Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 17, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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U tl C Library Serials Dopt, Box 070 Chapal- Hill, N.C, 27514 I .I - J) 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 4, Number 4 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1967, Founded February 23, 1893 Ik 1 I KXr Fir X X Hurricane Batters Coast OCEAN CITY, MD. - Striking from a freak angle with 80 mph winds, hurricane Doria pounded the east ern seaboard from Virginia t to v New Jersey Saturday, trapping boats in mountainous seas, causing coastal flooding and claiming at least one life. Because of the due east angle at which it was coming ashore a historic departure from hurricanes of the past officials feared it might prove the worst such storm in the area's history. Other storms have come in from the south and lost much of their punch by the time they reached here. Residents and vacationers poured off the Delmarva (Delaware-Maryland-Virginia) Peninsula by the thousands, aircraft were evacuated to points beyond reach of the storm and 100,000 navy personnel at sta tions along the coast were on alert. Nasser Rumors Denied An Egyptian government spokesman Saturday den ied reports abroad that President Gamal Abdel Nas ser had resigned in the wake of the reported suicide of a former trusted aide accused, of plotting against him. A flurry of excitement was touched off in world capitals by France's government-operated National Radio which said rumors of Nasser's resignation were circulating in Beirut, Lebanon. Adding to the stir were reports that radio and telephone communications had been cut between Paris and Cairo. A United Arab Republic embassy spokesman in Paris told UPI they tried to contact Cairo to check on the rumors but "all radio and telephone communications are apparently cut." Later, however, embassy officials denied they had tried to reach Cairo. Hours later, national guidance information ministry undersecretary Aly Kashaba issued a statement saying the reports were "pure fabrication and without foun dation." At the same time, the Cairo telephone ad ministration said lines to Paris operated normally dur ing the day. . SNCC Head Gets Review RICHMOND, VA. A federal judge Saturday agreed to hear arguments on whether Negro militant H. Rap Brown should be freed on bond. U. S. District Judge Robert R. Merhige Jr. issued a writ of habeas corpus after hearing arguments for and against a petition filed by Brown. The writ was granted after Brown's lawyers, Philip J. Hirschkop of Alexandria and William Kunstler of New York, said in a petition that all other possible remedies had been exhausted in state courts to have Brown freed on bond. Merhige ordered state authorities to turn Brown over to federal marshalls Monday for a noon hearing. Idle Teachers Plan Rally DETROIT Michigan's striking school teachers Saturday planned a mammoth rally for Sunday as almost 400,000 children appeared headed for a third week of idleness. The rally, to be held in the University of Detroit Stadium, was called by the Detroit Federation of Teachers AFL-CIO and all striking teachers in Michigan were invited. Some 11,500 Detroit teachers were expected to reject a fact finding proposal that they submit their dispute to binding arbitration. They will vote on the proposal at the rally. By LYTT STAMPS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The Student Party wants to "continue its.; .' tradition of leadership" while the Universi ty Party wants to erase a lack of ideas which has plagued it in the past, officials of both said Saturday. Thus the stage is set Carolina campus politics for to reiurn. And return they do tonight. The SP will have a party meeting in Howell Hall at 7:30, featuring Student Body Presi dent Bob Travis. The UP gets under way an ' 4 4 ft 'f""' ,lw'm'1' 'iMM,.ii ,30 JPb; ft jf, imm.'' m. ' '' , ' " ' " ' ' v ' " ' - - - j ! World News BRIEFS By United Press International ms PoUUeml MimSiries Aire hour earlier when its executive committee holds an open meeting in the Woodhouse Room of GM. It will be the 31st annual revival of the party rivalry on campus. For the UP it will be an uphill battle. Although it is the older campus party, three years have passed since it has been able to' elect one of its own as student body president ana it was 1959 when it last had a majority in student legislature. UP Chairman Mike Zim merman realizes he has a tremendous task to face if his lid J!A , 'A jr X V,- - - . - x - - 1 i ' , , - - - - " I f ' '' Draft Defer: Must Be By DENNIS FALCK ! of The Daily Tar Heel Staff . Requests for student (2-S) deferments should be made by October 1, said Central Records Director Raymond E. Strong Saturday.. Most student classifications expire October 31st. To fenew the 2-S classification or request it for the first time ( for freshmen ) , two .forms available at the Central Records office in the basement of Hanes Hall must be filled out. One form requests the defer ment under the June, 1967 Selective Service Act which authorizes it. This the student must maU directly to his local board. Changes Inconvenience By PENNY RAYNOR of The Daily Tar Heel Staff f Changing the sex of a dorm is not an easy operation. Just ask any girl who has lived through -the first week at Joyner of Omnor. Chances are, she thanks goodness for small favors which other girls take for granted such as beds,, trashcans, and shower cur tains. Life for her has been full of minor but funny annoyances. "About five of us arrived Thursday to find that we had no beds Barbara Brownridge, Joyner's presi dent, said. "We slept on mattresses and got beds at 8 the next night." "We didn't have any shower curtains and each one of the showers had only hot or cold water." "You should've seen how ex cited she got when we got shower curtains," Barbara Hall, her roommate, said. "The 'fire alarms were run ning on and off almost all day the first day " Miss Brownridge said. "Once they were on for three minutes". "We're doing without a lot of things. We just got the re mainder of the furniture for party is to be revitalized. He freely admits that the SP has been "more activist" since World War II when an influx of veterans joined the SP in an attempt to solve problems then facing the dormitories where they lived. SP student government ad ministrations have generally tended to be more militant in their relations with the U n i v ersity administration. They have had' bitter con frontations on such issues as student judiciary and student autonomy. On the other hand, the UP has promoted the so-called ' DTH Staff Photo by Ernest H. RobI Gayle Bomar passes for the sidelines ment R Filed October The second requests the University to verify the student's class-load status at the University, including the date he expects to complete his degree program. v Under the provisions for the student deferment, the student must be completing one-fourth of his graduation requirements each academic year. This means that 30 academic hours must be successfully com-' pleted each 12-month period following enrollment. A regular program must be completed in eight semesters plus summer sessions. The University's verification of a full load is necessary for the deferment, but is made on ly at the request of the, stu , fe ;i.a?SJSS department has stored away me i v anu sreu u e uvja iu last vear and can t seem to find them," she said. "We do without things until we get them and when we get them we hardly know what to do with them." The housemothers of both dorms agree that the girls have been very good sports about all their inconveniences, and have complained very lit tle. It's the boys they're worried about. They have been unable to communicate with their girls and dates because house phones have not been installed yet. "That has just been mad- nes," Mrs. Elizabeth Ramsey, tt nnnnnr housemother said. "We have girls running up and down the steps to get peo ple, and boys just lined up in the hall waiting for their dates. "The numbers on the telephones were changed, and sometimes the old numbers work and sometimes the new ones work," she said. "It's amazing how little things make the difference." Telephones are a problem at Joyner, too. Two on each floor ' 'progressive conservatism" platform. But Chairman Zimmerman wants to forget about the last several years of UP history. "I'd like to think of us as moderates," he says. He sees a broader base of participation and a new leadership featuring energetic sophomores and juniors for the party. In addition, the party will continue studying its reorganization which began last spring. r In the spring, it added a se cond vice-chairman to func tion much like the SP's suc eques 1 dent. If a 2-S deferred student fails to pursue a full load, the University will notify the student's local board of his change in status. In accordance with the June Selective Service Act, the University will not notify the board of a student's grade point level, said Strong. ' " Students who do " Hot meelr the requirements for the 2-S classification and are reclassified 1-A may apply for a I-S (C) deferment. If granted, this will give the student until the end of his academic year to reach the re quirements, according to an in formation sheet printedby Strong's office. can be used only to call out, and one receives calls in with &mQst nonent buzz. aj this was a good system for a men's dorm, it just isn't very practical for the girls now, the residents say. Other reminders of recent male occupancy are the urinals in the bathrooms which will probably remain for some time to come, though they have been removed from a few bathrooms. "It took three years to get the urinals out of Winston," the Joyner dorm president. Miss Brownridge, said, The newly-installed clocks at Connor have been "going ape" every night, just before closing hours, said Mrs. Ramsey. VEach time at exactly 10 or 15 minutes to closing hours the hands of the clock would start gomg around and' around Club Revival Set The North Carolina Conservative Club, dead for the past year is on the verge of being revived. Jeff Gaynor, a. history graduate student from Washington and Lee, called a meeting in Hinton James cessful system. In the SP, one vice chairman handles policy; the other, administration. One area which will receive study in the UP structure is its representative-voting policy in the conventions which select its candidates for campus of fice. Presently, each living unit gets a number of votes pro portional to the number of members of the party in that unit. Zimmerman said one possibility is to break down the size of these delegations. For example, all of Morrison is now represented - by one TO In Opeme By JIM FIELDS Special To The Daily Tar Heel RALEIGH The N.C. State Wolfpack struck like lightning on' a 55-yard touchdown pass from Jim Dohnan to . Harry Martell in the fourth quarter and went on to beat Carolina 13-7 before a sell-out crowd of over 42,000 in Carter Stadium. The touchdown pass came with eight minutes and 48 seconds left in the game and gave State the lead for the first time in the second half. The Wolfpack was first to score on a 44-yard field goal by Gerald Warren with 2:57 left in the first quarter. The scoring drive started on the State 28, and it took eight plays for the Wolfpack to score with Tony Barchuk doing most of the work. The teams battled on even terms until late in the second quarter when Carolina took over the ball on their own 20, after a missed field goal at tempt by Warren. Gayle Bomar was thrown for a six yard loss to the 14 on the first play, but came right back with a 23 yard pass to Peter Davis for a first down at the Tar Heel 37. After an incomplete pass, Bomar hit Tommy Dempsey . for nine yards to the 46. Dempsey crashed off-tackle for two yards, to the 48 and Tapes Of Game To Be Shown TaDea of the- UNC-N State football game will be shown over WUNC-TV, channel 4, today at 8 p.m. Tapes of the DukeWake Forest game will be shown Monday at 9 p.m. WUNC-TV is part of the University's educational television system, which in-" eluded four other stations. Girls finally stopping "One minute," at she 7. said, "you'd look at the clock and it would be almost 12, and the next minute it would 'be 3:15!" The house mothers and the girls in both dorms, though they have been through more than the usual orientation traumas, tend to look at the situation with patience and humor. "Each day, a few more things come in to make it look more like home," said Mrs. housemother. "After all, Rome wasn't built in a day ! " "Some day when they're get ting ready to graduate," Mrs. Ramsey said, "the girls will look back on this and think how funny it was. "They'll say, 'Ha when I got there they didn't even have a bed for me!"' residence Hall Friday, the purpose of which was to "get together with other con servatives - and plan something," he said. He plans to call a campus wide meeting for all interested persons sometime next week. -Renewed. Tonight delegation. Under Zim merman's plan, each floor could have its own delega tion. Zimmerman wants to work closely with his 22-man caucus in legislature. "I want them to visit then constituents, to become more activist," he says. "I want party members to find things about the Universi ty that need change. I want members to pursue and work on they ideas within the party framework." On the other side of the fence student party leaders are more optimistic. another first down. David Riggs picked up five yards to the 47 of State, and Bomar kept for three more to the 44. On successive plays, Bomar and Riggs combined to move the ball 11 more yards to the 36. . A pass to Tom Cantrell was incomplete at the 12, but Bomar came back with a 10 yard pass to Davis for a Carolina first down at the Wolfpack 26. Riggs got two yards off tackle, and a Bomar to Dempsey pass was good for eight more yards putting the ball on the 16. Dempsey got six yards to the ten and then on two more carries moved the ball to the six for. a first and goal. Bomar was held for no gain, and the Heels called time out with less than a minute re maining in the half. Bomar got three yards to the three, and Riggs moved it to the one. On fourth down and goal Dempsey crashed over left tackle for the touchdown, D ooley Keeps Cool In His First Game By LARRY KEITH Special To The Daily Tar Heel RALEIGH It is not Bill Dooley's nature to show much emotion. He will grimace oc casionally or grit his teeth when tilings are going poorly but generally, his demeanor is steady. He wore a pair of faded gray trousers rolled once at the cuff and a white knit shirt to his first Carolina football game yesterday. Nothing fancy. This too isn't his nature. To observe Dooley on the sidelines is to be impressed with his manner. He does not yell derision when things are going badly as they sometimes did in a 13-7 loss to N.C. State here yester day but, in a manner of speaking, he grins and bears it. When the Tar Heels broke from their dressing room for a pre ' game workout Dooley broke with them. Once on the field his attention was everywhere. A punter here, a passer there, a receiver somewhere eke. A chorus of "Hang down your head, Bill Dooley . . ." improvised by the State cheer ing section did not faze him. He probably did not hear it but if he had he wouldn't have said. At first Dooley was quiet but as the warm ups continued he became more and more active, more and more vocal. By game time he was ready. At precisely 1:50 p.m. Dooley emerged from the dressing room to get down to the business of beating State. Once the game began Dooley moved little up and down the sidelise. He yelled an. oc casional "attaway defense" though cupped hands not quite to his mouth but there was nothing any more noticeable. His tempo quickened with the pace of the game. When Dooley was waiting for something anything to happen he stood with his hands stuck halfway into his rear pocket. That is largely a decoy. He moves with the action. Chairman Don Johnson points to the party's record in the past few years. "In the last five years, SP legislators have introduced and passed 258 pieces of legislation compared with 100 by the UP," he says. Included in this legislation have been funds for residence college development and color televisions for fraternities, sororities and residence halls; the resolution which paved the way for a reading day before semester exams; and the judicial procedures and bill of rights amendments to the stu dent constitution. .Fal. 7 and Don Hartiz booted the ex tra point for a 7-3 Carolina lead with 19 seconds left in the half. The- third quarter was scoreless and the Wolfpack found themself on the Carolina 25 in the opening of the fourth period after Mark Capuano had blocked a Jeff Beaver punt. , State moved in four plays to the Carolina 17-yard line where the drive was halted and War ren booted a field goal, this one from the 23-yard line. " The Wolfpack kicked off to the Heels, and when they couldn't move the ball, they were forced to kick back to State at the Wolfpack 38. Bobby Hall got seven yards to the 45, and there lightning struck as Donnan found Martell open behind the Carolina safety men for the winning touchdown. The Tar Heels never quit and bounced back with a final drive that ended on the State 19 when a Bomar to Charlie Can pass was incomplete with 2:15 left in the game. On a play which saw quarterback Gayle Bomar gain good yardage around his side of the field Dooley ran with him, waving his arm and (Continued on Pace 5) Enough Sign Jretition, say Originators Dale Savilie and Ray Saunders, originators of the parking policy petition, have decided they have enough names on the petition and are now waiting to hand it to Chan cellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. They have stopped because they think "the idea of trying to get a swamp of names is really unnecessary now," Sa vile said. He added that the petition wasn't a legal document that required a certain percentage of names, but was just a means of letting the ad ministration know that a large number of student and faculty motorists were dissatisfied with the present parking policy. The petition has about 1,300 names now or close to 15 per cent of the motorists on cam pus, the pair said. Only about 50 people signed the petition at Chase Cafeteria Friday night, said Savilie. He attributed this to the large number of freshmen on South Campus. Savilie, Saunders, Bob Travis, student body president, and Scott Goodfellow, student representative on the Traffic and Safety Committee, will deliver the petition to the chancellor Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. The petition requests that "the T Parking Sticker fee be eliminated and that a pro gressive parking fee com mensurate with parking ac comodations and proximity to one's destination be instigated at once." Johnson also points to the party's leadership in the educational reform movement last spring. For this year, he sees the SP supporting an investigation of book exchange prices, limita tions of the campus code, at tempts at greater flexibility of the student judicial system and continued support of the speaker ban court case. Thus the lines are drawn: for the UP, it will be a year of bidding, for showing that it can come up with new ideas. For the SP, it will be a year of continuing what has gone on in recent years.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 17, 1967, edition 1
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