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r, ap,31 Mil. II, Cloudy today imT" shower cf watered Typing Opening The Shiest Aid Office feas an cpcsdsg far a typist wi2 ihart hand eiperiesce. Contact Mrs. Assette Most-omery, S23-il22, cr come by 330 Vance. 75 Years o Editorial Freedom ISSSWj. Nnmber 52 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1967 Founded February 23, 1S33 Take Aim AH UVa ofy4ulYKErni WIARlxnTESVILLE, Va He? North Carolina Tar S tbalj pame here v!S University of vjrpua Uy mi-ht well take SSU ZS Quayle scored all j&rce Jouchdowns and rushed tor 123 yards in 21 carries as Cavaliers ended Carolina's BJ a 21-14 losing cote. J Ivi23 reputation cow well estaikshed, Quayle, a junior, special attention.' The lenorom Tar Heel Coach X5Joley deemed probably the best all-around payer we will face this year," bas averaged 4.5 yards per carry 5a 116 tries. He leads his team in pass receptions with catches that total 720 yards. "Quayle wall cause us plenty of problems," Doolev admits candidly. Quayle 5s only one piston in a Cavalier attack that leads the conference in ground offense. Fullback Jeff Anderson has been responsible for 540 yards, Kurd best among individual ACC ball carriers. Throw in quarterback Gene Arnette, fifth in total offense with 034 yards, and you've got a tandem that the Atlantic Coast Conference's sixth best defender will be bard pressed to stop. "Our defense will have to fa I 'iiniiBirl i in iiiIm mIm ii f LBJ: Protests Lengthen War Anti-war demonstrators are prolonging the war in Vietnam was the message President Johnson took to servicemen from coast to coast Friday. The President, making a Veterans' Day tour of military in stallations, began his trip at Fort Benning, Ga. He came to the nation's largest Army base Friday to thank America's, fighting soldiers and theiir families, whose "lives are tied by flesh and blood to Vietnam." "You are a community of courage. You are a family of partiots," the President told an audience of about 15,000 crack in fantry men, Vietnam war wives and widows, and small children. The Georgia-Alabama border military base send about two thirds of the 55,000 infantry men trained here each year to Viet nam. (Complete Story on Page 4) Apollo Recovered Safely CAPE KENNEDY The Apollo 4 moonship, scarred but still intact after its historic Saturn flight, headed back to its California birthplace Friday so engineers can see exactly how well it withstood i!ts mock return from the moon. At the same time, the nation launched a weather satellite from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., to cap the most signifi cant flurry of U.S. space activity since the beginning of the cos mis age 10 years ago. The robot-piloted Apollo 4 capsule's bullseye splashdown Thursday and the spectacular success of the maiden Saturn 5 moon rocket that launched it put the Apollo program back on the track. It gave the U.S. a sharp edge in the race to the moon and a better chance of getting there in 1969. Tn nave the wav for the manned moon landing, America's Surveyor 6 robot settled down in the center of the moon's face Thursday night and sent back word Hhat the only remaining ques- tionable Apollo landing site was safe lor man. Apollo 4 is how aboard the aircraft carrier Bennington, which plucked it from the windtossed Pacific after its 8 hour 37 minute flight It will arrive at Pearl Harbor Saturday night and later will be flown to Downey, Calif., where was built and where it will be put through a detailed piecr-by-piece analysis. Soviet Viet Aid Gain Seen LONDON The Soviet Union has resigned itself to the role of chief supplier of North Vietnam and abandoned any peace role in the Vietnam war, according to (authoritative diplomatic reports. The diplomatic sources said Friday the Soviet Union has given up any meaningful political role in promoting peace in South Vietnam and will supply the expensive war material needed by the Communist side of the struggte. j in Moscow, the Kremlin pledged continued aid to the Viet mn Tnss said Friday Premier Alexei Kosygin "assured "SlTZ M the Viet Cong before, all necessary iTiTvil American aggression." rJmlomats from Eastern Europe who are informed on the vnnm issue said the feeling in high Communist circles is that thet Union can do nothing politically to end the war. Thus, ufmSt be left to the United States, North Vietnam and ewh?tRuiia fears most presumably fis an American escala-t-"rj h Vietnam ar and Communist diplomats never tire ques ttri wesSners in private or informal talks about Washington's intentions. Russians, it is becoming increasingly clear from these t rt are in no position to pressure, or even advise, President JSinh's regime on any specific course of action. if !wnr there is also growing evidence, the diplomats in dlcatedrat the hard-liners are virtually in full control in Hanoi. - play extremely well," Dooley notes. 1 thottt It looked good against Clernson last week, thouL" North Carolina fell to its seventh ios3 la eiit games Saturday, 17-0 but ft did not look too badly in the process. The Cavaliers, meanwhile, were being run over by the N. C. State dreadnaught 30-8. They may be only 1-3 in the conference and 2-5 overall, but their Becocd place standing in both total offense end total defense offers tittle to snicker about. Defensively 205-pound tackle John Naponick and linebacker Vie m Graduaafe By KAItEN FREEMAN of Tht Daily Tar Heel Staff The Vietnam war is Ekely to lead to decreased enrollment in the Graduate School next year. A spokesman for the Graduate School attributed this Friday to cuts in domestic spending that have caused a World News BRIEFS By United Prttt International that the Soviet Union will be giv- support ILU UlUk UVA wiv aw &x Mai MacGregor get the job done. Carolina is a definite un derdog in this one. Its only answer to Virginia's list. of AOC superlatives is total of fense leader Gayle Bomar. who spent Thursday night in the in firmary with an intestinal virus. He was expected to be at full strength today, how ever. Last week against the Tigers, Bomar pulled the trig gar on a shotgun offense that hit everything but bulls eye. That, or similar strategy, will Ek&y be unveiled here. Fullback Tommy Dempsey, rnTTm Liiil sharp cutback in federally financed fellowships and to the cancellation of draft deferments for graduate students in most fields of study. Graduate schools throughout the country wll be feeang the effects of the "domestic spending cutback, but UNC will be particularly hurt by the loss of fellowships under the National Defense Educa tion Act. UNC has always been given the maximum number of NDEA fellowships allowed any university, and this, year awarded 85. 'It will continue to receive the maximimn number,, but this number (wall probably be under 50 for next year, according to information sent .to the Graduate School by Ihe Office of Education. The NDEA fellowships offer 8-year non-service awards that particularly benefit the humanities and social sciences, n-s To Be Regained By HUNTER GEORGE o Th Daily Tar Heel Staff At least 25 UNC students who lost their H-S draft classification because they were lacking academic credits will regain their former status, it was learned Friday. Charles Poindexter, assistant to the director of records, said the number of students who were re-classified was pro bably "quSte widespread" One student who is serving with the newly formed draft counseling program here said 25-30 scudents have come to the when the results come out tney service within the past two usually get la 1-SC dasstfica iweeks asking advice about the tion, which is a statutory de matter, ferment for one year." Poindexter said they would At the end of the year, he be reclassified immediately as a N orth Carolina selective service poEey change announced Thursday. . The change involved a relax- I ' - m ' . u ' r- J a! - i v- 'i; . ' X "WA Ml M -r,n-i-, 1. .-,111. 11 1 ' -ii 1 L inn I jiiU V .1 4 ' tin 11 who has gained 299 yards for a steady 3.7 average, ran well from the new formation last week. With tailback Saulis Zemaitis still limping, he will be joined in the backfield by David Ris. Dick WesolowsM or James Miggs are possibilities for the Wixack position. Much, much more offense will be needed if the Tar Heels are to crack the stern Virginia wall. Carolina has scored only eight touchdowns this year, never more than one a game except the 14-0 win over Maryland whale ranking a HFoIImeinit since it carries with it the stipulation that at least three fourths of the fellowships awarded must be In these fields. National Science Foundatin fellowships will also be cut. Well be lucky to be award ed five or six NSF fellowships for next year," said Dean James Ingrim of the Graduate School. UNC is currently receiving 15-20 NSF grants. The natural sciences will be losing financial backing with the tapering off of federal grants for research. The social sciences will also be affected, but to Tlesser extent rvh OTaT,tc vh Q ,m r, r are what Dean "Ingram called, "Our major ways of attracting good students." AH graduate -schools are" waiting to see the effects of the mew draft law upon graduate enrollment. The new draft lalw willvhot only affect students graduating Delerments ation of deferment re quirements for certain un dergraduate students whose courses of study mad it im possible for them to satisfy the national selective service's directive concerning course completion. Poindexter said that several students had come to the records office asking for ad vice. "When ithey come in here with this problem," he said, 'the normal procedure has been to tell them to go ahead land take their physical, then said, they regain classification. their n-S "To my knowledge, no one has been drafted as a result of this," Poindexter said. DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS Spectators watch the intrasquad swim meet yesterday ... for details see page 5 peager seventh in total of fense. With Bomar's emergence as a fine passer the Tar Heels have the third best ax attack in the conference. Problems may arise, though, when it is tested by the AOC's best pass defense, one that has auowea only 85.7 yards game through the air. per Ends Charlie Carr and Peter Davis wffl be the objects of Virginia's preventive measures. The game starts at 1:30. It will be broadcast over WCHL. Cm this year who apply for graduate school, but to the first-year graduate students currently enrolled. Both categories will lose their stu dent deferments at the end of. the academic year. A private source of grants that .will also be reduced next year are the Woodrow Wilson fellowships that have been financed by the Ford Foun dation. The Ford Foundation is withdrawing Sts support, however, making it probable TJ? ';TX. JSUfaWBt Cm' Pletely discontinued. One reason forwarded by the Ford Foundation is that it only wants to begin, programs of this sort and never intends to continue financing them, hop ing that once-begun they will become self-sufficient. . A second reason dates to last spring when the Ford Foun dation by-passed UNC and awarded special grants to ten ,ivy4eague schools. Since that time, the Ford Foundation has been con centrating upon these ten schools and wiH be putting even more money into, them, leaving little left to maintain the Woodrow Wilson, fellowships. OopsI : In the wake of the Miss : : Modern Venus contest at the Sigma Chi Derby $ Thursday, a Daily Tar: Heel reporter, obviously still dazzled by the ex- : hibition h e witnessed, : committed two errors in : his story on the event. By way of clarification, $ the winner of the contest ji;: was Miss Kathy Gunster, g : not Gunther, as reported. $ And runner-up Sherry Arnold is a Pi Phi, not a $ gChiPhi. v wigwam wwpwuw' """Sa m ,,r 'r""".j I S r""- o C 1 Between performances, when there is no one there, backstage at Playmaker's Theatre is an eerie place. The only lighting comes from three stories up and is filtered through a series of CI7 ii CD By WAYNE HURDER oj The Daily Tar Heel Staff "This is clearly an absurd situation," student legislature parliamentarian David Kiel told fellow members Thurs day. The cause of the "absurd situation" was a clause in the by laws of legislature which requires that legislators get copies of bills 24 hours before the session if they are to be considered. Thursday legislators didn't have copies of four bills and so debated for an hour whether they should ignore the bylaws and consider fiie bills. They ended up voting 20-15 to defeat a .ruling by Senate Speaker Jed Dietz that they should go ahead and consider She bUis without copies of them. A special session .will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. to con sider the bills, one of which is an appropriation of $820 to Carolina Talent Search for the recruitment of Negro students. Another of the four bills, an AU jmm fK. V, -1 . Emptiness appropriation of $217 to the Student Stress Committee for a retreat this weekend, was passed by adding it to another biH, which could legally be considered, as an amend ment. Rep. Johnny Wflliford UP from Craige, revealed to legislature at the start of the session that the class offices biH which had supposedly been defeated in legislature on Oct. 12 had really been passed. The bill had been "defeated" Committee Studies Emotional Stress By TERRY GINGRAS of The DaSLy Tar Heel Staff "By next year, every freshman will have some sort of sensitivity training," said the Chairman of the Student Stress Committee Thursday. The committee is employing sensitivity trainingby which a student is made more aware of himself and bis sur roundings 'to study the causes of emotional strain and possible ways to solve them," Bob ManeMn said. "Every year, over 10,000 students attempt to commit suicide," Manekin said, "and we are trying to relieve some cf the tension which causes these suicides." Manekin said student stress could be reduced by changing "superficial things" and by changing the student's mental attitudes. "The two students who com mitted suicide last year lacked communication. If they had been able to communicate with their friends or air their feel ings, half the battle would have been won," he said. We're trying to create a situation so someone will be there to talk to." Tins weekend the stress committee is holding a retreat at Southern Pines to give sensitivity training to a group of 14 students. These students will then be used to set up reference groups. Manekin said every freshman would be DTH Staff Photo by STZVE ADAMS gratings and catwalks. The shadows give the props an unreal appearance. The silence rushes out at you. Alone. TTD""'7P .Bills IMS in a vote which sup posedly required a two-thirds majority to pass since the bill was being considered within 30 days of the election. At that time the legislators thought the election was to be on Nov. 7 but then it turned out to be on Nov. 14, more than 30 days after the bill was con sidered. The bill, whsch would have set up ia class commission, was (Continued on Pare 6) reached by one of these groups of 12-15 students by next year. "These students will be able to guide discussion, in the reference groups so we can get feedback on problems the students face," he said Three members of the NSA Campus environmental Studies desk will be at the retreat. In addition to the reference groups, some plans have been made to change the stress fac tors of students' en vironment. "We're also working on com puterized roommates and some rules changes," Manekin said. "We've sent 150 questionnaires to find out what students tftinV is wrong on campus." He said his group is also looking at Johns Hopkins University which already has a com puterized rooming system. "Ignorance of sex is another important cause of student stress," said Manekin. "We hope to distribute information of birth control. The student stress com mittee is advised by Dr. Clif ford Reifler, Chief University Psychiatrist; Dr. William McRae of the student in firmary; and Dr. Dorothea Leighion of the School of Public Health. Dr. Leighton instructs the, stress committee on the pro blems of student mental health every Tuesday. The committee has received a $500 services grant from the NSA.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 11, 1967, edition 1
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