Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 29, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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funy And Cool Mostly harder. Ci3c3s .j (031 n 1 1 Jl 1 I 1 f I II it er 41 75 Years of E&zZri& Freedzxi CHAPEL HTLL. NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1SS7 vu D Planning Session A pZassiag sesska ea e3ca asal isssratisa asd tie Ex psrizses csHsje will be teU tociit at fca Gerard IliX MT(Q 1 m-' pi , - ' ' ar . -v' 1 Heels t r . -V.. if ? I tV - - 4. -:- Lv'r V-r" v .'.' . - . .. '.. : f" C- . w 4 : , w , . r-V X'?" :X' 'X:: " - - ."' -.j - - """" " . , . - i . ... v f.-v.- -y-' .-....,.- I . " . . - . .... . . - - 1- Founded February 23, 1S33 IT (D) T r il n 1 TiTrrniQi iiiiiiii E2rk Kssia klacis po2zt after cSm fa Ciird qsarta Sstrkss gua. It?lUg Jar CJrrl Vorld News BRIEFS UWtid Prtu IntrifonaZ QP Sought or Go ,r By JTil FIEU DTH Staff A fired up Waie Forest team failed out an fee stops here Saturday to vein, its Erst game of &e season 20-13 over Nortii Carolina.. " : : - Thz victory was the third in as isasy years fcr the Deacons over fee Tar Heels, and tss meant that BH1 DoHey can't fcare a .500 season in fcis first year as head coach at CaroSna. Quarterback Freddie Sura cers aisl suiastte halibark Buz Leavt lead a bull dozing a Deacon offense that ran almost at will ovei tie Heels for total of 375 offensive yards, deeming on the grouisd. The Deacons scored what proved to be the winning touchdown &e first tinss they got their hands on the baS in the second half. The drive covered 83 yards in 11 plays wiii Ron Leavitt getting the last 16 yards on an off tackle play that saw lam break two Tar Heel tackles to score. Carolina's first break of the second half late in the third quarter when Mark Maria recovered Ron Jurewiez's fmnble on tie Carolina 23. Gayie Bomar then begin to put the ball in the air as the Heeis were forced to try and play catch up football. He hit Peter Davis, Tommy Dempsey and Charlie Carr to move the ba2 to the Wake 32. Deinpsey feea got four more to the 23 and Eomar four more the 24. Davis then hauied in a Bomar pass at the 15, sidestepped Carlton Baker, and raced into the end zone to score. Don Haxtig's extra point made the score 14-10 with 13:37 stm left in the game. The Deacons didn't fold under pressure though, as Leavitt took the errssiing kick off and returned it 37 yards to the Deacon 42. The Deacons then inarched 53 yards in 10 plays to score as Summers pulled two big plays out of his bat to keep the drive alive. The first of summers two miracle plays came on second and line from their own 43. Summers bit Richard Decker with a 22 yard pass to move the ball to the Carolina 35. Five plays later, be was faced with a third and nine situation from the Tar Keels 22, adn this time he went to Beth Henry with a 10 yard aerial to give the Deacons first and 10 at the Carolina 12. It took Wake three plays to score from there with Sum mers carrying the ball in from seven yards out. Marra block ed the extra point attempt and the Heels trailed 20-10 with 8:17 left in the game. The Deacon defense was then put to the supreme test as the Heels mounted three last ditch scoring drives to try and (Cesthxaed oa Pxjr 4) I iiFe By DOUG LOVE Special To The Daily Tar Heel A special Experimental College course with possible academic credits is being plan ned for next semester by Buck Goldstein and Roger Thompson of the Experimental College. r The main task ahead for the snecial six-cour course on He win not act as a teacher, according to Thompson. Learning is supposed to come from open discussion with other members of the course, he said. Grading will be done by the students themselves. Students when given the chance to grade themselves, usually assign grades that equal or are actually lower than those given 'urban-politics is" approvatby "tinslructors, Thompson1 the Administration. H the course is approved by the University, Th ompson hopes that this type of course will be "accepted as part of the institution just as the pass fail system has been adop ted." The -- participants in the course would meet three hours a week in seminar and become involved in social work in Durham three hours a week. Thomas Cronin, an in structor in the political science department will be the consultant-advisor for the group. said. This takes the burden M learning from the instructor and places it on the student, where it belongs," he added. Sanford May Run Against Ervin FAYETTE VILLE Former Gov. Terry Sanford has "in dica..d strongly" he may run against US. Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. in the Democratic primary next spring, reports Gibson Prather, executive editor of the Fayetteville Observer. - "I haven't decided whether I should run for the IMted States Senate or not.' Sanford saidJia.an-lnferviiw.-Wi would be a tough campaign. I am stni tninkmg about it." The interview was published in Sunday's Fayettevillfi Observ er. . -V;. ; x VC Threaten Attack On Humphrey SAIGON Communist broadcasts boasted that nothing the Americans or South Vietnamese government could do would assure the safety of Vice President Hubert H. HiJnphrey when he arrives in Saigon on Sunday. The Communists threatened new Viet Cong terror attacks similar to ones that sheQed the city during the INov. 1 national day relebrations last year. Militant Buddhists also threatened to ' cause trouble Sunday shortly before Humphrey arrives to attend the inauguration on Tueisday df Presidentelect 'Nlguyen Van Thieu. Brig. Gen. Nguen Ngoc Loan ordered polk on Ml alert because of the Buddhist threat and warned he would not let them demonstrate. Johnson Cedes Land To Mexico JUAREZ, Mexico President Johnson and Mexican Presi dent Gustavo Diaz Ordaz drove through blizzards of confetti and a crowd cf 2C0,CCQ wildy cheering Mexicans Saturday to end a century - old border dispute by ceremonially transferring 437 acres of land from the VS. to Mexico. After a welcome like few American presidents have ever seen in thir own country. Johnson and Ordaz nanea tne aansier w a rairiT'T at an mtpmaHcnal tract of land called the Chamizal as a symbol of international conference on the desirability of a federal program of cash prenatal care allowances to ease childhood women, as well WAKE First Downs 20 Rushing Yardage 185 Passing Yardage in Return Yardage ... 109 passes , 9-18-2 its --6-38.3 lble Lost 1 rards Penalized 40 UNC 20 147 249 134 17-38-1 5-37 0 80 Seoriag: WF Dolbln 51 run Georga NC FG Hartig 20 WF Leavitt 25 run, George ,ick -V - x . ' .... : . - . . NC Davis 24 pass from Bd mar, Hartig kick WF Summers 7 ron, kick blocked A 3S,000. Pu: Fun 1 . --"(f-it- ".-siy.: -x - X - 'A v !' ,ir-'i fi x - t . . W 4 , . . I H IP . . JiV2D Vl i-r?:XiX V s? "Nit. i . . , v .4 1 L . v ' " -fe 'J!" 4 r 7 iv"n- - pv.- (pe,).- V - 1 i over center Chip Bradley (51) after short grtin. V By JOAN PAGE Within the next 20 years, Viet Nam will be 'indecisively settled" and the political world East predicted here. will become "tri-polar" with "Well undoubtedly the balance of power being negotiate out of shared by the United States, Russia and China, an authority uu uae aaviei umonana Far have to Vietnam National Health Service Asked Child Medical Care . A national ritfld health service to assure adequate medical care for American children was called for week by a North Carolinian friendship. U.S. Losses Expected To Rise WASHINGTON The number of American fighting men kill ed in action in Vietnam during 1967 apparently will run about 70 per cent higher than last year. Latest Pentagon casulty summaries listed 7,456 who nave died in battle or in air or sea action during the first 10 months of the year, compared to 5,0C3 in all of 1966. While high compared to previous records for Vietnam, defense tinted out Saturday tnat tne new iouu nas not yet - - ' " - to mm m w poverty in the United States. .The proposal was made by Gerald M. Holdea of the UNC School of Social Work, one of six experts invited to speak at a three-day conference just concluded in Warrenton, Va. The Citterns' Committee for Children of New York City sponsored the conference with from Canada, Europe and American business, labor and civil rights leaders, and specialists in economics and social policy . HoMen called for a national health, service to provide to pregnant as the whole range of health services need ed by children. Such a pro- Recent statistics, he said, document the inadequacy of traditional medical services and health care available to the poor, especially expectant mothers and children living in poverty. Hoiden pointed to a 1961 in fant mortality rate that placed the United States 15th in ternationally, the wide gram would include preventive discrepancy in infant'niortality rates between whites and non- whites, and high rates of re jection for military service among young men from poor families and from large families. reached half of the death toll in Korea and is low compared to a special grant from the Ford U.S. losses in World War II. . rn a -ZZ. federal, state and local of ficials participated in the discussion with, representatives Class O UAW's Next Target; Chrysler Corp. DETROIT The United Auto Workers Saturday picked Chrysler Corp as its next "strike target' and went to the bargaining table immediately to try to match the record contract won at Ford Motor Co. The UAWs international executive board said it had decided to bragain "to conclusion" with Chrysler, smallest of the "Big Three" auto makers. This leaves the giant General Motors Corp. as me last among the major auto makers to receive the UAW strike pressure. Manhunt On For Illinois Gunmen CHICAGO A 10-state manhunt was underway Saturday for machine gun wielding bandits who slew two policemen while fleein" the scene of an $33,000 suburban bank robbery. However, Police Chief James Gilliam of Northlake, EL, wtee v, c,nntinc5 occurred, remained convinced -mathe two men and a woman sought were mcing somewnere wiaun iu nuies ot pertaining to Student Government the robbery scene.. and general University life. "They were badly shot up and couldn't get far," he saM. At The results were tabulated by IBM least one of them was thought to be wounded. machines owned by the- Political Science LeVY Ordered TO LeaVenWOrth Student Body President Bob Travis furiiish- RICiniOND Capt. Howard Levy was ordered jailed at Ft suggestions for the questions, which were Leavenworth, Kan., Friday after the fourth U.S. Circuit Court of wrfoen by committee chairman Bill Bowman. Appeals rejected liis plea for bail. pie purpose of the committee, said Bowman, is Levy has been held without bond at the Ft Jackson, S.C., post "keeP&g Student Government informed on stu- hospital since his conviction on charges of disobeying a superior deEt opinions." officer's orders and promoting disloyalty among troops. n other questions, students felt this way: services such as - im munizations and periodic ex aminations, diagnostic" and treatment services, and rehabilitative services. While the United States has lowered the economic barrier to some health services fbra "Almost 0 per cent of the portion of the population, children from families with un- we've done little to provide der $2,000 annual income and comprehensive care to any almost 43 per cent from segment of our popula- families under $4,000 have tion rich or poor, young or never been, to a dentist," old, Hoiden charged. Hoiden cinfinued. - before long and regardless of the outcome, nothing im portant will really be settled," Political Science Prof. Robert Rupen said. , "There'll probably be similar testing places' in the next 20 years. Other areas will see low-level confrontations, but none wdH be finaL We must accept this, for the United States certainly cannot pull out of Asia. No great Third World War will occur in the next 20 years." Continuing his "forecast for 1987," Rupen said China will become an economic and . military power far more menacing to the Soviet Union than any United States threat and that Soviet-American col laboration will occur in many areas. "Increasingly by . 1937, the Soviet Union and the United States wifl be seeking a con structive solution for fee China problem and will at least have begun to talk about large-scale economic and technical assistance to China," h e predicted. "Cf the three powers, China will play the smallest in ternational role because of its overwhelming concern with domestic economic and popula tion problems. But China's size and location, phis increased weight due to greater economic and military strength, wifl place it in the top rank of national factors af fecting international rela tions. China will have a population of one billion in 1937 and its on ly hope will be domestic in dustrialization and carefully controlled consumption, Rupen explained. "Population movement beyond its present borders will do nothing significant to ease its population problem, for it is inconceivable that annual Chinese increases of 10 to 15 million persons can find places to live abroad." The degree of Russia nAJS. collaboration in 1937, Rupen added, is going to depend on the degree of overt ag gressiveness of China. The 4Cbina threat," he said, will be manipulated by both the United States and Russia to justify cooperative, action. Though Russia in 1937 will still resist complete identification with the United States, a tacit U.-Soviet alliance against China will in fact operate in many areas. "While the United States and Russia will both talk as though each represents the greatest threat to the other, they will act as though China is the greatest threat to each of (Coathraed on Pare 6) UNC Writer To Present "The Singer" Teacher-writer David Mad den, currently writer-in residence at UNC will give a dramatic reading at 8 pjn. Wednesday in Howell Hall. Madden will read one of bis ' short stories, "The Singer" and then entertain questions from the floor about the story and bis career. "The Singer" is the story of a wandering girl singer who feels she has a mission to sing for Jesus. It is told from the point of view of a film-maker unsympathetic to her view. A reception will follow in GM. Both events are open to the public A native of KnoxviHe, Term., Madden was graduated tmm the University of Tennessee and received a masters degree in creative writing from San Francisco State College. He has taught English, dramatics and creative writing at Appalachian State Teachers University, Centre College and Morehead State College, and writing on a part-time basis at the University of Louisville. He served as assistant editor of the Kenyon Review for two years. Q (f O - Ussraie . By STEVE PRICE of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Fifty per cent of 200 students questioned in a random survey by Student Government's com munication committee think freshman, sophomore and junior class officers are necessary, whale 41 per cent think they are not The survey, conducted by personal in terviews from Oct. 13-23, contained questions activities GS per cent said campus poIiScal party ac tivities affected them very little and 34 per cent said not at all. Twecty-frve percent said they were affected somewhat by party lactivities. 81 per cent thought Student Government could be effective in dealing with educational reform. Seventy-three percent backed Student Government in parking reforms; and 63 per cent thought Student Government could ef fectively lower book prices. The parking problem!, ediacafional reform and women's rute changes were thought to be the most irnpcrraat areas to which Student Government siiould devote its time. Regarding the Campus Code, 70 per cent of the students polled thought the code should apply to offenses committed on campus and fee Chapel HE1 area only. . Concerning the orientation program, El per cent thoat & to successful in its purpose of acquainting entering students with Carolina. Nineteen per cent said the program was not effective. Those suggestions for improving tie orien tation program included cutting down on long convocations and meetings; having fewer re quired meetings; having a less concentrated program, and using smaller groups. Five per cent thorfet the orientation pro gram should be made shorter and eight per cent thought more care should be exercised in the choosing of orientation counselors. Concerning the Experimental College, 73 per cent of those polled wanted to participate in the Experimental College, while 20 per cent did not. Only 27 per cent of the students thought Stu dent Government could operate mcre ef fectively if student fees were raised by a small amount Fifty-seven per cent were opposed to the move. Regarding dormitory and residence college life 95 per cent of the students were in favor cf having rmaf! portable refrigerators in their rooms, which they would rent each semester. Seventy-eight percent sail they would rent such a refrigerator if it were available, while 14 per cent said they would not Eight per cent did not know. Answering two questions on Student Body President Bob Travis, 56 per cent said they were satisfied with his work while 33 per cent did not know if they were satisfied. Fifty per cent thought they had formed their opinion of Travis from the Daily Tar Heel; 23 per cent from discussions with friends and eight per cent from campus political parties. Of the 200 students polled, 22 per cent were freshmen, 24 per cent sophomores, 23 per cent juniors and 19 per cent seniors. Sixty-eight per cent were males and 22 per cent females. Eliiy-two per cent lived in residence halls; six per cent in apartments; and seven per cent were fraternity er sorcrity . cnembers.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 29, 1967, edition 1
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