U!C Library Serials Dm Box 870 C. Yack Queen Contest Organizations Interested ia entering a girl in the Yackety Yack Queen contest can pick op applications taday at tle Graham Memorial Informa tion desk. The completed ap plications should be turned in to the Yack box at the GM desk by 5 Wednesday. Feb. 22nd. Selective Service Test tiveA?lCtati02? 'r the Selec tive Service Test must be In tbe mall by today, for the Mtrch 11 test. Application available fa , 10nf 'To JFrifr? TFeM Is Better Than To Rule9 Volume 74, Number 94 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY FEBRUARY 10, 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 Florida Coed Is Cause Celebre For Nude Phoio a vf M flfl GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP) Pretty Pam Brewer was a cause celebre on the University of Florida cam pus Thursday, and not just because her 38-25-38 charms were displayed nude in an off-campus humor magazine. She is the center, not only of a full-length gate fold picture on a white persian rug, but also of a rising controversy over student rights and university con trol. "It could be another Berkeley," said Andy Moor, and editor on the campus newspaper Alligator. Stan Laughlin, an associate law professor, agreed. "The whole area of student's relationship to the uni versity has become increasingly sharp in the past few years the whole idea of individual rights and a Overtime Sees UNC Nip Wake By SANDY TREADWELL DTH Sports Editor If the pressure is more than, unbearable and the baskets vital, call on a senior from Washington named Bob Lewis. The Tar Heels needed eight points to defeat Wake Forest in overtime, 75-73, last night. Six of them came from Lewis' calm hands. He began the five-minute overtime with a foul shot which inched the Tar Heels ahead 68-67. He added two more on a pass from Larry Miller, an other two from the foul line, and one more with 17 seconds remaining. Wake came down court and Continued on Page 5 Convention rule of law. The students are concerned." It was the banner of student rights on the Univer sity of California campus at Berkeley that started the years of turmoil and focused national attention on the changing university. In Berkeley's case, the spe cific case was as unlikely as a nude picture: the right to use four-letter words. Pam, who got her parents' permission, posed for the picture knowing that it probably would make her a public figure in more ways than one. The coed whose uncovered form was displayed in the previous issue was put on probation by the facul ty disciplinary committee. An editorial in the maga zine said it would challenge any charges made a saints her. Pam, an 18-year-old sophomore from Springfield, Va., gets a public hearing before the committee to morrow in the tiny board of regents room, which seats only 50. "I'm afraid there's going to be a mob scene," said Moor. "Thousands of students want to go, but the committee refused to move to a bigger room. Some of the students told me, 'I'm going to get in regard less.' " The local board of the American Civil Liberties Union examined the picture and decided to enter the case on Pam's behalf. "It's not a suggestive picture," said Laughlin, a member of the board. "She's covered in all the ap propriate spots." The black and white picture, spread across two pages on the inside of the magazine Charlatan, show ing Pam lying prone on a rug. Her back is arched enough to display her breasts. There are eight other pictures of her on adjoining pages. In each, she is fully clothed. Pam's lawyer, Selig Golden, advised her to make no statement. "Our position is that the university has no authori ty to govern her activities so long as they are law ful, particularly when they occur off-campus," Gold en said. He also said the charge against her, "such indis cretion or appropriate conduct so as to warrant the attention of the university," was vague. Date Set By SP .Moore Asks Priority .ror ihdMcatioii Jtmiku. The Student Party should hold its party convention on Monday, Feb. 20, party advis ory board chairman Myles Eastwood said Thursday. The date must be approved by the party at its meeting Sunday night at 7 in Gerrard Hall. The convention is , held to nominate candidates for all campus-wide posts. The University Party has not announced a date for its convention. Any Student Party member who has paid dues outside -party meetings must have at tended a party meeting this semester by Feb. 12 in order to be eligible to votd at the convention. Candidates selected at the convention must pay candi dates fees upon nomination. '. Fees are $5 for president, vice president, secretary and treasurer; $4 for all other campus - wide posts, including senior class officers, NSA del egates, the president of the CAA and Daily Tar Heel edi tor; and $3 for legislators. At Sunday's meeting, the party will consider requiring cash retainers for candidates in campus-wide races and op- ' --i..rr?-1 t I : . 1 ( A . '-!' ill ii mmm- mm- . . - I." KWhy' f t f VuuiMiui un 1 - a.- - " r ' r'f ........ '-mwwf . f i """"" " - rr; Uy h ri-i - - in - ----- j--;-ir-n-i i r i .1 -T ri T-iiflfmtf mi ir im-ir ninHrtfrrrii irrnamiiin ii'ii -r- T m t miiiii i n 1 1 m WINTER AGAIN It came to Chapel HE1 yesterday out of a steel-grey sky and settled quietly over the town. Dean C. O. Cathey con templates the white mantle over the Old Well from the north door of South Building. Like a photographer from Sports Illustrated said yesterday viewing big falling flakes, "Man, it's snowing footballs!" DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Junior Weatherman Specializes In Snow By DAN GIBSON Special to the DTH -.The best weatherman in North Carolina may well be an amateur. He's Jeff Warner, a 20 - year - old junior from Greensboro, majoring in ge ography here. Jeff's record bears out his talent for accurate forecasts. In 1965 and 1966 he was cor rect on 96 per cent of his fore- tional retainers of legislative casts. The national average is candidates. 87 per cent. Details of fae retainer sys- So far in 1967, Jeff has been tern will be announced at the right on 98 per cent of his party meeting. forecasts. if : r But Jeff really shines when it comes to forecasting snow. He hasn't missed a forecast of snow accumulation in five years. "If I say 'accumula tion', it had better come, or I'll just go hide someplace." When Jeff began making his forecasts in .high school, he predicted all three of the Wed nesday snow storms in March, 1960. Jeff's accuracy is even more amazing when you consider what a weatherman has to do to make a forecast. "Some people think all we do is look at the barometer to see if the little witch has come out, or if the little boy is chasing the girl. Actually, we go through a list of 98 standardized items to make one forecast," he says. "You don't have to have a lot of fancy instruments to be a weatherman, but you do have to take a lot of things into account to the best of your ability to make that one forecast." If the hard - working weath erman misses one part, he ' has missed the whole forecast. He can get everything right, but if, for instance, he misses did you ever miss that one?' Bug, bug, bug, it's the weath erman's dilemma. But you get used to it. "Really though, when peo ple trust you and you miss one, you feel a lot worse than they do. People don't get mad, they're just disappointed." Jeff especially remembers one forecast he missed when he was in high school. "A front was coming in, it was cold, the clouds were right, everything was perfect for snow. I told my friends that it would snow Sunday, and that we'd probably be out of school Monday. "Well, Saturday night came no front. Sunday no front. Monday came, the temperature hit 70 degrees, and there wasn't a cloud in the sky. I really dreaded go ing to school that day. "I have that forecast down in my record books as black Saturday'." Jeff was born in Boston, the home of another weather fore caster "The Old Farmer's Al manac." Jeff says the Alma nac is fairly accurate, "But people foreet that Hipp aim a. the temperature by more than nacs are made out by meteo- five degrees, he's all wrong." rologists, and I'd like to make Jeff has been weatherman that well known." for his high school, a radio Meteorology began as a hob station, and now he is the as- by for Jeff, but now he plans sistant in charge of forecast- to make it his profession. Even ing for the UNC Meteorologi- as an amateur he has a very RING TIME ad if yoa dsa't have your's yet, today's the last day you can order from the booth, (warm and inside) at the Y-building until 4 p.m. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer cal Bureau under Dr. David Basile. A weatherman's life can be full of trouble even if he is just an amateur.' "People don't remember the 273 days straight you were right," he says. "If you miss one day, there goes all the glory. Everybody's cutting you for the next ten years. 'How professional attitude about the science. He commented on scientific attempts to control the weath er. "Dealing with the weather these God-created forces and trying to make it rain, and snow or make a front come through is far out in the fu ture, and it's very difficult. RALEIGH (AP) Gov. Dan Moore Thursday asked the 1967 North Carolina General Assembly to approve record expenditures for education, in cluding sweeping pay raises for public school, community college and university person nel. . .::,v;'.'; --:' In his state v of the state message to a joint House-Senate session, Moore called for $784 million to finance the public school ; system in the next two years, plus millions more for the community col leges and the ' institutions .of higher learning. The governor also voiced stong opposition to liquor by the drink, but said if the leg islators could legalize brown bagging without affecting , state control of whiskey "Jie ? would support such a move. Moore also asked the 170 legislators to: -. , DENY separate universi ty status for East Carolina College. CRACKDOWN on the Ku Klux Klan. PERMIT the voters of North Carolina to decide on a constitutional amendment al lowing the General Assembly to set a minimum voting age possibly 18. GRANT a 5 per cent sal ary hike for all full-time state employes subject to the Per sonnel Act. SHARPLY increase the number and effectiveness of highway safety programs. It was education, however, where the governor focused the spotlight. "Education," he said, "is the first concern and respon sibility of this administra tion." He spelled out in dollar marks the cost for public schools, but did not go into details on the additional costs for community colleges and in stitutions of higher learning. He said the $784 million rec ommended for public schools represented an increase of $130.4 million over the 1965-67 budget. Much of the additional mon ey would go for pay raises with public school teachers getting a 17 1-2 per cent hike over the next two years. It would oush the minimum . salary for beginning teachers to $5,000 a year, a goal long sought by Tar Heel educators. Moore also called for free textbooks for all high school students who now pay a $5 fee. Another $400,000 would be ear marked for an in-depth study of public kindergartens and a survey of all aspects of the public school system. The governor will go into more of the money details whn he presents his budget message to the Central Assem bly Monday night. In the community college area Moore asked for a two year pr cent pay boost for teaching personnel: the estab lishment of four new branches, and the conversion of Wayne Technical Institute to a com munity college. University and college in structors. Moorp said, should he granted a 7 to 9 per cent psv raise in fiscal 1967-68 and n additional 4 per cent boost in the next 12 months. The expenditures for higher pducation will show p 39.5 per cent hike over the Dast two years, meaning millions and millions of additional dollars. Moore said that appropria tion for hieher education had iumned 92.5 per cent since the 1963-biennium. Continued on Page 6 h0 ; i ' "wfi- s, 1 '..rTvV in . : - S , ,iT.: " :- mMJsAi'iim Ill mm,m mi munn "ii mm mil inn". i n i mr' in 3 OVER THE TOP for one of last night's precious points, Tom Gauntlett fingers a shot away over the hapless hantl :Of a tongue biting Wtke defender. UNCs 75-73 deliver ance after a first overtime reminded Tar Ile el fans all too vividly of Tuesday night's near-debacle with Virginia. See story on page 5. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Campus Briefs Placement Service Will Discuss Jobs The Placement Service will hold a summer job seminar at 4 p.m. Wednesday, February 15 in 105 Gardner Hall. Students representing vari ous types of summer jobs will discuss their employment ex periences. Further information pertinent to summer iob seek ing will be given by the Place ment Service. Among the companies and agencies who will interview on campus for summer employ ees are the following: Fieldcrest Mills Feb. 15 Travelers Insurance Co. Feb. 16 Monsanto Feb. 20 Kurt Salmon Associates Feb. 21 IBM Feb. 22 Seaboard Citizens National Bank Feb 24 Prudential Insurance Co. Feb. 23 North Carolina National Bank -Feb. 27-28 U. S. Naval Research Lab. Feb. 23 S. S. Kresge Feb.. 24 Chemical Abstracts Service Feb. 28 Vick Chemical Co. Feb. 22 23 Weathermen Goof In Snow Prediction "Some chance of snow flur ries, gradually changing to rain during the night." That's what the early reports said Thursday. But typically unpredictable Chapel Hill weather pulled an other quick one and dumped two or more inches of the white stuff on UNC, catching some dismayed students with their boots in the shoe shop, and no snow tires. Snow began to fall here about 1:45 p.m. yesterday, and continued into the night, with partial clearing expected Fri day. The temperature should rise to thawing level in the 40's Friday. Hazardous driving warnings were out Thursday 'night for the Raleigh-Durham -area with predictions of sleet and freez ing rain adding to driver's snow woes. By mid-afternoon Thursday reports of snow ranged as far south as Augusta, Ga. Asheville and Winston-Sa lem reported no snow Thurs day afternoon but expected flurries last night. No Invitation Needed For Rush Says IFC Sterling Phillips, IFC rush chairman, said Thursday that all interested in a fraternity who did not receive rush in vitations should go through rush anyway. Freshmen rushees who did not receive invitations are asked to first check with Lar ry McDevitt, assistant dean of men. "The individual fraternities have issued lists of those they plan to rush. It's quite possi ble that a student was inad vertently omitted from the in vitation lists," he said. Students who received invi tations belonging to someone else may pick up their own invitations at the Dean's of fice. Rush begins Sunday after-' . noon from 2-6. Monday and Tuesday evenings, rush hours are 7-10; Wednesday evening, 7-9:30; and Thursday 7-9. Strict silence ends Friday at noon.