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UI1C Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chscal Hill, !!. C. Candidates To Speak Candidates for president of the student body ?nd editor of the Daily Tar Heel will speak and answer questions at 6:30 tonight at the Pres byterian Student Center on Henderson Street. Volume 74, Number 116 4t SSL Session M ercer m LJ LJJ Take H-obof& By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer RALEIGH UNC swept four major honors at the State Student Legislature mock assembly here yester day. The 31 delegations from col leges and universities all over the state gave individual hon ors to Charlie Mercer and Dick Levy and group honors to the North Carolina delega tion. Mercer was elected Presi dent of the SSL for 1967 while Levy tied with Bill Deal of East Carolina College for "Best Speaker in the House" honors. UNC's 15 - man delegation tied for first place with ECC for "Best Large School Dele gation" (enrollment over 1500) award. The "Best Bill" Award also went to North Carolina for a bill providing for a Board of Regents to deal with main tenance of state supported higher education. "We were very pleased with the way UNC did," Levy said. "But frankly, I thought our delegation was far and away the best there, better than ECC's." State Student legislature meets annually for four days Each school se'nds two Sena' - tors to the bicameral eMher- in mocK legislative session. ing and a number to the House of Representatives pro portional to the school's en rollment. Two schools. UNC and ECC, sent the maximum of 13 rep resentatives and two Senators to the session. The winning bill introduced by UNC would not eliminate the Board of Trustees for the University, but would reduce the number to 24. The regents board would consist of 15 rep resentatives, one from each congressional district, to be appointed by the Governor with the approval of state leg islature. The trustees would take over the management of the Uni versity, while the regents would handle the maintenance of it. In other legislative action, the SSL passed: A bill co-introduced by UNC and A&T to prohibit politically-oriented groups at state fairs, etc., to solicit outside the perimiter of the rented space. This included the use of electronic devices such as loud speakers which could be heard outside the alloted area. This prohibition was a re vamped version of an A&T bill to abolish completely such groups, such as the Klan and the Black Muslims. A bill lowering the voting age to 18 in North Carolina. A bill requiring that sex ed ucation be made available to all students in the public c v i Yesterday it was summer and at least one Carolina gent found a way to put his books to good use. r 9 schools from the fifth grade on. A measure to make mutual consent grounds for divorce. A bill outlawing the prohi bitions of interracial mar riaees, called miscegenation. The assembly voted down: A measure providing for state subsidy for the campaign expenses incurred by guberna torial candidates. A cigarette tax bill, intro duced by a Duke coed from Wisconsin. The delegation also voted down a gag bill co-introduced by UNC, Duke, and State which called for the names of these institutions to be chang ed from 'university' to 'col lege'. The basic "Whereas" reason cited in the bill was "Whereas the word 'Universi ty' is hard to spell and don't make no sense a toll, . . ." It was resoundingly defeat ed. Of course. Panels Differ On ha mges In SS Rules WASHINGTON (AP) Two visory committees on the draft agree that younger men should be called first. But they are at odids on student defernlents and proposed se lection by lattery. A presidential commission said yesterday in a report that the Selective Service System should stop general deferment of students and should begin use of a limited lottery. And while the President's commission recommends a sweeping overhaul of the ad ministrative structure of the Selective Service System, the congressional panel finds no need for major changes. The House committee's ad visers reject a lottery as a cumbersome device that would "only impede and complicate the task" of selection. The two groups agree that actions should be taken to give more of the burden of combat to national guard and other reserve units. And both reject the idea of all-volunteer armed services, of universal military training, and of alternate civilian na tional service compulsory or voluntary. Here are comparisons of the two groups recommendations on key issues: Method of Call President's Names of draft eligible men should be put in a pool at age 19 or shortly thereafter. If not drafted within about a year, they would not be called unless all men from the following pool were needed. , . 'V ' j h . W lWiA lisJ v.h f .1 . f . r - si 1 r r P P -v.;- ' "i ' . i,' ' - - 'x a, , "i -" W v. - h7sV i) .-MO . : i'I (Ai 'vVvlX , . ,- -, . :- " ' v - . - irnii inn vi iimr, li I - ,W Larry Miller Twists and Turns for Two of His 29 Points. -DTH Photo by Mike McGowan Expose Hurt NSA ay Have Helped By DON CAMPBELL DTH News Editor (Last in a Series) , Within the past week, the draft status of three NSA staff members has been changed from 2-A to 1-A. It is one small example of the results of the revelations of CIA aid to NSA. , The expose hurt NSA and it hurt the CIA. But people in a position to know don't think the damage is permanent or necessarily regrettable. Eric Van Loon, a UNC stu dent who serves on the NSA's National Supervisory Board and heads the legal and fi nance committee, thinks that in the long run the NSA has been helped, for three' .rea sons: . Because of the contro versy, the college student, in general, knows more about the programs of NSA. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan The South' Largest College Neicspaper CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1967 II.IIUIIIII.U I. 1111.11 "JUL i LIU.. ,. .. I. .Illl.ll.ll.il The NSA At UNC Campuses which have previously been worried about the NSA being a Communist front have their perspectives changed. Other cmapuses will now become less hesitant be cause of this change. Financially, the NSA is better off. This is true, Van Loon says, because the na tional officers made the deci sion a year and a half ago to break with CIA, and at that time began looking for new funding sources. So, the NSA is not going to wither and die. Of course, with the experi ence of the past two weeks, future contributors to NSA will be checked and double checked, all will be suspect. The staff will have to be come more creative in the search for financial support. But there are advantages. The government is still will ing to help NSA, and they will give funds through various agencies; moreover, the mon ey will be above the table. Within the past year, for ex ample, the Office of Econom ic Opportunity gave the NSA a $130,000 grant to establish a tutorial education center. The National Institute for Mental Health gave the organ ization a $50,000 grant to study student mental health. NSA delegates from this campus will attend a conference at Reidsville this month on that subject as result of the grant. The Office of Education gave NSA $23,0Q0 to establish courses in teacher evaluation. The NSA film program has become a most successful ven- School at 1 p.m. Tuesday ture. (March 7) in 210 Manning Hall. These v are legitimate pro- "Military vs Civilian Jus grams minus the spies. tice" is his topic, and he is They are examples of the sponsored by the Student Bar success of NSA, domestically. Asociation. The dangers of the recent A graduate of UNC and Har- sensationalized disclosures to vard, he received his LL.B. the NSA's international pro- degree at Harvard in 1950 and gram are clear. his LL.M. from Duke Univer- van Loon says the interna tional operations will not fold, but have been "definitely hurt." Al Lowenstein said Thurs- " 1 mm itr A broad, At Home day night that the integrity of the student leaders had "been compromised", but that the NSA officers had withstood the controversy well. Moscow, whose concern with integrity was not made clear, used the expose for an excuse to blast the CIA. But then their students never -were at a loss for funds or . ideas. Van Loon feels that the safe ty of some NSA students over seas was jeopardized by the link with CIA. So, there will be setbacks. What is the future of NSA here at UNC? Van Loon is optimistic. Car olina has always been a main stay of NSA. It has turned out two national presidents for NSA and has traditionally been the leader in regional af fairs. Student government here has always been very close to NSA. Van Loon thinks it will remain that way. There may be future attacks on NSA from the extreme left and extreme right, but NSA is not going to change political ly. In the future, as in the past, students are going to fight each other for the right to at tend NSA conferences where organizations such as the CIA won't even be mentioned. Duke Prof Speaks Robinson O. Everett, Duke University professor of Law and Durham - Raleigh attor ney, will speak at the Uni- versitv of North Carolina Law sity in 1959. He was admitted to the N.C. Bar in 1950 'and the District of Columbia and U. S. Su preme Court Bars in 1954. UNC Farms Top Tourney Seeding Miller, Clark Lead Second Half Surge By JEFF MacNELLY DTH Sports Editor A hot shooting Tar Heel squad overcame a close first half score behind the fine play of Larry Miller and Rusty Clark to beat the Blue Devils of Duke 92-79 yesterday after noon in Carmichael. It was the last home game for the seniors on the team, but it was a pair of under classmen who really sparked the Tar Heel offense: Miller netting 29 points and Clark ad ding 23. The two accounted for 18 Tar Heel rebounds. High scorer for the. game was Bob Verga who tossed in 34 points for the Blue Devils, numerous fast breaks and his usual hot hand from outside. The Tar Heels started strong as they jumped to a 13-3 lead after four minutes of .play, with Tom Gauntlett and Bob Lewis each sinking two buck ets. The Blue Devils started their drive back, led by pow erful Mike Lewis and the hot shooting Verga. . With 14:30 showing on the clock, the score was 16-9. It was here that the Tar Heels got their bipest scare of the afternoon. Bob Verga took charge as he sank a pair of free throws a minute later. Two timely misses by Carolina gave Duke the opportunity. Lewis, Riedv and Kolodziej capitalized and the Devils took the lead at 12:20. After a time out the Tar Heels still couldn't budge, as Kolodzief and Verga tallied seconds afterwards. It looked for a moment as though Duke was duplicating Wednesday's South Carolina game, where the Tar Heels were stalled at 15 points as the Gamecocks sank fourteen straight points. But the Heels came back, and six minutes and six Miller points later, Carolina recaptur ed the lead, 25-24. For the remainder of the half it was a see-saw battle. Neither team could pull away, although the Tar Heels led by four points twice. Carolina held off a Duke bid in the clos ing minute of play and came off the floor with a 43-41 lead at half-time. Duke dominated the boards in the first half as they drag- Teams Hot By OWEN DAVIS DTH Asst. Sports Editor The game yeterday was more notable for its spurts of action and intense fan re sponse than for consistent' scoring by either team. Carolina began play like a pack of point - starved Ail Americans who had not had an opportunity to score for several seasons. The Blue Devils had not grown accustomed to the for eign surroundings before the Tar Heels had grabbed a 13-3 lead. At that point, Coach Vic Bu bas called a Duke timeout and the UNC head cheerlead er galloped around the court like a cease - fire in Viet Nam had just been obtained. Bubas obviously picked hisr words carefully and correct: ly for the Blue Devils came out after the timeout and threatened to bomb Carolina off its own court. Bob Verga, Bob Riedy, and Mike Lewis combined to throw in an assortment of shots from a 30-foot jumper to a 5 foot hook. Duke scored 13 straight i fy hv'"-:; - X ' ' If m f ' . DUKE'S BLUE DEVIL gets a police escort out of Carmichael yesterday after a brief scuffle. The devil went along with the officers only under strong protest. His cape was ripped in the fray. (UPI Photo by Ernest H. Robl.) ged down twice as many re bounds as the Tar Heels be hind the power of Mike Lewis and Bob Riedy. Despite the fact that Caro lina hit for 55 per cent from the floor and Duke hit only 38 per cent, the Devils held it close by hauling down 11 of fensive rebounds to the Tar Heels' one. The second half belonged to the Tar Heels, however. Lar ry Miller, who was held to 8 points in the first half, explod ed for 21 more after intermis sion. The score was still close after six minutes had gone by as a Ron Wendelin set shot put the Devils within a point. Then a Lewis to Miller layup, fol lowed by another fantastic Mil ler score from under the bas ket, forced Coach Bubas to call a time out. Tar Heel Coach Dean Smith pulled his boys into a zone de- Plav ,Cold points to jump on top 22-16 and the small Duke contingent boldly cheered their heroes on. Meanwhile the Duke Blue Devil, who pranced around the court in a clown uniform, drew the crowd's wrath for his overt display of Duke al legiance. Aside from stunts done by each cheerleading faction, the Tar Heels got down to work and pulled out a two - point halftime lead. Carmichael noise had sub sided somewhat by the half. Carolina supporters who had pictured a rout at the start of the game now knew that Duke was not the kind of team to fold easily. The second half was a for bidding sight at halftime. Lar ry Miller had three fouls and had sat out five minutes of action in the first half. Miller decided that he did not like the splinters of bench life and blazed the nets from the outside in the second half. . Miller hit seven of seven field goal attempts and haul ed down six rebounds in the (Continued on Pajre 4) Spot The Spot Moved If you're worrid about spott;n the spot-the-spol con test picture for today, it's got a spot reserved on page thrrr. Founded February 23. 1893 - Game Box 7C STATISTICS DUKE FG FT T Verga 12-29 10-11 34 Mike Lewis 5-11 4-7 14 Riedy 5-11 2-4 12 Kolodziej 2-5 0-1 4 Wendelin 3-8 1-2 7 Liccardo 0-2 0-0 0 Kennedy 1-2 2-3 4 Golden 1-4 2-2 4 McKaig H 0-0 0 Totals 29-75 21-30 79 UNC FG FT T Bob Levis 6-16 4-5 16 Miller 11-16 7-10 29 Clark 8-11 7-9 23 Grubar 2-9 2-6 6 Bunting 2-5 0-0 4 Gauntlett 4-10 3-5 11 Tuttle 0-1 1-2 1 Brown 1-10-0 2 Brown 1-1 0-0 2 Moe 0-0 0-0 0 Bostick 0-0 0-0 0 Fletcher 0-0 0-0 0 Frye 0-0 0-0 0 ToUls 34-69 24 92 fense, which paid off big. Two juick steals, and three straight buckets by Miller brought the fans to their feet and the Blue Devils to their knees, 66-56, with eleven minutes to play. From then on, Duke was be hind to stay. The Tar Heels kept up the pace and at one point increased their lead to fifteen points. The Tar Heels weren't as hot from the floor as in the first period, but came back strong under the boards, out rebounding the Devils in the second half. Tar Heel seniors Bob Lewis and Tom Gauntlett had a fine game, netting 16 points and 11 points, respectively. The pair also helped out in the re bounding department, ac counting for 11 snags. Guard Dick Grubar put in a stellar performance with 6 points and 6 rebounds. Timely steals and fancy ball-handling and passing gave Grubar 7 as sists. For the Blue Devils, Verga's 34 points were backed up with 14 by Mike Lewis and 12 more by Bob Riedy. Lewis led Duke with 15 rebounds, as Liccardo and Verga each grabbed six.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 5, 1967, edition 1
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