UC Library trials Dept. Box 870 N.. C, ?!0. Closed Circuit Game UNC students and staff members will be admitted free to a closed-circuit tele vision hookup of the UXC State and Clemson-Wake For est ACC Tournament games at 7 and 9 p.m. tonight in CarmichaeL Candidates Meeting All campus and district can didates must attend a manda tory candidates meeting to day at 4 p.m. in Roland Park er 2 or contact Doug Mc Keown, 942-2S68. .1 Tfte South's Largest College Neicspaper Volume 74, Number 119 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY. MARCH 9, 1967 " -I . I,, . a Levy Announces For DTH Editor Dick Levy, legislator from Morrison Residence College, has announced his candidacy for editor of the Daily Tar Heel. - LEVY Senior Coeds Curfew Reset Senior coeds will have 2 a.m. curfew bnv weekends next fall, the Dean of Women's Office announced yesterday. The extension of closing nights was approved pending hours on Friday and Saturday release of university money to pay for the extra desk at tendants needed about $15, 000. "It's almost certain the cur few change will go into ef fect next fall," Mrs. Dot Fulg hum of the Dean of Women's Office stated. "I don't think we'll have any trouble getting tne money okayed." u. o. Cathey, Dean of Stu dent Affairs, gave his informal approval this week saying: "I really don't see why on earth the iris want to stay out until 2 a.m. but if that's what they want I have no strong objection. Seniors should have some extra privileges," ..He left, the final decision to Dean of Womea Catherine Carrnichael, he said. Ecuadoreans Om Visit Here Five Ecuadorean economics students are visiting the UNC campus this week during a State Department - sponsored travel grant in the United States. The students come from four universities, in Quito, Cuenca, and Guayaquil. They are particularly interested in investigating the economics de partment at UNC, and also in meeting with the faculty, stu dents, and student leaders. The students will also be ob serving various aspects of banking and finance, agricul tural economics, and govern mental offices on the federal, state, and local levels. v The participating students are Juan Antonio P a r n o Aviles, a third-year student at the Central University of Quito; Rolando Peralta Monsalve, a fourth-year student at the Un iversity of Cuenca; Bolivar Gilberto Santacruz Vivanco, a fourth-year student at the Un iversity of Guayquil; Alfonso Troya Jaramillo, a third-year student at the Catholic Uni-' versity at Quito; and Manuel Perez Trujillo, a fourth-year student at the University of Guayaquil. While at UNC, the students have met with Bob Powell, student body president, and Eric Van Loon, a member of the National Student Associ ation Supervisory Board, for a seminar on student govern ment. They also participated in a seminar on higher edu cation at which the vice-president of the Consolidated Un iversity spoke. The Ecuadorian natives have met and dined with UNC stu dnts at Lenoir Hall, the Car olina Inn, the Rathskellar, and at a picnic hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Steve Ayala and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sharp. Today they will visit N. C. State University, where they will meet with Dr. A. J. Coutu, director of the N. C. State University Extension in . Peru. The five students are reci pients of a thirty-day educa tional travel grant, awarded by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U. S. State Department. The grant provides for travel funds and per diem for the group. The 20 - year - old junior from Greensboro officially en tered the race Wednesday, with the statement: "The coming year is crucial for Carolina. If we are not to founder, the Tar Heel must assume a position of increased responsibility. "Editorials must be more in cisive and span a broader range of the problems con fronting us. A weekly in-depth feature will be inaugurated." An International Studies and Finance major, Levy added: "The DTH is a $100,000 a year business. As such it re quires an editor who can write administrate and decide po licy. My experience in these areas, plus legislative ex perience and majoring in fin ance makes me, I believe, the most qqualified candidate for Tar Heel editor. If he is elected, he said, "the Tar Heel will cover and review all cultural events. Movies of interest and TV shows of merit will be noted. Residence Colleges, frater nities and sororities have been virtually ignored. Coverage of them and organizations on campus like the Young Dems will be expanded. "Good satire will return to the pages of the Tar Heel. The DTH will be lighter and less ponderous than in the past. "News from Duke and the Consolidated campuses will be included on a regular basis. Greater rapport between the campus and the Chapel Hill- Carrboro communities must be encouraged. , "Service will be improved, as will the quality of writing. Most important, the Tar Heel will be closer to the students than ever before. It is my sincere hope that as a non journalism major the students will identify with me and feel , free,, to make suggestions or talk with me at any time," he said. In addition to observing eco nomic conditions in the United States, the students are inte rested in learning about U. S. Latin American relations, U. S. foreign policy, and Ameri can political parties. . tif I - i I y : '( I - , ' - s f f , ,- i . ; , - . . -4 1 A Spot The Spot No. 7 JUST IN CASE you haven't noticed, our cutlines under our spot-the-spots have been straight out of the fields would you believe corny? Well, for this reason we decided to make the picture corny, too this time. All right, stop the gab. Just find it, that's all. And it's not out in a field. It's on campus (al though some may think that's the same thing). And if you findit, YOU may be the one to get those ten great albums from the RECORD BAR. SPOT NO. 7, Name of person Campus address ACC Pairings AT GREENSBORO N. Carolina (1) Thursday 7:00 PJH. N. C. State (8) Friday ' ,a 7:00 P.M. Clemson (4) Thursday 9:00 P.M. I Wake Forest (5) Championship Saturday Duke (2) 8:30 P.M. Thursday 3:30 P.M. I Virginia (7) . Friday ,. t 9:00 P.M. S. Carolina (3) Thursday 1:30 P.M. I Maryland (6) ECC TTft Jul State DAVID ROTHMAN RALEIGH "Make us a university, too" people had: their day in State legislature yesterday. The. much-discussed bill to make East Carolina College a university was introduced in both houses of the General Assembly. Expected to provoke strong opposition from Gov. Dan K. Moore, the bill was intended to clear the wa for the es tablishment of state-supported regional universities. - Under the legislation, intro duced By Sen. Julian Alls brook, D-Halifax, and Rep. Herbert Roundtree, D - Pitt, "University" would follow "East Carolina" "on and , aft er July 1, 1967." Previous legislation would be changed to make it possbile for the state to have more i...... .. o than one university, The new university's trus tees would be chosen be the General Assembly rather than selected by the governor as is now done. - Also. ECU trustees would be authorized to start a two year medical school. Reached by the DTH for comment, Consolidated Uni versity President William Fri ' day declined to discuss the bill at this time. '3 If public hearings are held, University officiate may be called on to discuss the bill's implications. But for the moment, Sen. Adrian Shuford, chairman of the Senate Higher Education Committee, would not say when public hearings would be held if they are. Shuford said he wanted to wait until a report on ECC's readiness for university status is released. He says that it is now at the printer and will be available soon. He said that Consolidated University officials might ask him for an opportunity to tes tify at the proposed hearings. Defending the ECU Bill, Allsbrook told the Associated Press: "It should be ..made clear that this bill does not repre sent an attempt to disrupt or otherwise impair the develop ment, present prestige or ex cellence of any institution in North Carolina. "It does not attack the Con solidated University." (AP noted that the ECU bill lacks an appropriation re . quest. It will take about two years before ECC's budget can be bolstered enough to meet added requirements for uni versity status, Allsbrook esti mated.) In a Tuesday night news con- Meri On House Race GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., (AP)James H. Meredith re peatedly sidestepped questions yesterday about his candidacy for Adam Clayton Powell's vacant House seat, but pre dicted "one of the most im portant elections in racial po litics in this country." He declined to elaborate, or to spell out the issues for a news conference held after he spoke to students at Acrui- nas College and Grand Ra- pids Junior College. The place to discuss the issues is in the 18th District of New York," Meredith said. He was asked to comment on Powell's statement that he would not be a formidable opponent. c fflEti. On In Qmarterfimal Tourney Play By DENNIS SANDERS DTH Sports Writer GREENSBORO Top-seed ed North Carolina , and eighth- seeded North Carolina State, two teams on opposite ends of the final Atlantic Coast Con ference stadings, open upper bracket play in the ACC tour-, nament here tonight at 7:00. Fourth-seeded Clemson and fifth-seeded Wake Forest tan gle in a 9:00 following contest to complete first-round play for the upper bracketed teams. In afternoon action, Duke (No. 2) and Virginia (No. 7) meet at 3:30, after South Carolina (No. 3 and ineligible f erence, AUsborook said : "We feel East Carolina has earned its place in the sun and is qualified as a university." North Carolina "need not fol- low the. example of Calif orma" in establishing an additional university consolidation, Alls brook said. He told United Press Inter national that he hoped the bill would clear the path for other new state - supported univer sities especially Appalach ian State Teachers College, which already has applied for university status. Western Ca rolina and Asheville Biltmore also have indicated interested in becoming universities. The report on the extent of ECC's readiness for Universi ty status is part of a study by the North Carolina Board of Higher Education. The board's recommendation's are schedul ed for release March 15. Alls brook says he and other ECC University backers "are not going to let this report inter fere with out going ahead." , s The report is said to suggest that ECC net be made an in dependent university outside the consolidated system. The Charlotte Observer re cently published an article saying the report generally would be critical of ECC's be coming a university at least at this time. Aerobiologist Tapped Dr. Edward L. Fincher, aerobiologist at the Univer sity of North Carolina School of Public Health, has been appointed a consultant to the Health Facilities Service Branch of the U. S. Public Health Service's Division of Hospital and Medical Facili ties. "I guess I don't have any thing to say about that," Meredith answered. Newsmen pressed him for a reply to Powell's comment that Meredith is not a civil rights leader. Meredith answered: "I am not going to get into a debate on that." He said he was not familiar with comments Powell has made about him. Meredith was named as the Republican candidate for the Congressional Seat the House denied to Powell last week, He told the news conference he woudl welcome support from civil rights groups, or anyone else who believes his views are the right ones. dith Mum Wol ft nack. for the ACC title) and Mary land (No. 6) crash into each other at 1:30. For the Tar Heels, No. 3 and No 4 in the nation de pending on which poll you be- lieve, the N. C. State match- up means the beginning of a rough road to the ACC crown they grabbed during a 14 -game league schedule. Now 21-4 and 12-2 in the con ference, the Tar Heels must bypass State and two more op ponents to annex the right to represent the ACC in the NCAA Eastern Regionals. State, on the other hand, finds itself in a position to lose little and gain everything in the three-day, single-elimination meet here in the Colis eum. The last-place ACC team, with a 2-12 record, Coach Norman Sloan's Wolfpack won only seven of 23 games all season. But the tournament belongs to whoever can put three win ning games under the great est pressure of the season back-to-back. Twice this season by 79 78 in Carrnichael and by 77-60 in Raleigh Coach Dean Smith's Tar Heels bested State. But to remain in the tourna ment play : the : Heels will have to make it a third time tonight. And former Wake. For est Coach Bones McKinney once said, "It's awful hard to be the best team in a series with another team three times in one year." Just as the Heels went 12-2 in ACC play to State's 2-12, so did they finish their sea son. Carolina won five of its last eight games, including an easy win over Duke, while State finished with three wins 'Little Bit' Owen Lilses American Boys Better By STEVE KNOWLTON s DTH Staff Writer There is a "refreshing in fluence" in the Dean of Men's Office who goes by the name of Rosalyn Owen. Dean Long's secretary is 18 and straight out of Liver pool, England. The dimunitive brunette is very proud of her British heritage but is fast be coming accustomed to the ways of "somewhat disorgan ized Americans." Election Series Planned :: 3 The Daily Tar Heel will begin an in depth series on :: the upcoming campus elections Saturday. In as far as g available space permits, the DTH will try to cover all po sitions to be voted on, but this can only be done with :$ the full cooperation of all candidates. -The DTH is asking that candidates furnish summar ies of their backgrounds and platforms, preferrably typ ed, limited to the number of words announced below. :: The DTH reserves the right to edit these summaries. S: The series will begin with the candidates for the pres idency of the student body. Candidates for this position are asked to submit their material by noon Friday. The material should not exceed 300 words. :?: Candidates for all other positions are asked to watch :;: for further announcements. The DTH appreciates the co : operation of all concerned. GM Office Open :j:j Applications for the presidency of the Graham Memo rial Activities Board are available at the GM informa- ijii tion desk. Interviews will be held on this Friday after noon starting at 4 p.m. Applicants must sign up in ad vance. Among the president's duties are presiding at the ijij weekly meetings of GMAB, holding the chairmanship ijij of the GM Board of Directors, and also coordinating GM : committees. In addition the president works closely with 8 the director of the Student Union in planning incoming x programs and promoting new ones. His most immediate responsibilities include the selec- tion of members for the incoming Activities Board and jij: planning the GM orientation program. . - KT; sZ7s .A .C . r x - . .. . 4,iimi. . i . - - The Action Starts Today ... UPI Telephoto By Jerry Huff in its last eight games, r The Wolfpack's two league wins came over Virginia and Wake Forest, both in overtime. Smith will look again to so phomores Rusty Clark (14.6), Bill Bunting and Dick Grubar (9.0) and, AU-AOC selections Bob Lewis (18.5) and Larry Miller (22.4) to vault his team into semifinal action Friday against the winner of the Clemson-Wake Forest game, State will counter with four double-figure scorers, all aver She answer the phone, types, takes dictation and all the oth er things a secretary is sup posed to do, but somehow seems to manage it all with out getting bogged down in the mundane of the secretar iat "He (Long) calls me "lit tle Bit'," Rosalyn demures, ob viously quite pleased with the nomenclature. As a Britisher and particu larly, perhaps, as a Liverpud- (No,, m aging between 10 and 14 poifita per game, including Dick Braucher and stumpy Nick Trifunovich, the guards; Bill Kretzer, the hottest scorer of late, and Bill Mavrdes, the forwards; and either injured Jerry Moore or Robert Mc Lean at center. Those are the performers 8, 500 Coliseum fans lucky enough' to get tickets from the eight ACC schools will see in a panorama of pressure basketball. lian, she has some opinions about Americans, particularly American boys. "American boys, I think, are more polite, there are many things I like about them, particularly, I guess about Southern boys, be cause most of my time in this country has been in the South.' Actual preference of Ameri cans over their English count erparts? "If I had to answer that question, which of course I don't, for my own safety while I'm in this country, I'd have to say that I prefer American boys," she said, "And you can quote me on that." Ros does say that "there is a completely different look about British boys. "I like British boys with longer hair, because they don't look good with short Ameri can style hair. "But an American boy with a British haircut looks like a werewolf from the b a c k woods," she said. "I also have very different ideas concerning office man agement. I'm a firm believer in the 4 o'clock tea break," she said. "But then Ameri can tea isn't worth a damn anyway, but I don't suppose I should have said that word." "But really, American tea is horrid. Particularly iced tea," she thinks. She start ed to say that it was 'the worst thing ever made, but changed her mind, as she readily admits she is quite wont to do. "God didn't make iced tea," she said in a very broad ac cent, but not at all unpleas ant, ut He would have a fit if He saw what His creation had done with his tea crop,", she adds defiantly. Her tastes, particularly in (Continued on Page 6)

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