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o The Doily Tar nI
thk if, Sco' who you
rea VophorRore but who
Tar "?fS? I' l?ok arge of the
sparked a 13-point rally that
It rlimnsi Virginia Tech
at Carmichaei Auditorium Sat
urday night t
, The fruits of the Tar Heels'
as an ms opening
-7
Too often it was done in
opening game style, however,
as Coach Dean Smith's horses,
in their eagerness to run,
sometimes tripped over them
selves. "I misread my own team,"
said Smith afterwards. i
thought we could run and we
couldn't. In the second half
we had to go back to our style
of play of last year. I take the
blame for the first half but we
were still able to come back."
Scott, playing like a veteran,
scored 18 points, six in a sec
ond half comeback that brought
the Tar Heels from 11 down
to a two point advantage at
50-43.
The 6-5 New Yorker lit the
fuse with a steal and court
long dash for two points. Then
Dick Gruhar took a fine lead
ing pass from Larry Miller for
two more 2nd the Tar Heels
were on their way.
The last four points were
Scott's and when the clock
read "15 54"' North Carolina,
which had played so poorly in
the first 23 minutes, was clear
ly Li command.
The Tar Heels never trailed
from that point, although the
Gobblers did knot the court on
three different occasions be
fore a seven point spurt, again
capped by Scott, made it 65-53
at 9:53.
The Gobblers called time out
at this point.
Tzy -ere right.
It Ws.
2?LiI5?er- finished
widi points, showed weU in
the first naif as Carolina could
EIW2f EaZ 13 cf 33, canv
from clone in. . -
The halftime score was 44
tr.? e-point burst by the
Gobblers had broken a 19-19
tie after the Tar Heels had
earlier battled back from five
down.
At intermiss::n UXC determ
ined to concentrate cn its de
fense, especially the aspect
which concerned sharp-shoot--ers
Glen Combs. Wavre Mal
lard and Chris EZis.
The three had 15, 12 and 11
points respectively at that point
and they finished at 27, 21 and
If.
Meanwhile. Miller's offensive
prowess, which had produced
19 points" to six-by. Scott and
five by Clark in the first hall
si v ri
r 1 1 17 T"K tK
75 Years of Editorial Freedom
The Greensboro
Coliseum announced
Saturday that the Tar
Heels' Dec. IS game with
Princeton is a complete
sellout, and no more stu
dent tickets are available.
A limited supply of tickets
for the Dec. 12 game with
Kentucky in Greensboro
area avUable ' here
Volume 75, Number 66
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1967
Founded February 23, 1893
cf play, was somehow
uted among his mates.
Scott finished with IS. Clark
13. Grubar 11, and BZ3 Buntm.?
11- Reserve Joe Brown was
good for nine.
North Carolina improved in
every phase cf the game from
the first half to the second. It
was enough to hand the Gob
blers their second straight de
feat to a team from the At
lantic Coast Conference, a con
ference they once tried to joisu
Friday eight they lost to Duke
Field goal percentage was
just one area. That improve
ment came not enly because
the Heels got hot from the cut
side but because that elusive
"easy basket began to rou
tine itself.
On the boards the Tar Heels
finished with a 45-34 advantage
as Clark pulled in 17 to lead
the way. At halftime he only
had six.
Clark's performance gave in
dications that he will be strong-
er and better tms year, a .c
Gohi-iCrs- rnatcned two men
against the 6-15 junior. On?,
Ted "Ware, g:t seven points
&-m JT!' w3 "im w- ,&
Tenuis ard his substitute. Dars
WciicI, was limited to no
And he was tagged f:r four
fouls also.
North Carolina shored up its
defense tremendouslv in the
Hnal ?J minutes. VPI fell from
that lofty 4 per cent of the
first half to less than fifty in
the second as it hit 14 of 23 &t-
f a
The real star, when it is the
full 43 minutes you're interest
ed in, was Miller.
He hit 12 of if from the
floor and six cf seven from the
line. Just as noticeable were
the nine rebounds and six as
sists. It was one of the best of his
best panics and it clearly in
dicated how seriously he is
taking his newly-adqhired db
ties as team captain.
MjJcpJ
FlinieF9 Q.teJpey
W
SlEIl i
Agiree,
Fot m COP
Dy HUNTER GEORGE
of Th Daily Tar iieel Staff
Thirty-four year old
Congressman Jim Gardner and
64-year-old John Stickley made
separate pitches here Saturday
for young people to join the
Republican Party ranks in the
1X3 campaign.
The two, appearing as part
of an all-day Republican "Op
p o r tunities Unlimited' pro
gram, spoke at different times,
but both had the same
message: their party wants
youthful support.
Gardner, congressman from
the Fourth District, received a
standing evation in Gerrard
Hall Saturday morning after
telling about 125 Young
Republicans "their effect on the
1963 elections could be
"absolutely unlimited."
An hour later, Stickley, who
last cnonth became the state's
first announced gubernatorial
candidate, told a seminar
group the young vote will be
"extremely important" next
year.
Stickley and Gardner may
face each other next spring-in
a Republican gubernatorial
primary.
Both men steered clear of
campaign talk during their
tlfyr Daily ear Qrrl
World News
BRIEFS
By United Pri& International
A IV
? t
"u.
speeches, but after Stickley's
short address the Charlotte
businessman told reporters he
feeds he can pull the support of
North Carolina's young ,voters
as well as any man.
x-r i i
iL 1 I 1
Jim Gardner
John Stickley
v "As far as I'm concerned, I
"don't think it (my age) will
. either hurt me or help me," he
said. "The young people in this
state are intelligent enough to
make their decision on the
merits of the candidate'
v Asked whether ruaning1
4 against a : younger opponent
would hurt his chances, he
replied, "No, I don't think
, Stickley said part of his
campaign will, be directed at
fee state's young people. '
"I guess I've shaken 4,000
bands in the last four weeks,
and it thrills me to see the in
terest and activity of young
. men and women in politics."
The UNC program was one
of 11 such events being held on
university campuses across the
nation. It's purpose was to ac
quaint students with op
portunities for leadership in
thenation's political
sceneand in the Republican
Party in particular. ;
Francis Cardinal Spellman Dies r"
NEW YOBK-Franscis Cardinal SpeBman, America's leading
Roman Catholic churchman whose flock of millions was scattered
from the slums and skyscrapers of New York to the battlefields
of Vietnam and the icy wastes of the Antarctic, died Saturday of
a "massive cerebral accident."
The 78-year-old archbishop of New York, one of eight
American cardinals, was stricken fatally at St. Vincent's Hospital .
less than two hours after he was rushed there by ambulance. He
was the second U. S. cardinal to die this year.
The cardinal's secretary, Msgr. Thomas McGovern, said that
although Spellman was hospitalized for a checkup only last
month, he had been in good health almost to his death. He visited
to banquets 'Friday 'nifjht and talked to making his annual gat
ttefront visit to Vietnam at Christmas.
Sanford-Primary Won't Split Party
RALEIGH, Former Governor Terry Sanford, in an open let
ter to Son. B. Everett Jordan, said Saturday he could oppose Sen.
Sam J. Ervin in the primary without causing bitterness or
division in the democratic parry.
"I do not know whether or not I will run," Sanford said. "That
depends. But if I do I will promist you I will not attack him, will
not fan up false issues, will not say anytlhing that will embarrass
the party in the fall, and will eliminate the causes of bitterness
and division in every other way."
"Furthermore, I will sign a detailed statement to this effect
with our party chairman and will give him authority to stop me
at any time in any campaign approach or statement that violates
such a pledge of honest campaigning," Sanford wrote.
Sanford wrote to challenge Jordan for statements in a news
conference in Washington earlier this week. Jordan urged San
fcrd not to run against Ervin for the good of the party.
Rusk Denies Reports He May Quit
WASHINGTON UPI "Although beset by many of the same
problems and pressures which caused Defense Secretary Robert
S. McNamara to resign, Secretary of State Dean Rusk has no in
tention of quitting before next November's elections.
If he leaves before that time, it will be because President
Johnson finds him a political liability and asks him to do so a
possibility not foreseen at present in top administration circles.
t Rusk has passed the word to State Department associates
speculating about his future plans that his opponents should not
"count on" him quitting and his supporters should not fear that'
he is about to do so.
Peurson IDemocmcy
Politics Go Together
By LYTT STAMPS
of Thm Daily Tar Haml Staff
"To call partisan politics dir
ty is to call democracy dirty,"
Republican Sen. James B.
Pearson of Kansas told
delegates to the GOP
sponsored "Opportunities
Unlimited" symposium here
Saturday.
The keynote speaker for the
conference, designed to in
troduced college students from
this area to political op
portunities particularly in the
Republican Party called
ihetley Calls Chase
Trouble 'Unfortunate'
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Representatives of three
South Campus residence col
leges met with Book Exchange
director Tom Shetley Saturday
and told him that although it
was unfortunate that Chase
Cafeteria had a hard time
competing with Book Ex-run
snack bars, the snack bars
shouldn't be restricted in what
they serve.
The meeting came as the
result of a statement Thursday
by George Prill a man,
University Food Service direc
tor, that the Book Ex's snack
bars are "definitely our big
gest competitor for the
students time and money for
eating."
Much of this competition is
because the snack bars now
serve hot foods, he said.
Shetley met with Morrison
governor Parker Hudson, Ehr
inghaus governor Ken Nefaer,
and a Craige representative,
Robert Reaves, to find out if
they thought the snack bars
should stop serving hot food so
Chase could get more business,
which supposedly would enable
it to serve better food.
The students' answer to
Shetley"s inquiry was that the -snack
bars should continue as
they are. '
"If the Book Ex can serve
more food at lower prices it
should do it," Hudson said.
He said he hoped that the ad
ministration wouldn't order the
Book Ex to eliminate its hot
foods so tfrat Chase could get
more business, because "the
students want as much com
petition as possible."
Part of tha problem, as
Hudson saw it, was that Chase
is not able to compete with the
new technology that makes it
possible to sell hot foods
cheaply in packages at the
snackbars.
politics the "lifebloo-d o f
democracy."
He said citizens o f a
democracy cannot view politics
as a "spectator sport." They
need to get involved, "to
sharpen debate," in the "most
exciting business of the
world," he added.
The "scorn of party politics"
was just one of "three ten
dencies which plainly damage
the process of government"
cited by the Duke University
graduate.
The other two were addiction
to labels and resistance to
change.
Sen. Pearson, who has serv
ed in the Senate since 1962,
said labels only serve to
"distort," because they, have
lost all meaning.
'The greatest danger" caus
ed by labels, he said, is mat
voters "may act on labels
rather than the merits of the
issue."
Pearson said people may
seek what is either the con
servative or liberal position on
a question and then fall on one
side or other without think
ing. -
"But don't fear labels," he
added. "No label or slogan can
make an issue right."
Pearson charged state
governments with failure to
meet their responsibilities. He
said this was the reason the
federal government has been
stepping into more areas.
"If one level of government
doesn't meet its responsibility,
then another will," he said.
V
s
i m m TO.:
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DTH Staff Photo by UIKS MeCOWAN
And another Tar Heel basketball season begins ...
ittersoii, Students To Meet
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Dally Tor Heel Stcff
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sit
terson will meet with students
in an informal discussion in
dormitories twice in the next
two weeks to listen to their
problems and explain some of
the problems of his job.
The two discussions will be
patterned after one which
took place in Morrison on Oct.
25, to which about 50 students
came to talk about the residen
ce college system.
There was "a very fruitful
dialogue" at the Morrison
meeting, according to Student
Body Vice President Jed Ditz,
and this resulted in Sitterson's
being asked to visit two more
dorms. ,
He will be at the Grimes
social room Tuesday from 7 to
8:30 p.m and in the Mangum
social room from 7 yo 8:30
p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 13.
Dietz, who had asked the
chancellor to visit the dorms,
explained that there is "a
large communications problem
between South Building & the
rest of the campus, which isn't
the kind of thing anyone can be
blamed for."
The furor over the changing
of Smith and Battle-Vance-Pet-tigrew
into office buildings
reflects this communications
problems, he said.
One of the better things
about the meeting in Morrison,
Morrison Residence College
Governor Parker Hudson said,
was that it gave the average
student a chance to express
himself.
"It was a really good ex
change," with coed residence
colleges, and faculty in
volvement in the residence col
lege being discussed primarily,
Hudson said.
Sitterson explained that the
discussions --were nothing
radical, that he responded to
their request that he visit since
"it is part of the role of the ad
ministration to meet with
students."
; He called the Morrison
discussion "just a mutual ex
change of views on matters of
interest to the University'
After the two upcoming
meetings he may continue his
discussions, if he is asked to,
and "depending on how in
terested students are."
The Morrison talks followed
a viewing of a television show
on the recent residence college
system conference in Durham,
which the chancellor had been
unable to attend. .
The good of the meeting,
Dietz said, is that "it lets the
Chancellor have a chance he
very seldom gets to find out
what the students think the
problems are, and also gives
him a chance to tell the
students what he . thinks the
problems are."
W
humeun Em ApartmBmtst
By KAREN FREEMAN
of The Daily Tar Hl Staff
The administrative change that will
allow seniors to live in apartments next
year may have far-reaching effects upon
the bulk of women's rules contained in
"Regulations for Women Students."
Under the rationale that there should
be continuity in rules, seniors still in
dorms could also be put under the "rules
of society,"" and this "privilege" could
then later be extended to other classes.
Far - reaching effects are
unlikely unless the administration again
by-passes the Women's Residence Council
and makes changes WRC won't
I Amaiysis
request
More will be done by this Council than
any before it, however, if only because
having seniors living o f f -c am pu s
necessitates some readjustment of the
rules.
In addition, next year's freshmen will .
almost definitely be freed from closed
study. .
This year's freshmen would be except
for the WRC tradition of respecting rules
formulated by previous councils by giving
the rules a chance to work, and not
implementing changes in mid-year.
Discussion at last week's meeting
favored writing this tradition into the
constitution, with only scattered support
for adding a clause making it possible to
change rules mid-year if a three-fourths
majority think "unusual circumstances"
would justify it.
The tradition itself serves to keep
WRC from doing anything hastily and to
maintain the integrity of WRC as a
deliberative, cautious body.
This image is cherished by the
-TO PP
Ft
39
membership, who reacted sharply at the
beginning of the year when chairman
Sharon Rose returned from the National
Student Association Congress hailed as
a liberal who would lead a liberal WRC.
The term "liberal" itself, according to
one WRC member, is a derogatory one to
most representatives because they feel it
is a direct " insult aimed at their
morality.
Miss Rose was a ligeral not only
concerning rule changes, but al-o in her
philosophy of the role of the woman, but
she presented her ideas to the Council too
quickly, the house presidents feel.
Two presidents called a general
meeting of presidents. They discussed
what one called "the negative attitude
toward rules with which campus was
being swamped as a result of Sharon's
speeches."
Since that meeting, which was
followed by smaller, more informal ones
that are still continuing, the presidents
are more unified and are more vocal at
WRC meetings in qestioning changes.
So Miss Rose, hearing of the
opposition, began acting more like the
chairman is expected to act, waiting for
suggestions for changes to come from the
Council.
At this week's meeting she renik
rules
committee chairmen to look at
critically, and consider eliminating those
which do not provide only for tha
"physical safety, welfare, and
protection" of the. girls a marked
change from Miss Rose's tone at the
beginning of the year.
She was reflecting the views of the
Council accurately, however.
As one of the strongest examples of
Student Power, WRC has always strived
to make use of that power
responsibly initiating fee "ia loco
parentis" policy behind women's rules. :
Malcontents with w&men's rules
a
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