Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 8, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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-rl-" -n s v n.c. risinm fair WU slowly middle w 1116 low to 27514 irVf Peace Corps AH retarded Pface rn Tftl-tecrs pleas cs-isct Aaae Qucea at tac Y Ccoi ece Friday eooo. 75 Years of Editorial Freedom 7 L- ! I i X I Vol IMrd Party Eof Class Officei CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLED, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 8,557 r in ance Tin By WAYNE HURDER and KAREN FREEMAN of The Doily Tar Hetl The Independent Reform Movement, organized three weeks ago, no longer is run ning candidates for class of ficers. The third party was running six candidates for class of ticers, only one more can didate than the minimum allowed by Election Law for a party to get its candidates on the ballot Then one candidate failed to go to the required candidates meeting, another dropped out of the race, a third was dis qualified, and a fourth came down with mononucleosis. The party had a chance to candidates or were decided to that mm iTIjr Dailji ear Jfrrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International Russia Celebrates 50th Birthday replace the dropped out qualified but the race. The party may stay dead or the members may decide to try to run someone in the spring, party chairman George Tayior said Tuesday. The Reform Movement was organized by Bland Simpson and Bob Tyndall shortly after Student Legislature decided not to abolish class officers. Both Simpson and Tyndall had been very active in the drive to get rid of the class of ficer system. The third party wanted to use the campaign, and the of fices, if it won, to seek certain reforms in Student Government. It wanted an investigation of the SG executive bureaucracy, investigation and evaluation of the honor system, a study of the relationship of Student Legislature to the campus, and investigation of student fees. Taylor said he thought it doubtful that the party would Honor Petition Nearing Goal The Honor System referendum petition came within 230 of the required 1,500 signatures Tuesday afternoon, according to a Di-Phi spokesman. The petition received more than 110 signatures Tuesday, pushing the total over 1,270. Di-Phi also planned to operate a booth in Chase Cafeteria Tuesday night. It was not known how many additional signatures were ob tained. He also said the booth in Y Court will be open through Thursday, i f necessary. "If we get 1,500 signatures Wednesday, we will probably stop. It's getting mighty, cold out there in Y Court," the spokesman said. ay Founded February 23, IS 33 c O rt O jaecFMraini Bill. By WAYNE HURDER of The Doily Tor Heel stag An appropriation cf $320 to start a program to recruit talented Negro students to at tend UNC was passed out favorably by the finance com mittee of Student Legislature Tuesday. The bill will be considered by Student Legislature Thursday night - The money will go to the The special effort to recruit Negroes is needed, according to the bill, because Negroes "receive little information about UNC and they are outside the traditional re cruiting network and alumni." The bill was introduced by Joyce Davis, SP from WE V, for Clay, the dirctor of Carolina Talent Search. The funds win be used mostly for publishing ties in- aware of outside the YMCA and will be dispensed brochures on opportunities for by that organization to the Negroes UNC, and for vis Carolina Talent Search, an iting schools. organization set up recently by Clay has already sent out 200 Phil Clay to recruit Negroes. questionnaires to high schools to get the names of interested Negro students. Clay told the -committee that "high school students aren't aware of the oppo state but are made the opportunities state. "We want to stem the brain drain" that results from talented Negroes leaving the state, he said. Davis bill says that "equal opportunity must rest on the fact that all students, regardless of race, should have the opportunity of knowing of opportunities at UNC." MOSCOW The Soviet Union turned 50 Tuesday and displayed in its giant celebration parade a three-stage rocket it said could launch a nuclear warhead into orbit Four other new missiles appeared in 'the display of military be revived unless considerably might that moved through Red Square in honor of the Bolshevik more backing of the 4 party Revolution of 1917. Defense Minister Andrei A. Grechko in his keynote address warned that the American Vnninal war" in Vietnam endangered world peace. 'The criminal war of American imperialists in Vietnam causes deep anxieties among the peoples of the world," Grechko said. "Imperialism. . .aggravates international tension and the danger of a new world war." could be generated. David House, the party's candidate for freshman class president, failed to go to the Elections Board's required candidates' meeting and was disqualified. Doug David, a wingback on the UNC football team, and the candidate for sophomore class vice president, had to quit the race because football took up too much of his time. Tyndall, the sophomore class presidential candidate, Monday was declare-ineHgiibie" to- run because he had attended, sum mer school and . : was academically a junior. Andy Schorr, running for president o44f the freshman class, came down with mononucleosiss. The requirements fo a party to get its candidates on the ballot area a petition with more than 20 signatures, candidates for 30 per cent of the offices open in the election, bylaws and officers. " c " o Q - ' - rO ' - " f I A i MEWS 17 Americans Die In Viet Battle SAIGON Communist forces refusing to give up at Loc Ninh hit U.S. troops Tuesday with withering rocket and rifle fire that killed a U.S. battalion commander and. 17 ofA his, soldiers: nearjthe.., rubber plantation batUegrouhds where the Reds last week suf fered one of their worst defeats. . : " ; 4- . Farther north, bitter fighting between North Vietnamese troops and American footsoldiers and paratroopers for control of South Vietnam's Central Highlands raged into its second day. At one point the Americans called in rocket and napalm strikes almost on their own positions. U. S. Submits Mideast Resolution UNITED NATIONS The United States submitted an om nibus resolution for a Mildle East peace settlement Tuesday on the heels of a United Arab Republica demand for urgent Security Couicil action to force Israel out of captured Arab territory. Informed sources in Cairo reported the United Arab Republic willing to accept President Jhhnson's five-point program of Mideast peace if there was a clearcut call for Israel to pull out of the territory it seized in the June 5-10 war. Dirhsen Offers Fiscal Program WASHINGTON Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen suggested Tuesday a compromise formula for a tax in crease and a cut in government spending which he thinks might nmua afvPTatahTf to President Johnson. r r .... . 1 :j-T n-.nn ; - Tl T J V t- k-.n.. 1 A Dirksen who otten in tne past nas come up wiui wuituwuuocs away r nu uigut wwecu w to save stalled Johnson legislative programs, told newsmen he and 10:30 pjn., and was felt the President would regard his proposal with a "reasonable returned Tuesday morning oefore 11:30 pjn. view. .... , . Thf large nortrait suffered minor damage during its absence. One corner is chipped off its gold-gilded frame, there are numerous nicks on the rest of r fu4 ( JL " ' Charlie Mercer, a member cf the State Affairs Com mittee, said that the work should be done through the Carolina Talent Search rather than through State Affairs committee or through a specially-created Student Government committee because the idea of creating equal opportunity for Negro students is a full time job that requires autonomy." Clay said that his group is seeking funds from the U. S. Office of Education in order to carry on a permanent, more extensive program of recruit ment Mercer, Gay and Ed Bristol, chairman of the State Affairs committee, aU agreed that the work of the Carolina Talent Search will not overlap with the State committee's recruit ment work. The finance committee also passed out favorably a bill that would give 5230 to any residence college that spends an equal amount to set up a radio station. It deleted from the bin a sec tion asking for $500 to set up a radio network on campus. The committee" passed out favorably an appropriation of $217.60 for research in the area of student health. The money will be used by the Student Stress Committee, a special student mental health program and for surveys and questionnaires. The radio bill and student health bill were introduced by Rep. George Krichbaum, SP from lower quad. DTH Sta& Photo by GZNE WANG . . . Going Three Times ... Sold! The slave auction was part of the IFC canxical which netted about $50 dollars for UNICEF. Turn to page five for more pic tures. And f Mason Returns To Smith By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The elusive James Pleasant Mason portrait is again oc cupying it's place on the wall of Smith Dormitory's television room but no one knows how it got there. The protrart was spirited Tha TiKnni ftfP leader said the formula might consist of a $4 billion tax hike accompanied by government spending cuts that would total another $4 billion. Token Force Remains In Winston WINSTON-SALEM Fifty National Guardsmen remained on duty here Tuesday, a token force of the 1,000 troops used to help subdue three days of racial rioting hre. Thirty military policemen from Greensboro and 20 local guardsmen remained on duty to help police a school tax election Tuesday. A spokesman in the Governor's office in Raleigh said all the extra 90 state high patrolmen moved into the area had left the city. San Francisco Votes On Vietnam SAN FRANCISCO San Francisco Tuesday became the first major city in the nation to vote on the Vietnam war. Proposition P, advocating an immediate ceasefire and withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam, was on the ballot in the municipal election that included a hot mayorality race among the three top contenders. Officials predicted a record turnout of 82 per cent of the city s . 317,000 registered voters. Democrats have nearly a 2-1 edge over Republicans. Returns were not in by The Daily Tar Heel deadline. Former Veep John Garner Dies UVALDE Tex Former Vice President John Nance (Cactus Jack) Garner, S3, the tough, plain-spoken Texan who exiled himself from Washington in opposition to President Franklin D. Roosevelt's third term, died Tuesday ofa heart attack. Death came quietly to Garner in his bed in the samll, white frame house, shaded by pecan trees, in which he had lived since 1943 lie had a "little touch" of penumonia two days ago. But he ap narently had recovered and plans were being made for a big 9th b'rthday celebration Nov. 22. Garner became ill again Monday night. . the frame, and part of the can vas is wrinkled. In addition, part of James Pleasant Mason's npse is miss ing a few spots of paint. The portrait was notice missing when someone asked to see it Friday night, and it was discovered the same way, when someone asked to see where it had been Monday morning. Ann Marie Wenz, vice-president of Smith, was the first to notice the painting's return. AH of the screens of the parlor windows were locked, so it appears .that the painting in through the parlor. The main parlor must be crossed to reach the television room. Jo Ann Porter, ' Smith's president, stated that the pain ting was still missing Monday night It was that the keys to the storage room had been taken from the key ring that holds all of the keys to the lower rooms in Smith. Paullette WestphaL the girl on duty at Smith's desk when the portrait was taken, said she didn't think anyone conn- ectea with removing tne If the picture had been put in The portrait will be under the storage room, there was no additional surveilance for the sign of disturbance. next few nights, Paillette Campus Security Chief Athur Westphal said. Beaumont said Monday that Miss Westphal received a fhprt Nr nn further clues as telegram Monday afternoon to who had taken, and return- discovered Monday ed, the portrait me return oi me pururau. will close the case as far as the Campus Security Police are concerned, Beaumont said, unless "someone comes up with a positive identification." like the ones being sent through Pi Kappa Phi fraterni ty for the IFC UNICEF Carnival that read: "Leave 25 thousand dollars in the Old Well at midnight or you will never see James Pleasant Mason alive again. Radio Union . Considered At Morehead Mbrehead Residential College" may have the chance to tie with Morrison's WMO radio station if Morehead residents consent next week. The Morehead Senate will have an open debate on the plan at a senate meeting Nov. IS. "The general opinion seems to be favorable. Some people are decidedly against it. The debate is to feel out the ma jority of the people on it," said Martha Hammond, senator from Cobb residence hall. If approved, the tie-in will cost Morehead College about $370 initially, slightly over $30 each semester and it will begin operation next semester. The decision to join with Morrison will also depend on whether the Student Legislature Thursday night passes a bill authorizing $230 in matching funds for any residence college starting a radio station. Political Scientist Fears Brain Control By TERRY GINGRAS Of The DTH Staff A noted political scientist said Tuesday night one of the problems of the future will hi trying to keep advanced technology from contributing drugs and other "brain-storming techniques" from con trolling human beings. Dr. Harold Lasswell, pro fessor of law and political science at Yale University and third speaker in the ""Leadership in the 1930's" con ference, said the possibility of m i nd-controlling techniques will make new leadership in stitutions necessary. Lasswell suggested that a policy seminar approach be us ed for leadership in the future. "These seminars would study the past in order to pro ject the future" he said. "They would think of how to remodel the future in closer harmony with their postulated goals." Lasswell, speaking in Memorial Hall, predicted that the policy seminar technique would eventually modify must have been brought back portrait would have had access to the key unless Mrs. Parker, the housemother, had left the keys with the men who came to check Smith's electricity shortly before the picture was taken Friday night. The route the men took to get down to Smith's fusebox went past the desk where the -keys were kept The keys were found lying on the floor by the New Commmiittee To Study His C7 Ker Education In U. decision-making institutions at every leveL Lasswell said a special effort would have to be made to foster individuality because of the increasing loss of privacy in our "electronic fisfabowl" existence. He predicted that a deliberate program would be started to foster initiative and individuality. . Unlike John Cogley, Monday night's speaker, Lasswell does not see the world of the future coming without violence. He sees the possibility of ex tending international strife into outer space. Lasswell stressed the "urgency of mutual participa- problems of the natural teeth desk with the storage room key missing. The fusebos is just outside of the storage room. Two Day Course For Dentists A twoniay course in the diagnosis and treatment of faulty tooth and jaw alignment will be offered to practicing Tar Heel dentists at the School of Dentistry here on Dec 7-8. Demonstrations of occlusal tion by the leaders and the led in all institutions of the decision-making process." Us ing greater interaction, between leaders and followers Lasswell said, can i4rescue the earth from disaster terror and anxiety." Dr. Howard W. Johnson, president of the Massachusetts' Institute of Technology, will speak on "Education for Leadership" tonight at 8. will be shown on live closed- circuit television and participating dentists will make specialized stuides of various patient problems. The instructors wfll be Dr. Walter T. McFall Jr. and Dr. By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel SiajJ "A comprehensive study of higher education in the United States" that's the task that Study Government's newest and probably largest (5 0 members) committee is undertaking. John McMurray, chairman of the three-week old Special Committee On General College Reform, told Student Legislature last Thursday night that his committee S tackling this job plus one of studying problems at Carolina. The occasion for his report on the committee's plans was the first appropriation ($197.10) from legislature to the committee for it to carry on its , investigation. The committee was established by Student Body President Bob Travis because "there has been widespread student dissatisfaction with the degree of freedom and quality Don L. Allen, both of the UNC of instruction that exists in the Department of Periodontics General College," he said on and Oral Pathology. Oct 19. The course will follow the The committee is writing to annual Dental Seminar Day on other colleges, getting bulletins Dec 6. from them, and studying their general college requirements, McMurray said. When it finds a college with a interesting approach to the first two years of college, the committee wfll get more ex tensive information on the pro gram. This is being done 'in hopes of iiriprovirtg our own cur riculum," McMurray ex plains. The committee wfll also study specific problems at UNC through student and faculty cestioniiaires and by working with other committees or organizations that are stu dying educational problems here, such as the Student Stress Committee, or the peridental College. "The basic function" of the group, according to David Kiel, a student member of the Chan cellor's Advisory Committee on Teaching and Curriculum, will be "gathering information and feeding it to the ap propriate decision-making structures." The Chancellor's Advisory Committee represents the main decision making body for implementing any changes in this case, according to KieL McMorray's committee wfll riodic progress reports and a final report, with analyses of studies made by itself and other organizations, by next summer, McMurray says. Two programs that the corn (Ccntissed ea Pa?e 5) LSD Topic Of Session The fourth panel discussion of the five-week "Drugs in Our Society" series will discuss the hallucinogens (eg. LSD) Ex- today at 4 pjn. in 111 Beard HH. Dr. Lewis Harris, assoiate professor of pharmocology cf the school of medicine, wfll discuss pharmocology. Dr. Tyndall Harris cf the Student Infirmary wfll grass the medical aspects. Jed Dietz, student body vice president, will be moderator. A combined cemmittee wfll present a report on the social legal and ethical aspects c! crug use at the next Nov. 15. meeting,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 8, 1967, edition 1
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