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V.ll.Z. Library S ,"1 nan Warm BoxT70 Free Mixer 1 Hill. n.c. A mixer, sponsored by CVVC, wi3 be held in Polk Place Sun day afternoon from 4 to 6, featuring The One-Eyed Jacks. Admission is free. 2) 75 Years of Editorial freedom Volume 75,. Number 22 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1967 Founded February 23, 1893 0U V7V Meeis Take Amu Bv JIM FIELDS of The Daily To Heel Staff North "Carolina will be trying to bring a school and con ference losing streak to an end this afternoon in Kenan Stadium when it takes on Vanderbilt at 1:30. The Tar Heels are currently riding a 10-game losing skid. If it isn't halted the school record for the most consective losses of 11 in a row established back in 1951-52 will be equaled. They will also be out to serve a con ference losing streak t o mm North Vietnam Invasion Hinted WASHINGTON Sen. Vance Hartki, D-Irid., said Friday the administration was seriously considering invading North Viet nam. He said President Johnson was under increasing pressure from Pentagon chiefs to order an attack north of the Demilitarized Zone. 'There is no question that an invasion is being seriously con sidered," Hartke told UPI. "President Johnson is under in creasing pressure to do that." He charged that the pattern of past escalations is being followed "a contrived leak, trial balloon, a carefully worded pentagon denial." Advocates Bombing Halt UNITED NATIONS India said Friday its contacts with Wanni flnH nthpr .narfipc t tYtn Vipfnam wot Kor? vn,Trirfv if o ---- V-- W VAW ' MJV V TWA UUVft VVU V UivvU cessation of the American bombing of North Vietnam would Indian Defense Minister Sardar Swaran Singh told the General Assembly he made the assertion f'h6t nierely as an exercise in wishing thinking but with confidence and belief based on our talks with the various parties concerned in the conflict." Mills Claims Tax Bill Is Dead WASHINGTON . Congress chief taxwriter locked up Presi dent Johnson's proposed tax increase tighter than ever Friday with a call for long-range spending cuts as well as immediate ones. Chariman Wilbur D. Mills. D-Ark., of the House Ways & Means Committee said the proposed tax hike is dead unless the President orders both kinds of cuts in federal outlays. The stiffened stalemate between Congress and the President -who pleaded anew for his proposal appeared to have killed any tax bill for the year. . , Wilson Retains Party Contrcil SCARBOROUGH, England Prime Minister Harold Wilson Friday remained firmly in control of his government and his own party after a week of politicking and speechmaking at the Labor party's annual conference. The rank and file grumbling, bordering an open revolt, which marked the opening of the conference, had not been quelled. But Wilson won what aDDeared to be a breathing spell to con- tinue his tough economic policies during the next few months without fear of excessive harassment from the party's ranks. Viet Army Drafts SAIGON The South Vietnamese government Friday backed ud warnings to student demonstrators by drafting 12 of them into the armv. At the same time, it would lose their civil rights and face trials in military courts. The new get tough policy could face its first real challenge Sunday. Militant Buddhists said they will march through Saigon to "pay a visit" to Thich Tri Quang, the Buddhist leader who is staging a sitdown strike in a park across the street from the presidential palace. No Leads Oh Du MIAMI A private detective waited by a telephone Friday hoping to make a ransom deal with the robbers who ransacked the Willis H. Du Pont masnion of $1.5-million in goods, including a rare coin collection. "I haven't heard a thing yet. I'm right here waiting and hop ing," said private eye William Stanton, hired by Du Pont as his agent in making a deal with the underworld. Du Pont lost Russian coins he valued at over $1 million Thurs day when five men barged unceremoniously into his bedroom wearing hoods and with drawn guns. After forcing Du Pont, 31, to open two safes in his plush gray sandstone bayside home, the robbers tied him, his 23-year-old Spanish born wife, Miren, a 4-year-old son, Victor, and a butler and his wife. Explosions Destroy Chinese Jets HONG KONG A Hong Kong newspaper Friday quoted travelers as saying at least six Chinese Communist air force MIG 17 jet fighters were destroyed by mysterious explosions at a restricted air base in southereastern Kwangtung Province last month. Southeastern Conference teams. Atlantic Coast Con ference elevens have lost 19 straight games to SEC op ponents. The last victory was a 7-0 win by Wake Forest over Vanderbilt in 1965. The Vanderbilt Commodores will equal a record of their own if they win their second in a row. They haven't won two consecutive games since 1961 when they beat West Virginia and Georgia back-to-back. Last week the Commodores beat William and Mary 14-12. Gdf Hgtfjj JUar.fjrrl World News BRIEFS By ifriiUd Press International Demonstrators warned that future demonstrators Pont Coins They bring a 1-1 record into today's game. Gary Davis, the Vanderbilt quarterback, will be one of the men the Heels will have to stop in the Commodore attack. Against the Indians, Davis completed 12 of 19 passes for 182 yards and one touchdown. , The big question, however is will he start against the Heels today. Davis broke the thumb on his passing hand two weeks before school started and was forced to miss all of fall prac At Trustee Meeting rnday Del ends HMei Off By BILL AMLONCL of The Daily Tar Heel Staff ': G R E ENSBORO Consolida ted University President. William C. Friday defended Carolina's hiring of Negro rights figure Howard Fuller to the University's Board of Trustees Friday as being routine. He said Fuller's appointment as a $l,500-a-year lecturer in the School of Sccial Work was merely one of 1,700 part time instructor Wrings on the four CU campuses and that it had been reviewed with the board's executive committee Sept. 8. A controvery arose over Fuller after Gov. Dan K. Moore recently called the hir ing "a serious mistake." Moore declined to comment further Friday, however, saying: "The matter is closed as far as I am concerned." Friday spoke to the trustees New Building Is Named For Daniels GREENSBORO The new bunding which will house stu dent administrative offices and pothrUniversUy1! North Carolina at Chapel Hill will be named after Josephus Daniels. University trustees at their meeting on Friday approved tne name tor tne ouuoing now under construction near Wilson Library. The late Josephus Daniels was a former Secretary of the Navy and long-time editor of the Raleigh News and Observer. The building will be located between the new Robert B. House Undergraduate Library and the Frank P. dent Union. r ..!!; f l; .... " 7fc"Ws"-- r i .. a-v-v. ...... K.SJ ,' K. SI: t'Y;-i:;f ... Classes can't stay outdoors forever, but you'd never believe it from the campus this fall. However, this isn't a class. It's a sorority rush At Vavudy Today tice because of a cast on the hand. . . Roger Day, who has started both games at quarterback for the Commodores, could well be the number one signal caller this afternoon. The bread and butter play for Vanderbilt is the roll out pass or run that is similar in many ways to the Tar Heels pass-run option. The main receiver in their aerial attack has been split end Bob Goodridge. He caught eight passes for 177 yards last week .Rights 1VM V : President Friday b Fuller Hiring Routine as they met in the library auditorium of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro at the end of : a two-day ceremony of that campus' 75th anniversary. t iii He told them Fuller's first contact . with the University was in the fall of 1965 as both a guest lecturer to three classes, and as the supervisor of two field studies for social work graduate students. Fuller also lectured to several classes last year,Friday said. - Fuller, 26, holds a master's degree in social work from Western Reserve University and has worked as a com munity organizer in the Durham Negro ghettos. He became controversial figure during the summer when he and another poverty , Four James Residents Allowed To Keep Rooms After Protest By WAYNE HURDER ojf The Daily Tar Heel Staff Four occupants of Hinton James who had been told Wednesday night that they would have to move out to - ' h. -. .... r r and one touchdown and has gabbed 13 for 254 yards so far this season, i Vanderbilt ' tries to com - plement its passing game with i a strong ninning attack, but the Commodores have had their problems here because they don't have the fast, break T away runner that can get them the instant score. Instead, they ; have been forced to grind out t short yardage on the ground '' with Dann Lipperman and Jim Whiteside doing most of the running for them from the I- w o r ker, Ben Ruffin, pie," Friday said. "Transitions spearheaded a drive b y never take place without con Durham Negroes for better troversy. . 7 i jobs and living conditions. "Since University faculty "The faculty of the School of an staff members posses the social worK, navmg Knowledge P 1 J of his academic preparation and having had these op portunities to judge his pro fessional performance, and after .receiving evaluations on his work and competence which were obtained from in dividuals.! with whom he had previously associated, deemed Mr. Fuller qualified to lecture in the School of Social Work in the field of Com m u n i t y Organization," Friday said. Negotiations to hire Fuller began last spring and by late summer the Faculty Advisory Committee approved Fuller's coming here as a part time lecturer. Friday said later that although Fuller's hiring was brought to the Executive com mittee for review, the f University.has the authority to hire instructors for a year or iless without trustee-approval. - Fuller has been hired for a year. U Criticism such as that which has arisen over Fuller's being hired, Friday told the trustees, has occurred before "and will occur again as long as the University of North Carolina remains a place where ideas are exchanged, current prac tices examined and new solu tions projected for the pro blems of our society. "We are in the midst of a period of major change in our country which affects the lives and work of millions of peo- make room for visiting atletes have been allowed to keep their rooms. The Athletic" Department, which bad previously thought it would need 24 spaces for athletes from other colleges, t. . ..,,,.,., , . - ---- DTB Staff Photo by MIKE McGOWAN planning discussion group meeting outside. In other words, it's the greatest conglomeration of girls to be found on campus. formation. The Commodores defense is led in the front line by Sid. Ransom and Chris Collins who have made 35 tackles and 22 assist between them. Sophomore middle guard Bill DcDonald and junior Chip Healy, All-SEC linebacker last year, are two more defensive terrors. "This is a big game for both teams," Vanderbilt coach Bill Pace says. "I think Carolina (Continued on Pare 5) competence and research skill m required for the analysis of issues as we search for their resolution, the University in evitably becomes in volved. . ." Gover. Moore, who sat silently during Friday's speech, followed him to the microphone. The next item on the agen da. . ." Affect By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff "What newsmen goes on between and Vietnamese of ficials is for them to know and us (the State Department) to be responsible for," a foreign service officer said Thursday night. William Marsh, who has just completed six years in Saigon for the State Department said the 350450 American cor respondents in Vietnam can easily "irritate and influence the Vietnam government." revised its needs to 21 spaces, Six of the occupants of the 12 rooms set aside during the summer for the athletes had not been told the rooms would he temporary, as the others had when they signed up for rooms. Four of the six protested having to move out without being previously notified. Director of Housing James Wadsworth met with Jjmes Governor Miles Wilhelm, Stu dent Body President Bob Travis, and Scott Morgenstein, a representative of the four Friday to discuss the problem. Student Advisors Being Picked By STEVE PRICE of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Candidates are being chosen for a student advisory com mittee formed to aid un dergraduates in selecting their future courses. Lloyd Simon, head of the committee, has -been in terviewing students for posi tions since the committte was formed by executive order a week ago. The committee will choose students to act as student counselors much as the General College advisors. Simon said the student ad 'Round And 'Round No matter how you torn this picture, you still get the same thing spirals. And more spirals. Actually, though, the spirals are steps and the steps ae part of the water tower on Manning Drive. Viet Leadership Marsh, speaking at the Di Phi Meeting Hall, mentioned two CBS newsmen as an ex ample. "They were out in the middle of a riot and the police picked them up. They came ninning to us with complaints about . freedom of the press. We had to straighten the situation out." One of the chief problems in Vietnam, according to Marsh, is the "thin veneer of ad ministrators." "The average term of office for a province chief is something like four months. This is due to the shifts in na tional government." "They have so few officials and so little experience. We are hopeful that with the new government they will have a return of political stability." Marsh revealed that the Viet Cong are in trouble. "Their recruitment has dropped by a half. In addition, they are plagued b y inefficiencies, particularly in logistics." Marsh, said the aim of the U. S. in Vietnam is to return freedom of choice to the peo ple. The title of Marsh's address was "Washington and Saigon: Who Makes the Decisions?" Marsh, answering questions, said there is little friction between American and Viet namese troops. c "They are not together that much and when they are it is usually under conditions where visors would fill the "vacuum now existing" in the present advisory system. 'The General College advisors are just too busy to fill the present needs," he continued. Somon said the exact method of picking the student advisors has not been determined, nor have their office locations, once they have been chosen. "Possibly we can put them in the residence colleges," he said, "or even in the departmental buildings. "Grades will not be a determining factor in our choosing advisors," he - con tinued. "All will undergo str ingent interviewing so that we -"' " 1111 -' ' IIIIMUM L-L ,1.1.11 y v 4 A .10 X the chief concern' is staying alive. Even u When they. are together there; ja- not much, if any, friction."- -e ... In Cashier's Possession The Department of Student Aid has deposited all scholarships and loans with the University Cashier, according to Director William Geer. The date of finalization was a little later than last year due to increased enrollment which, in turn, increased the amount of paperwork necessary for the deposit of funds with the cashier. The delay was also caused by a lack of communication between the department and students. Some studenis chang ed their addresses after ap plying for aid and therefore did not receive the forms required by the department. "All students who have not heard from us but have applied (for aid)," Geer said, "should send us their new address in Chapel HilL" He said this could be done either by sending a post card to 2 Hanes Hall or by going by the office. will know we're getting serious students." Such a student-advise-stu-dent system is working suc cessfully at the University of Michigan and at other large universities, Simon said, and his committee has contacted several of them for sug gestions. On this campus, Simon has the full support of Student Body President Bob Travis, vice-president Jed Dietz and presidential assistant David KieL . Dietz admitted he was "very excited" about the committee and promised aid in every possible way. Scholarship
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 7, 1967, edition 1
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