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Lit Ch """" .. a -. c. 27514 I 7 5ae Drops To 10 N. C. State University fell la number 19 in the LTI fxsf baD raskisgs released Tees day. See page 4 for details. V i tuSbf' cl"dy and "iShsto sS. y C0ldcr' i it D 75 Years o Editorial Freedom CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15. 1967 Founded February 23. 1S93 Mice we n1 frf B I It I II jjjjy Number 55 TTlo W IBS If KJ1L Unofficial Results Junior President Newlin (UP) 212 Farris (SP) 454 Reynolds (Ind.) 320 Freshman President McAllister (UP) No Farmer (SP) Results Sophomore President Merrill (UP) No Powell (SP) Results Congress Passes Air Pollution Bill WASHINGTON Congress passed and sent to the Presi dent Tuesday a $428 million .bill, to fight air pollution forjfcr next three years. ". " " .1 - The bill couples short range powers to deal with smog crises with a long range federal-state program to clean up dirty air. It also earmarks $125 million out of the total authorization for fuel research an attempt to determine which fuels are to blame for pollution threatening the health of millions of city dwellers. No Substitute For Victory-Dirksen WASHINGTON Senate GOP Leader Everett M. Dirksen said Tuesday "there is no substitute for victory" in Vietnam. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, meanwhile, said U.S. war pro tests were "disturbing the Vietnamese" but were not bothering VS. troops. Dirksen drew cheers from some 5,000 real estate brokers when he said the late Gen. Douglas MacArthurwas right when he said there was no substitute for victory. "If I have any objection, we've been there too long and haven't aggressively ..." Dirksen said before his words were drowned out by applause. Bunker said that although some leaders of the Saigon gov ernment are troubled by U.S. antiwar demonstrations, they are "satisfied that we are going to keep our commitment." Marine General Killed In Vietnam SAIGON North Vietnamese forces Tuesday fired heavy 122mm rockets for the first time at U.S. troops defending the Dak To area where American officers said Hanoi has commit ted 6,000 elite troops in a drive to overrun the Central High lands of South Vietnam While the bloody Dak To battle raged through a 13th day, a flaming helicopter crash killed the commander of 20,000 Ma rines in South Vietnam, Maj Gen. Bruno Arthur Hochmuith, and five other men, near the northeastern coastal city of Hue. Hcchmuth, 56-year-old commander of the 3rd Marine Divi visron, was en route back to his troops defending the Demili tarized line border after strategic talks with a South Vietnam ese general when his helicopter exploded and crashed in flames into a rice paddy. Sen. Hart Asks Draft Ruling WASHINGTON Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., asked the Justice Department Tuesday to rule on his contention that stu dents interfering with Selective Service should be fined or jailed not drafted. In a letter to Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark, Hart opposed a recommendation by Selective Service Director Lewis B. Her shey that student protesters interferring with the draft or mili tary recruiting be subject to immediate induction. Hart said he did not intend to encourage "illegal or ir responsible protests." But, he said, "under state and federal law there are sanctions in the form of fines and jail terms which can be applied to iUegal acts of protest." He argued, hewever, that "cancellation' of a student de ferment is not ... one of the sanctions under either the Se lective Service law or its regulations which can be applied by Gen. Hershey to draft war protesters. Stasssen Announces . . . Again MILWAUKEE, Wis. Former Gov. Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota Tuesday became the nation's first announced presi dential candidate. He said he will enter the 1968 Wisconsin pri mary as a Republican "peace candidate." It will mark the seventh time Stassen has bid for the nomi nation He has run every four years since 1940 with the excep tion of 1956. He won the 1943 Wisconsin Republican primary. World News BRIEFS By United Press International - t i ; . -y:.-:f5r'-.. CHARLIE FARRIS -lesislaltiiiFe HF i By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A boll to appropriate $820 to start a program for recruiting Negro students to attend UNC was defeated in Student Legis lature ia-16 Tuesday night, but the program will go on any iway. The ball, introduced by Rep. Joyce Davis, SP from "Winston- H. L. Stevenson, managing editor of United Press Inter national, will discuss how a world news service covers such diverse subjects as ra cial strife and the Vietnam Gatef old Girl Here Dec. 1 Dolly Read, Playboy Magazine's Playmate of the Month in May, 1966, will be on campus Dec. 1. Miss Read, whose pic ture appeared on the mag azine's gatefold, will be the guest of Ehringhaus dormitory. She will speak at the Ehringhaus Ban quet at 7:30. The banquet is open to the .public. Admission is $5 per couple. A door prize (a life subscription to Playboy will be award ed. Miss Read, who will be named house mother of Ehringhaus, will arrive at on the 2:23 pjm. flight from New York. The By ERNEST BOBL 'Getting there and bringing a piece of it back is the main thing," was the way Dr. Wil liam E. Thornton put it. The "it" he was talking about was the moon. But Thorton a native of Faison, who was named a sci entist astronaut in September has other things to worry about at the present time like learning to fly jets. Thornton, who graduated Service League Asks Carolina Coed Help The Chapel Hill Junior Ser vice league needs the help of UNC coeds to help make de corations for its annual Christmas House. The Christmas House is a project in which the town's needy families are given gifts of food, clothing, toys and holiday decorations "in a way which will preserve the dignity of the recipients." Any type of tree decorations such as felt ornaments are greatly needed. For further in formation contact Mary Anne Ragland at 929-5583. - ' M r j BOB EADIE CbnnorJoyner was intended to give Negro students "the op portunity of knowing the op porfamitiesat.UNC.'' . It was designed to eliminate a situation in which "Negro high school students receive little information about UNC and ... are outside the tradM tional recruiting network and alumni," according to the bill, ditoir war here Nov. 20. Stevenson will speak, at the November meeting of the UNC Press Club in Howell Hall. The 7 p.m. talk, which will be fol lowed by a question-and-ans-wer session, is open to the As manager editor, Steven son is in direct charge of the day-to-day operation of an in ternational news agency '.which supplies ' an estimated 4,500, 000 words of news to some 6,480 subscribers in 114 coun tries and territories. : ' Stevenson worked in the At lanta, Tallahassee, Jackson ville and Tampa bureaus. He also was Virginia state manag er, with headquarters in Rich mond, and was a business rep resentative in North Carolina. From 1960 to 1963, 'Steven son was a news editor in New York. He was Southern Divi sion news manager in Atlan ta from 1963 to 1964 when he was named assistant manage big editor in New York. Stev enson was appointed manag ing editor in 1965. Stevenson covered virtually every major civil rights story in the South from. 1953 to 1963. Moom from the University and re ceived his medical degree from the University in 1963, returned here this week for two days cf intensive astrono my training at Morehead Pla netarium. Thornton Said one thing doc tors have learned from astro nauts who had been in orbit for some time is that they lose weight. He added that this could become a problem on ex tended flights, especially if there was no way to keep track of weight. Thornton's response to the problem was to invent an in strument which measures mass rather than weight. He currently has an application pending for a patent on the device. How did Thorton first be-, come interested in the astro naut program? "I've been interested in air planes ever since I saw the first one," was part of the an swer he gave. Thornton's background, how ever, provides the rest of the answer. While at the University, Thornton not only earned a bachelor's degree in physics, an Air Force ROTC commis r"i x v. SALLY COOS The bill would have appro- priated the money to the Caro- lina Talent Search, which was made a Student Government organization Tuesday by Stu- dent Body President Bob Tra- vis in an executive order. He appointed Phil Clay, who first proposed the idea of re cruiting Negroes, to be direc tor of it. Clay commented that he would "go ahead and carry out the program and hope there wall be some good bene factors to fund the program." Critics of the bill opposed it '-Onthe grpiunds either that Student Government couldn't afford the program; or that thefbill was discriminatory, or that recruiting was the respon sMirty of the Administration. ; Rep. Dick Levy, SP from James, told the legislators that they should vote for the bill "On very pragmatic grounds." - He said the legislature should vote for the bill because the social, economic, and politi cal situation of the Negro con stituted one of the major pro blems of the state and nation. "Since the university is "the backbone of the state," he commented. "it is our oreroga- Mils E rive to concern ourselves with The note said that food serv the problems of the state." ed by scoop (must be a level He also said it would be to not heaping scoopful, and Panel Discusses Pot The final panel discussion in the five-week "Drugs in Our Society" series will discuss marijuana. ' Discussion, groups will be set up to evaluate the pro gram and discuss questions that might have been over looked in the series. The final discussion will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 111 Beard Hafl. Dr. Lewis Harris, associate 6 Wmms A Piece, EaeM sion, and a letter in football, but he also started his own electronics maintenance sys tem. Following his graduation in 1952, Thorton went into the Air Force and did scientific research. In 1955-56, Thornton became interested in medicine while working on medical in struments at Memorial Hospit al. He returned to the Uni versity in 1958 to study medi cine. Thronton is currently parti ciapting a five-month intro ductory astronaut training pro gram, which will be followed by almost a year of Air Force flight school. Several times Tuesday aft ernoon Thornton mentioned something about going to t h e moon, but when asked when he thought he would get there, he shrugged his shoulders and said "I wouldn't hazard a guess." But at one time while talk ing to newsmen, Thornton in dicated that he was thinking of even bigger things: "The trip to the moon is just a stone's throw compared to some of the missions we hope to make in the future," he said with a smile. Farris Other By HUNTER (GEORGE of 70 Daily TBr Heel St&3 Charlie Farris led the Stu dent Party ticket to a clean sweep of junior class offices in Tuesday's election. Returns were not in late Tuesday night on the sopho more and freshman class rac- the benefit of the University tx encourage Negroes to at- tend UNC because students should try to "come into con- tact witn as many diverse ele- ments as possibleJ Clay said that has organiza tion last week sent oat some 200 questionnaires to high schools across the state, he said he has received about 12 responses. 6 By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A memo from the manage of Chase Cafeteria last week told all employes that "'the custo mer is being given much too much food" and that portion size must be reduced immedi- ately. . professor cf pharmocology in the School of 'Medicine, will speak on the pharmocology of marijuana. A three part program on so cial, legal and ethical aspects of drug use will feature Pro fessor Michael Katz of the Law Seool; Professor J. Ric hard Udry of the School of Public Health; Dr. Ruel Ty son of the Religion Department ; J 1 I i f . - 1 . ' T-:Ji ; . Cx s '. . ... - iy r-v.f nil ... - - - I, ,f . "t --rTT-ii- L J i,.,,, ... ,-,-.. .,, ..... . ,,- , , , , , Is President; Results Not Ii es. Those ballots will be count ed today. In the junior class, Farris defeated independent Brugh Reynolds and UP Jim New lin to win the top spot. Exact vote totals were not avail able, but winners were an nounced as follows: Bob Eadies (SP) beat Rodney McXabb (UP) for junior class vice president. Sally Cook (SP) won the treasurer spot over UP Jackie Frost. . Molly Nicholson (SP) beat Psm Perkins (UP) for secre tary, and Sarah Dorsey (SP) won over Julie Suk (UP) for social chairman position. . In the race for seats on Men's Honor Council, the only two positions contested saw Winbourne King (133) and Ben Hawfield (72) defeat David R. Patterson (67) in MD IH, and Champ Mitchell (291) and Bill Lee (252) defeat Richard Gizinski (126) in Hinton James. In the uncontested races, Larry Krieger (131) won the seat in Granville West, Howard Miller (64) and Jay Schwartz (58) won in MD IV, Lorenzo Lewis (24) won in MD V, Ash ley Thrift (250) won in MD VII, and Bo Bishop (396) won in Morrison. Oasis'. Manna that spoon servings may be rounded "but do not go into the pan for that little bit more." Chase's manager James Car penter wrote that this over portioning "must cease if we are to maintain our business and your job." Carpenter took over as man ager of Chase the day after the dining hall was given a ,CC" sanitation rating three weeks ago by the State Board of Health. Carpenter commented on the note which was tacked to the employes' bulletin board, say ing "any business of any kind has a certain amount of ser- vice or product for a certain price, and when these limits are exceeded, they have to be cut down." He said he did not know if the too-large servings were affecting the profit margin of Chase. "I haven't been here long enough to know about that," he said. University Food Service di North Carolina Native William Thornton . . . discusses space medicine while other Astronauts look on. For Women's Honor Coun cil, Ann Merricks (33) and Susan Scripture (23) won seats over Jane Thurlowe (24) in WD I. Rebecca Pope (61) was uncontested in WD II, Ellen Sugg (1C3) eded Pairida Owens (93) in WD II, and Karen Qiecksrleld (101) beat three contestants in WD IV. In WD V, Martha Levell (111) was uncontested for one of two seats. No one ran for the second seat, so it wiU be filled by presidential appoint ment. In Winston - Conner - Joyncr Livy Miller (153) and Barbara Gaddy (93) were uncontested for the two seats. Gene Moncrief (91) and Karen Freeman (73) took seats over Ibba Wilson (54) in Granville East. Returns for sophomore and freshman races were not in be cause of the lack of persons to count votes. Elections Board Chairman Norman Zettel said counting will resume this afternoon about 1 in Roland Parker I and n probably. He urged students to help in the counting. gfF rector George .Prillaman said the directive , did not come from his office, but he sup posed that Carpenter "w a s simply following directions as set down in his manager's manual." "Each fitoai is listed in the manual," Prillaman said, "and beside it is a price and an exact amount that should be followed." Prillaman said, "I imagine that Mr. Carpenter has been reading his operation manual, as I told him to do, and is trying to make the Chase por tion size meet the standardiz ed lists." He said he did net know if the portion size was affecting the profits at Chase. "I really don't think that is Carpenter's concern. Rather, I believe he is simply trying to follow the manual directions." The note read as follows: "Each of the serving spoons, dips, etc. are designed to give a definite amount of food at a (Continued on Pare 6) DTH Staff Photo by Ernest H. Rob I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 15, 1967, edition 1
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