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. ? I . n r u trials Dept. ox 870 hl Hill. M.c VP Meets Monday The University Party will hold its convention Monday night at 7 in Carroll Hall, in stead of Sunday, as was ori ginally planned. The change was made in consideration of conflicts with residence hall activities and post - rush activities in t h e fraternities. 7 51.1 Free Combo Party The Dee Jays will provide the music for a combo partv tonight at th Naval Armorv from until 12: CO. Admission is fre to students with I.D.'s The South't Largest College Neuspaper Volume 74, Number 101 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 18. 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 1 Sjrichbaum Seeks USC Falls. 80-55 Vice Presidency George Krichbaum, a legis lator from Lower Quad, an nounced Friday that he will be seeking the Student Party no mination for student body vice president. The American Studies maj or has served on both the rules and the judicial com mittees of legislature. He introduced the bill which led to the establishment of George Krichbaum Parldng Data Compilation Nearing End By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer There are 2727 parking spaces for students cars on campus. There are 7532 students' cars registered with the Dean of Men's office. This leaves some 4800 cars with no place to park. Wilber Smith and Associ ates, a firm specializing in parking problems on college campuses, is analyzing this and similar problems trying to come up with some workable solution. At the direction of the Traf fic and Safety Committee, the firm is in the process of anal yzing the present situation, rzcognizing the problems and making specific suggestions for improvement. "We all know that a serious traffic problem exists," said Alan Geiger of the University Planning Office, "but we don't know exactly what it is, or how to solve it. That's why Wilber Smith's firm was hired to handle it for us." At a Traffic and Safety Committee meeting last week, Donald Ingold of the consult ing firm reported that the data from a parking survey last fall was "nearly collected." "In about a month," accord ing to Geiger, the data should be completely compiled and the problems should be de fined. "The company was held up somewhat because some students when filling out the survey questionaire,- would put local address as "Joe's Trailer Court" or. some such thing. "They had to return these questionnaires for us to ex plain where these places were," Geiger said. - The parking and traffic con sultants will divide up the campus into "demand zones" and determine what time of day each is most crowded. In gold said that by "late April" a preliminary report contain ing suggestins for concrete ac tion will be submitted to "the University. Geiger expects this April re port "will be quite conclu sive" and will offer a number of alternatives to the present parking problems. A major difficulty involves the high cost of building and maintaining a parking lot. Though it varies from place to place around the country, parking lots cost "almost $2, 000 per space to construct," said Geiger. If the lot is to be paid for over a 40-year period, mainte nance and construction aver ages to about $30 per month per space Room rent An a residence hall is computed to about $1 per day, or $30 per month. And where are those 4800 cars with no place to park on campus? Geiger is "sure that they must be on the streets of Chapel Hill." Dean of Men William G. extra cars are. "Ask anybody who lives in the Chapel Hill ' area," he said. 'They'll tell you where the extra cars are located." ; . 1 ; 1 ' " ' 'MP s. ... - - the student suDreme court. Ho also has introduced legislation, which is still in committee, which would limit the campus code to the University com munity" and another still in committee which defines the rights of defendants before student courts. Krichbaum was a leader in the fight against the Yack coupon system and a princi pal in calling for a referen dum to determine student opin ion on the Vietnam war. "If elected, one of my primp objectives will be to establish communication onc again with thf student body," Krichbaum said. ' "It is my firm conviction thata legislature is becoming out of touch with student opin ion and needs," he said. Krichbaum called for a "complete system of reform" in the legislative setup. He said this would include using legislative aides, legislative reports and teachins to ex plain the legislature to stud ents. "I want to take the stigma of pettiness out of legisla ture," he said, "and make the system functional." Krichbaum, a member of the SP advisory board and chair man of the platform review ing committee, said he would work with the electd presi dent "in a strong attempt to put an end to the u?e of erty and financial aid to car ry on private business and private affairs." IsThisAnyWdy To Run An Airline? LOS ANGELES (AP) What happens to a steward- g ess wearing an inflatable bra when the cabin of her jet plane is depressurized? x Just what you're thinking, Herman. Inflation. As Los Angeles Times Columnist Matt Weinstock told li ft yesterday, this set of potentially explosive circum- : stances occurred recently on a Los Angeles-bound :: flight. He gallantly withheld the identity of girl and air- :j line. g "When she had, ahem, expanded to about size 44" Weinstock wrote, "She frantically sought a solution, g Somehow she found a woman passenger who had a small :; hatpin and stabbed herself strategically. "However, another passenger, a man of foreign des- cent, misunderstood. He thought she was trying to com- :: mit hara-kiri the hard way. He grappled with her, try- J ing to prevent her from punching the hatpin in her chest, i "Order was quickly restored, but laughter still is j: echoing along the airlines." : Weinstock says it really happened. Good thing they don't make those bras puncture- proof. "ft.!. Committee Says Kmowm WASHINGTON (AP) A special house subcommittee questioned CIA officials yes terday and then broke the us ual secrecy rule to announce that "every administration" . since 1952 has known of .the spy agency's subsidy of the National Student Association. The House Armed Services CIA Subcommittee issued the statement as reports whipped through the capital over who knew and who didn't know about the politically hot CIA undercover payments to t h e nation's biggest college stud ent organization. One source confirmed that the senate group which super vises CIA activities had known about the payments for some time. This Senate committee re portedly has been pressing CIA officials to transfer some oth er expenditures td depart ments where they would show up in the public budget and Jivoid embarrassing disclosur es such as the CIA-NSA finan cial link. Included in these are CIA funds being used in pacifica tion and rehabilitation p r o grams in South Vietnam. Meanwhile the NSA's gov erning board was nearing a showdown on whether and how to remain in operation. The group is considering giv ing up its overseas activities in the belief that its representa tives will be viewed hence forth as spies. The 10 - man Supervisory . ' : .. - 'v ,- V1. ."e South Carolines Frank Standard goes up for a shot over Larry Miller during last nighfs North-South doubleheader only to be found by Rusty Clark. JJPI Telephoto by Jerry Huff : Of Long Board abruptly shifted its meeting from one Washington notel room to another one down the hall after fears were expressed that the first room was bugged. An informant said the NSA officers were convinced the original meeting room was rigged with secret listening devices. One student leader accused the CIA of using threats of "character assassination" in an effort to keep NSA lead ers from acknowledging that the organization had been receiving CIA funds since 1952. Philip Werdell, editor of the student magazine "The Mod erator" who is acting as a press liaison man for the NSA Superfisory Board, told news men: "The CIA has intimidated them by means of threats ranging from character assas sination to putting pressure upon 'the establishment' to reject them from responsible roles in American society." While Werdell was denoun cing the CIA, the House Sub committee was praising the big intelligence agency in a statement after questioning CIA Director Richard Helms. The subcommittee statement was issued by Chairman L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C, and the ranking Republican, Rep. William Bates of Massachus etts. It said the CIA aid was giv- en at the students' request "to It vS ' " i - Powell it "- . Jx a Stadeiit w By HUNTER GEORGE DTH Staff Writer Student Body President Bob Powel said Friday he was act ing in a student government capacity on his trip to Wash ington, D. C, last month. Besides meeting with Secre tary of State Dean Rusk on the Vietnam war, Powell also attended two conferences concerning the University's participation in a mental health study and a program to increase student influence on national political decisions. Powell made this statement in an effort to "clear up an misunderstanding" about, his CIA Aid Time 9 counter Communist attemDts to take over foreign student organizations by making it possible for American students holding independent views to participate in international meetings." "The program of financial assistance to the National Student Association has been known to every administra tion since 1952," the statement added. 6NSA Room Says UNC's By ERNEST ROBL DTH Staff Writer Meetings of the National Stu dent Association advisory board currently meeting in Washington probing ties be tween NSA and the Central Intelligence Agency were under constant surveillance by government agents, a partici pant told the Daily Tar Heel yesterday. Eric Van Loon, UNC NSA Coordinator and a member of the 10 member NSA advisory board said, "It was a fantas tic experience finding our selves subjected to these (spy) methods." Van Loon said that the pres- ence of snoopers had forced 1 si - s Claims trip, which has been widely criticized. During his five-day stay in the Capital, Powell met with a representative of the National Student Association to make arrangements for - a study of student stress and suicides, which will be conducted this spring in conjunction with the National Association of Men tal Health. The study involves a $60,000 grant to be shared by 28 schools in the Southeast, and it "involves a fantastic amount of planning," Powell said. The second meeting he at tended involved a plan to en able college students to be heard on national matters such as the draft, 18 year-olds voting, grants and loans, and other matters of interest to students. "The purpose of this meet ing," Powell said, "was to bring together the heads of several student bodies to study ways of making the student voice more influential." Powell also clarified his rea sons for submitting a requisi tion for funds after he had al ready made the trip. He said he and presidential aide Eric Van Loon drove up to Washington in Powell's car, but that Van Loon had to come back to Chapel Hill be- B ugge Van the group to change the hotel in which thay were meeting. He told of one member of the board returning to the room in which meetings had been held and finding a man rum aging through the waste basket, examining the paper scraps in it. He also said that a camera crew was observed on a roof across the street from tha hotel in which the NSA group was meeting. "We had been warned that the NSA building was bugged, and we always went under the assumption that our meetings were bugged and our phones tapped. Van Loon said that investi gations had shown that for some years as much as 80 per leels .Record By DENNIS SANDERS DTH Sports Writer CHARLOTTE There is something captivating about two basketball teammates who fully complement each other with their respective styles of play and their un selfish attitudes. And that is what Bob Lewis and Larry Miller, North Caro lina's "L&M" boys, did here tonight captivate 11,600 Char lotte Coliseum spectators as they combined their talents to lead the Tar Heels over South Carolina. That the final score was a devastating 80-55 , and that this was the opening game of the ninth annual North-South Doubleheader, are unimport ant. What is important, then, is that the Tar Heels solidified their hold on the Atlantic Coast Conference's top spot, t running their record to a per fect 10-0, and showed their critics if there are any left now that they can display awesome basketball power when they so desire. Lewis, the forward-turned-guard, scored 23 points and Miller, a junior forward who drives the lane like a freight JLnp Matter Bob Powell fore they concluded their busi ness. Powell let Van Loon drive the car back, and he himself took an airplane later. The plane ticket amounted to $20 and Powell submitted a requisition when he returned to Treasurer Don McPhaul, asking that the money be tak en from the president's travel fund (about $200). McPaul presented the requi sition to the Finance Commit tee, which denied the request Thursday, ostensibly on the grounds that it was submitted late. Asked whether he thought the Finance Committee's de cision may have been a re flection of personal disagree ment with his motives in con ferring with Rusk, Powell said he did not know, "but it's quite possible." Loon cent of the NSA budget had come to the organization through CIA fronts. ' He said that the NSA is taking a very firm stand on breaking all ties with the CIA, and that all current funds had been frozen while the investi gations were continuing. Van Loon said that there was no basis to speculations that NSA would fold following the current crisis. Van Loon said that the stu dent organization had receiv td funds from the intelligence agency as late as the current academic year and that about four to five percent of this year's funds had come from the CIA. . t . j L l)Lj a Puigli train, added 20 in leading North Carolina to its 18th win against two losses. They were the only Tar Heels to score in the double figures, but they were so flaw less in their display of basket ball talent that they relent lessly drove in points when South Carolina tried to play catch-up. For 10 minutes, it was a basketball game, with the Tar Heels leading by 12-11 and failing to penetrate the South Carolina zone with cold out side shooting. Then the Tar Heels went to work, almost as if they were waiting for the 10 minutes to click off before they began showing the brilliance that carried them to a high na tional ranking earlier in the season. Rusty Clark hit a tip-in to make it 14-11 and seconds la terwith 9:30 left Miller hit . his first outside jumper and North Carolina began pulling away. With 4:33 left in the first half which solely belonged to Lewis, who scored 16 of his points then reserve Tom Gauntlett came in to hit two jumpers from left field, and UNC pulled to 24-17. It was 35-22 at the half, North Carolina, and then Mil ler decided to take a turn. Just as teammate Lewis had completely dominated the opening half. Miller ran the second, scoring 16 of his 20 and charging the boards like a . . . well, a runaway freight train, which is about how he drives. "This is one of our best games, the best defensively of the season," said UNC Coach Dean Smith. "Miller domi nated the boards in the sec ond half (he finished with 11 rebounds) and Lewis . . . well, Lewis is going to play the best ball of his career down the stretch of the season," Smith aded. Miller's two free throws ' with 18:28 left in the game pushed the Carolina bulge to 19 at 41-22, and when re serve Gerald Tuttle was alone and hit a jump shot with 7:59 left, UNC doubled the score at 70-35. Even though Smith pulled Lewis and Miller two minutes v if FEBRUARY DAFFODILS took advantage of the early warm spell during mid-week in the UNC arb along with an affec tionate conple in the top of the picture. Both couple and flow ers fared for the worse at the hands of Friday's downright nasty chilling ; rain. DTH Photo by Jock Lauerer ACO en earlier, and even though South Carolina outscored the Tar Heel reserves 20-10 the re mainder of the game, the is sue had long been decided. '.South Carolina is better than they showed tonight," Smith said, but that was little consolation for Frank Mc Guire's Gamecocks, now 11-5 overall and 5-3 in the ACC Gary Gregor, a hulking 6-7, 235-pounder, led the Game- I Statistics UNC FG FT T Lewis .. - 10 3-3, 23 Miller 6 8-9 20 Bunting 3 2-3 8 Clark . ' .. 3 0-0 6 Grubar 3 0-16 Gauntlett ....... 3 0-0 6 Tuttle 1 1-2 3 Brown 1 H) 2 Fletcher 2 0-1 4 Bostick ... 0 2-4 2 Moe 0 0-0 0 Frey 0 0-0 0 ,32 16-33 80 USC FG FT T Thompson 3 1-2 7 Standard 1 0-0 2 Gregor 4 5-5 13 Burkholder ..2 0-0 4 Harlicka 4 1-2 9 Salvadori 2 2-2 6 Gorgant 0 2-2 2 Felter : 4 2-2 10 Womack 1 04 2 20 13-15 f3 'AV.W ..v.. cocks with 13 points, and Jack Thompson ' added nine. Bill -Bunting had eight for North Carolina, while Clark and Dick Grubar a soph guard laden with keeping Thompson's 14-point average down and succeeding by hold ing Thompson to one point while defeasing him had six each. Suicides Told -'- LOS ANGELES (UPI)' Bad news. About 1,000 Ameri tan college , students will commit suicide during the year reports Edwin Schneid mann, a physician and direct tor of the Los Angeles Suicide Center. , .4 is..
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 18, 1967, edition 1
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