Top Tournament Seeding Regular - Season Title? In Balance As Meets evils Relive Old Times 9 D By DENNIS SANDERS DTH Sports Writer Ironic, That is the best way, the only way, to describe it. First place in the Atlantic Coast Con ference, solely in possession of North Carolina since the long season began, hangs in the balance of the annual grudge match with Duke this afternoon at 1:30 in Carmichael. Their records both Carolina's 20-4 slate and Duke's 16-6 mark will be meaningless when Dean Smith's Tar Heels and Vic Bubas' Blue Devils re live old times on the court. It is that kind of rivalry, with this match on regional television. Carolina is still No. 1 in the ACC, their 11-2 record overshadowing Duke's second-place 9-2 record. But the Blue Devils cancelled a series with South Carolina, play only 12 conference games, and will win the regular-season Honor Council Meeting All students interested in running for Honor Council must come to an orientation meeting Monday at 5 p.m. in Roland Paker II. Interviews for endorsement will be held Tues day and Wednesday from 3 to 5:30 in Roland Parker II. title and the top seed for the ACC tour nament with a win here today. A Duke victory would give the Dur ham team a 10-2 record and .833 per centage, leaving Carolina (with a loss today) at 11-3 and .786. The Blue Devils have incentive, for they have: Turned a dismal 1-3 start into a 16-6 season with strong play, including 10 wins in their last 11 starts; Lost to North Carolina by 59-56 in an earlier Duke Indoor Stadium meet ing; Lost to Carolina twice in the same season only once in the past seven sea sons, that being in . 1964-65. And as if the rivalry itself weren't enough incentive, the Tar Heels, with a win today, would: Carry the regular-season crown and top tourney seed into the ACC meet beginning Thursday in Greensboro; ' . -Hold first place in the league after resting solidly there all season; End the regular season with a 21-4 record, the most wins in a single sea son by a Tar Heel team since the NCAA champion Heels went 32-0 in 1957, and since the 1924 Heels went 23-0 for the national title. For Carolina senior Bob Lewis, the Washington, D. C, sharpshooter, the Carmichael Auditor, where he has . Carmichzel .Auditorium, where he has displayed some of his finest basketball talents, and where he once set the single-game scoring record for an individ ual Tar Heel. It will also be the final home game for seniors Tom Gaunt lett and Mark Mirken. Lewis will carry an 18.5 average into the clash, sixth best in the conference, and Larry Miller, the forward who has devastated numerous opponents with his play this season, is hitting at a 22.4 clip third best in the ACC. In addition, Lewis needs only 24 more points to become the second highest ca reer scorer in Carolina history. He has totaled 1,688 points during his varsity career, and is currently third behind Lennie Rosenbluth (2,045) and Billy Cunningham (1,709). He has today's game and at least the opening round of the tournament to move into the No. 2 spot. Duke, a team that has won 20 or more games every year for the past six years, needs a win here and three more in the tournament to make it 20 for the seventh consecutive year. But North Carolina, with this Dean Smith's first 20-win season since he be came head coach nearly seven years ago, has tasted victory this season and obviously as the 16 teams they have played will tell you they like the taste. ' , ' And so the Tar Heel mentor will par lay the scoring averages and stellar play of the likes of Larry Miller, Bill Bunting (8.1), Dick Grubar (10.0) and Rusty Clark (14.1), his starting five with Lewis, into what he hopes will be vic tim No. 17 and win No. 21." Duke will counter with the ACC's best scorer Bob Verga and his 25.3 average, and big center Mike Lewis, a top rebounder and 16.0 scorer. Bob Riedy's 13.0 average and strong floor play from Tim Kolodziej and Ron Wen elin are additional Duke strong points. Kolodziej has scored 29 in his last two games to raise his average to 9.1, and is averaging 5.6 rebounds. Miller, meanwhile, is averaging just under, and 6-11 Clark just over, 10 re bounds per game. But the real pleasure in this North Carolina team is a lightning-quick fast The South' s Largest College Newspaper mm Volume 74, Number 115 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1967 break and a 49.7 team shooting per centage, garnished on percentages like Clark's 56.7, Grubar's 56.3, Lewis', 49.7, Miller's 51.8 and Bunting's 47.1. Verga, who poured in 39 points in Duke's most recent win, a 113-71 past ing of Wake Forest, enjoyed a good shooting night then but has not been im pressively accurate with his lanky jump shot from deep much of the season. Duke, too, has displayed a potent fast break this season, but may not get a chance to unfold it before a sell-out Carmichael crowd if Carolina as the Heels did in the first game--resort to the cautious four-corners offense. Still, the 8,500 who will see another in the long line of Duke-Carolina bat tlesunlike the thousands who camped out around Carmichael only to find tic kets sold out will see rivalry basket ball. Duke-Carolina style. Today's Weather The weather today will be increasingly cloudy and mild, with the high in the 70's. The high yesterday was 76. Founded February 23, 1893 CIA-NSA Ties Hit Students' Integrity Lowenstein Claims OF Tk:"Kr I J Ml ill' 1 tf : f 5 HAS By WAYNE HURDER DTH Staff Writer "The most damaging aspect of the CIA-NSA relationship," Al Lowenstein, said Thursday night "was that it compn mised the integrity of the stu dents." However, the "CIA has nev er tampered with the demo cratic structure of NSA," he said. 1 When Ramparts magazine revealed the relationship be tween the two, in Lowen stein's opinion, the people of NSA "acted with a great deal of dignity, courage and sobri-ety- and so did the CIA."' Lowenstein, a UNC gradu ate and president of the Na tional Student Association in 1950, appeared before the Stu dent Legislature and fielded queries on NSA-CIA relations, the war in Vietnam, and stu dent dissent. ' Concering CIA subsidits to NSA he warned against getting self - righteous in de fending the relationship or be ing overzealous in attacking the two. He Dointed out the CTA's manner of supporting the nt just rhetorical qeustions. NSA was wrong considering "The point I'd like to their purposes f,i f - f - ' . ,, fi in" CM G SI Prices I . , ... J,i I c i t f gested in a debate with mem bers of the "New Left" that they try writing the President as a means of protest. In the debate , they com plained that they had no means of communication with the power structure in the country. ., 5 1 He told them that they were wrong and that they should try letter writing. Powell and other student leaders (not necessarily the "New Left" to which Lowen stein addressed his sugges tion) .wrote the President and questioned him on the objec tives of - American - interven tion in Vietnam. der attack for posing as the w Street. See accompanying story to find out just what they mean. "Wthettter! -DTH Photo by Mike McGotvan - Lowenstein, however, thinks "the letter doesn't attempt to speak for va.v majority of-the students at any point." He then reviewed the V main points and wording in the let ter to try to prove his point and to show that the letter was the result of sincere in terest in the U.S.'s goal, and a rd. rrn too l.o Jrig .mutSi 'l'l"-IIH i ill j ... J IT in,..tl--!!r, - mmJ .. . . . . Contests, prices, ads. All of them are shouted by the signs on Frank' Committee Favors Drafting Youths stress about the letter,'1 he added, "was that it was in continued on Page 6) WASHINGTON (AP) A civilian advisory panel recom mended yesterday that young er men be inducted first be cause it said the present sys tem "has caused unnecessary The reason for supporting the group was to enable the U. S. to, have representatives at international student con ferences, which had been, ud to the time of NSA support by CIA. dominated by the Communists. Instead of telling the offi cers that the CIA was sup porting them, the intelligence agency could have done it se cretly through foundations or could have gotten the State Department or Office of Edu cation to support them, he said. Thus they could have avoid ed the trouble they are going through now. The crowd held him just a little while on the CIA - NSA relations and then he went in to the Vietnam issue full tilt. Lowenstein, a former aide to Vice President Humphrey, chided the federal govern ment for being dishonest in explaining to the American people the country's true pur poses in Vietnam. A student asked if he meant that that Humphrey in his talk here was deliberately trying to mislead the students. No, Lowenstein answered, "one' doesn't have to question the vice-president's motives." What he says, however, has to be tempered by the loyalty he promised Johnson when he accepted the vice presidency. As for Johnson, "I think that he doesn't want war . . . I think that, he wants a way out. - vn,,!n j hope.) At the end of the contest the first person to bring in jrAfMtoS a complete, correct list of the spots will win the grand prize Stttoffni- from the RECORD BAR in Chapel Hill. So, take those blinders mit past errors. off and see once again. v0u never know, some great iecords y Lowenstein first explained may be yours just for the looking. to the crowd the purpose of oh, by the way, be sure to save each picture and the the letter to ine rreswcm accompanying blank. uncertainty" for draft - age men. The panel also said students should be deferred for college but then should be subject to the draft as soon as they re ceive degrees or reach the age of 24. This would give them "equal exposure to the draft," the panel said. ' The eight-member group, set up last November by the House Armed Services Com mittee, defended the existing draft lav against many other Basketball Supporters Fizzle Out By CAROL WONSAVAGE DTH Staff Writer The pep rally in Carmichael yesterday afternoon way sup posed to start at 4:30, but by 4:15 only the team was in the big auditorium practicing by themselves. By 1:30 only 100 people had shown up. 'Don't worry," said one of changes that have been propos- the guys already , there, "ev ed recently. The panel's report was issu ed by Chairman L. Mendel Ri vers, D-S.C, of the House, Armed Services Committe. A brief statement of the panel's findings was released by Riv ers last Monday. The report of a presidential advisory commision on the draft is expected to be releas ed tonight. Public debate on the draft has been building to a climax because key sections of the Se lective Service Act expire July 1 unless Congress acts to ex tend or replace them. Rivers expects to begin hearings soon. Among suggested changes which the panel rejected were those calling for an all-volunteer armed forces, draft selec tion by lottery, and universal military training. In its full report, the panel said the younger-men-first ap proach "would generally draft men at the most favorable time in their educational or ca reer patterns. . . . between neither high school and college or career employment or im mediately after college and be fore they have acquired do m e s t i c or career commit mens." Currently, the panel noted, young men are liable for the about the Vietnam war sign- draft from age 19 to 26 Spot The Spot No. 3 Once again the DTH presents its spot-the-spot contest. All the spots will be on campus or in downtown Chapel Hill. Most of them you will have seen before. Only you won't have looked at them quite the way our photographers did. (We K,r ctndent leaders (in eluding SG president Bob Powell) and then went into a critique of American inten tions there. Asked about his role in the letter to the President, he ex plained that he had once sug- Spot No. 3 Name of person a Campus address and to age 35 if they are given a deferment. Under the suggested change, men in the 19-and 20-year-old groups would be most likely to be drafted and those ap proaching 26 would be less likely to be called. erybody is supposed to gath er at Memorial Hall and march down here. You know, crowds. The bigger they are; the longer it takes to march." Sure enough, at 4:45 those in Carmichael heard the boom ing sound of the band from around the corner, and soon the pep rally marched into view. . It was just the band. And the cheerleaders. Period. The band and cheerleaders swelled the total of people at the rally to about 150. The building was like an echo chamber, though, and the ef forts of the band and specta tors completely filled it with sound. The cheerleaders presented Coach Dean Smith with a lit tle gift of appreciation, then Bob Lewis, Tom Gauntlet, and Mark Mirken spoke, thanking the student body for their sup port this season. Those that did come cheered loudly with each speech. There were even two students on crutches there. The band played for about five more minutes, then the rally broke up at 5:00. A few spectators shot baskets on the way out. ( The band straggled back over the same route it had marched before marched all by itself. Tomorrow the team meets Duke in Carmichael Auditor ium. This is how we tell them we want them to win. By HUNTER GEORGE DTH Staff Writer Funny thing about gas. Prices go up. They come down. There are promotion games which have to be paid for. And the service stations claim they have nothing to do with the price of gasoline. That's true to a certain ex tent. But what none of the serv-. , ice station managers seem to be able to (or wants to) ex plain is why prices differ among the .same .brands . with in the same area. The Daily Tar Heel, trying to discover an answer to this discrepancy, surveyed 12 ser vice stations representing six brands of gas. Although one station mana ger explained why gas prices in general have gone up over the years, none of the station operators was able to explain why the same brand of gaso line costs a different price a few miles down the road. For instance, a Brand A sta tion in Chapel Hill charges for its three types of gas 28.9, 35.9 and 33.9 cents respective ly. Another Chapel Hill station of the same brand charges 37.9, 35.9 and 33.9 cents. (A penny difference between the highest octanes). But if you ride out Durham Road you can get the same gas at 37.9, 33.9 and 32.9 cents. Now take Brand B. High test is 39.9 cents at the Chapel Hill station. At the Durham Road station it's 38.9 cents. The manager of the Dur- ham Road station said his prices were up one cent last week, "but the company call ed and said pull them down." Asked why the Chapel Hill station, which is still selling gas at the same price, had not lowered its prices too, the manager said he didn't know. Brand C fared little better. The Carrboro station sold gas at 37.9, 35.9 and 33.9 cents. The Chapel Hill station sold at 38.9 , 34.9 and 31.9 cents. In other words, if you want high test you would save a penny a gallon by driving to , CarrboroBut it. y oil want ei ther of the two lower octane gasolines it is less expensive to buy in Chapel Hill. Confusing, isn't it? One station manager ex plained that even though gas prices are going up, the sta tion owners actually are mak ing only one and one - tenth cents more per gallon than they were 10 years ago. In addition, he said, operating- expenses have gone up agout '40 per cent. Another operator said that the recent one cent price rise among several brands of gas was dictated by the major oil companies. "It Usually happens every time they get a contest going or something. Sometimes prices come down when it's over," he said. Gas Prices Down Despite Gripes DETROIT (UPI) There probably isn't a motorist who doesn't gripe about gasoline prices. But leaving price out of it, would you believe your car is getting about 40 per cent more mileage to the gallon than it would have 30 to 40 years ago? Here's why this is so Forty years ago, gasoline was merely a derivative of crude petroleum, a distillation of the most volatile sub stanres of that black viscous fluid pumped up from the bowels of the earth. Today's gasolines are not a natural product at all, but a processed material. Science has learned how to take apart the molecules that go to make up the substance called gaso line to rearrange them and put them back together again. While all this has been going on the price of gas has gone up and up. Not, however, because of the federal and (Continued on Pare 6) . W t V . .. . . . i i i "j . - 1 r x 1 1 - ........ Leicis speaks to the people vcho attended the pep rally in Carmichael - W 0 yesterday. The pep rally teas planned to encourage the players fo the Duke game today. -DTH Photo by Steve Adam or s