellows, dating a Carolina girl is much more convenient, and contrary to popular opinion, less expensive than importing femmes fa tales. After you try, it a couple of times, you may find the Christmas spirit is softening the cold hearts of Carolina coeds and they're not such bad dates after all. .Rag9 win, but we can play a lot better." There weren't any individu al stars because it wasn't that kind of a game, but Larry Miller and Dick Grubar did more than anyone to decide the outcome. The game was broken open during two minutes of play in the second half when Carolina, and particularly Grubar and Miller, displayed the type of basketball of which the team is capable. 7 With the clock showing 9:55 remaining in the game and the score Carolina 54 - Clemson 49, Tom Gauntlett fed Larry Mill er under the basket and the big forward fought his way past Randy Mahaffey for two points. Mahaffey fouled Mill er on the way up. It was his fifth, and, all at once, Clem son's rebounding strength was taken away. Moments later the Tar Heels sophomore quarterback Dick Grubar hit a jump shot from the center of the key. Then, with Clemson still un able to score, Miller hit from the right corner. The big forward added two more points to Carolina's side of the scoreboard on a tap-in with 7:19 remaining, and the shot gave his team a 13-point lead. Moments later Jim Suther land, Clemson's primary scor ing threat, fouled out of the game, and Carolina rode their lead all the way into the dress ing room. The game began with the cheers of 8,500 enthusiastic fans in Carmichael Auditori um greeting the appearance of the '66-'67 version of Caro lina Basketball. The Tar Heels' big man, Rus ty Clark, scored the first two points of the ball game with a layup under the basket. For the next 12 minutes Car olina's scores came painfully slowly. Continued On Page 5

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