Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 7, 1967, edition 1 / Page 1
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7(1 ' 2751 ! Majors Seminars I ! A7 i V I . A V r Variable ci0udi ton"". Mifc' y mostly ta to V,'1 v'ume 75, Number 69 iJh A f t ill X 75 Yearj o Editorial Freedom i Hi PkiX -v 1) CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAKQLINA, THURSDAY. DECEMRFR 7, 1967 Ma;- seminars ia the c a in I sciences wHI be fcf!J tcr.i'it at 729 p.m. ia Ilaell Ili'-i. Subjects isclsded are botaaj. chemistry, geography, Kw!ot. xsaiiseraalks, physics Fcur.ded Febrcarv 23. IS 03 Heels TTT TT) (01 1 fi itn it K emu Hate9 1(0)783 By Dale Gibson Fear no more. The Tar Heels have done it. The fear was that the UNC cagers would look past their the lice. Miller scored 12 points in each half. Rusty Clark, toe Tar Heels bis center, had a great night. Clark struck for 23 points and Wednesday night opponents to- plucked eight rebounds. Charlie ward the upcoming games with Scott and reserve forward Joe Vanderbilt, Kentucky and Brown each added 16 tallies. Princeton. They did anything ' The Tar Heels played a more but that as the men in blue and balanced game than the one white walked away with a 107- against Virginia Tech in which 83 win over the Kent State they trailed by seven at half- DTH Staff Photo by STIVE ADAMS Scott drives for two. Golden Flashes Wednesday night. Although being manhandled by the superior Tar Heels, all was not lost for Kent State. Doug Grayson stole the show from Tar Heel stars Larry Miller and Charlie Scott The 6-5 junior tossed in 41 points, hitting 18 of 19 from the field and hitting five out of five from the foul line. Gray son scored 35 points before missing a six-foot fall-away shot with 4:16 left in the game. The hard-Kiriving Miller also had a good night. The 6-4 senior connected for 24 points with 10 field goals and four points from Prof TED m irroices By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Almost 175 full-time faculty members teaching in North Carolina colle ges and universities' 140 of them on this campus have signed a petition supporting students "conscientiously refusing military service." The petition and the list of signers which is expected to grow considerably before the schools break for the Christmas vacation will be sent to President Johnson, the Justice Department and to Congressmen as a protest to the present draft law, which "forces young men of con science" to "either serve in a Wynn, who helped draft the petition, to register a com plaint about a law which seems draft laws and ta give moral support to students who are refusing military service on conscientious grounds. "We will be sending copies of, the petition once it is f i n i s h e d to Washington," Wynn said, "to register a com plaint about alaW which seems to us to be preposterous." He said no one expected im mediate changes in the draft law, which, the petition reads, "permits exemption from military service only to those who conscientiously oppose participation in war of any form and under all in a democracy there is a cumulative effect in dissenting action bringing about changes in the long run." As support, the petition "will give moral support to those students who on conscientious grounds are forced to object to this war and refuse - military j service," Wynn said. "There are many students,' time. Against Kent State, the Tar Heels went into the lockers at half time with a comforable 64 37 lead. But the Flashes came back full of fight at least the flashy Grayson did. Grayson opened the second half with a fall away jump shot from the corner, the same shot that had netted him 21 points in the first half. After a Tar Heel turn-over, Grayson con nected again to bring the score to 64-41 with 18:40 left to play. After UNC forward Bill Bunt ing missed a six footer with 18:25 left, the Flashes drove ; and tossed to Grayson who con- I nected for his sixth straight 1 point. Then the Tar Heels began to show that they could do a little Eiickson OK After Stroke Wednesdav Special To The Daily Tar Heel S.C.-North Carolina A&letic Director Chuck Erickson was "fully recovered"- after suf fering a "slight stroke" here WednestDay morning. fancy shooting cf their own. With the score 64-43, Tom Lag odich fouled Clark. The 6-10 junior hit the shot to send the Tar Heels ahead 65-43. After a single point by Kent State, the Tar Heels returned with two more. Joe Brown missed a corner shot, but Mil ler picked it off and layed it in. j .Brown got another chance on an 18-footer from the corner jand hit this one for a 63-44 jscore. Clark tapped another in after a blind pass from the fsuper sophomore Scott. Brown then added two more and Scott hit two foul shots to put he Heels ahead 75-45 win 14:57 to Play. Coach Dean Smith got his wish in being able to prenare his team for the next game with a tough Vanderbilt squad. The Heels finished the game with five reserves on the court. "Vanderbilt is the immediate thing on our mind." Smith said. "We know they will be tough f in Nashville. (Term.)'' Smith called his squad a . second half team after last week's game with Virginia Tech but he was well pleased with the first half Wednesday. "It was obviously our game after the first half," Smith said. "I just wish we had been sharper in the second half." Smith, like the 8,800 fans in Carmichael Auditorium, watched in awe at the he-man scoring task turned in by Kent State's Grayson. "We knew he could shoot well," Smith said, "But, I didn't think he would hit everything. The Tar Heels hit 41 of 80 attempted field goals for a 51.3 percentage. Led by Clark and Brown, Carolina pulled down 41 rebounds to 37 retrieved by the Flashes. . Kent State Coach Frank Tru itt had praise for bis opponents. 1 was really impressed by their defense," Truitt said. "We had heard about their offense, but the defense es pecially Mifler and Clark really surprised us.' ' " ruu1 DTH Staff Photo by STTVX ADAMS Clark collides wth Lagodich. TTft 1L .1 ii By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The UNC chapiter of the American Association of University Professors Tuesday night passed unanimously a resolution endorsing a proposal r to recruit Negro hagH school me 60-year-oiL JOTcsson, ixij students to attend UNC - Myrtle Beach for the winter i-- pmi aay, wihose proposal meeting of the Atlantic Coast Jig A AT IP endnrspA rvpalprf Wynn said, "who are facing conference, awofce weanesoay that a bill asking funds for the sm serve In this morning Wicn "a SUgni Carolina Talent 5areh thp jail rather than serve in this morning war ifhrh thpv hplipvp i im. just or face jail," the petition circumstances" and "the only .gads recognized opposition to war The petition was drawn up, mS:stlm J 'religious psychology professor William He believes, mwever, "that (EIr Dailii aar fjrrl World News BRIEFS By United Prete International war. What is bothering them is' paralysis oif the left side," ac- corojing to sporis lniormauon Director Jack Williams. WMams s a i d Erickson's, wife called Dr. Ed Hedgepeth, the chairman of the UNC Athletic Counsel who was staying in the same motel. Erickson was admitted to a Myrtle Beach hospital. Late last night the doctor said, "Mr. Erickson is doing real well. There are no signs of any paralysis of any kind and he is in real good spirits. "We are very pleased with the progress he made throughout the day and we think he will be well enough to return to Chapel Hill wilhin three days." not their impending 1 ail sentences, but rather that peo ple don't understand their posi tion that their consciences will not allow them 1 0 participate in this war." Wynn said he felt that this petition "was the least that we (concerned members of the faculty) could do for these young men." The petition reads, "We (the undersigned) believe that all men, regardless of their views (Continued on Pace 6) Carolina Talent Search, the recruiting agency in his pro posal, will be re-iniroduced in to legislature sometime soon. Preyer To Run In Sixth District GREENSBORO L. Richardson Preyer, a well-known name an North Carolina's judicial, business and political circles, Wed nesday became the second candidate to enter the Sixth District congressional race. Preyer, a former federal judge who stepped down from the bench to run unsuccessfully for the Democratic nrnination for governor in 1964, told a news conference he planned a campaign based on "reason and fact rather than emotion." He threw his bat into the ring beside that of Republican William Osteen, a Greensboro attorney wfoo announced Monday he would seek the seat from which Democratic Rep. Horace Korenegay plans to resign in order to spend more time with his family. VC Massacre Refugee Hamlet SAIGON Communist terrorists exacting apparent vengeance for refusal of mountain tribesmen to furnish, them Viet Cong recruits, ravaged the refugee hamlet of Dak Son, killing 121 persons, most of ithem women and children U.S. spokesmen . reported Wednesday night. The spokesmen said that victims of the worst massacre of civilians in the Vietnam war included Montagnard tribespeople and seven popular forces defenders of the mountain hamlet located 74 miles northeast of Saigon and 25 miles west of the Cambodian border. Another 47 persons were hospitalized, most of them suffering from severe burns suffered when the Viet Cong used flamethrowers to put their hamlet to the torch in the attack ear ly Tuesday. Protesters Snarl City Traffic Shouting, sign-toting antiwar demonstrators snarled traffic in downtown New York and Philadelphia Wednesday. Police hauled scores away in paddy wagons. Four-thousand police twarted efforts of some 2000 protesters to shut down the armed forces induction center in New York and used flying wedges to drive hundreds of demonstrators away from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel wiere Secretary of State Dean Rusk kept a speaking date. APO Plans Centralized Lost-Found Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity is plannii g to start a centralized lost and found of fice ifor the campus, but it is having a hard time findinga -place to locate it The Fraternity plans to open the service at the beginning of spring semester with office hours from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday throu gh Friday. Temporary plans call for the office to be set up in the fraternity's basement room in Smith Dormitory. When Smith is converted to office space next fall, however, the office will have to move. "We would like .to find a more permanent place to start it," said a spokesman from the fraternity's pledge class, which originated the idea. "We have been told by the space committee and by the director of Graham Memorial that there is no space on cam pus available to us," the spokesman said. The idea behind the service stemmed from the problem of knowing where to go to find something that has been lost. "As it stands, if someone loses something between GM and Howell, they have to check 2 Language Courses To Be Offered Abroad The Eberfaardt' Private Institute of Languages is of fering two accelerated courses in French and German to be taught this summer in Europe by native instructors. The courses will be taught from July 1-Aug. 31, 1968. Fees are $50 per course. Estimated living expenses are $600. For a pScations contact Mrs. J.D. Griffith, 582 Howard Ave., Staten Island, N.Y., 10301. I I i " ; Y v 4 l v- - ? Ii t V 1 v t . Al J Dean Morrow UNC can't help A bill requesting $820 for the program was defeated , by . legislature 18-16 in a special session on Nov. 14. The new bill will ask fox less money than the last one, ac cording to Clay. Clay said some persons had indicaited, to him th a t . legislature will pass the bill this time." The AAUP's vote came after it heard talks by ad ministration, athletic depart- meet, and students represen tatives on currerJt admissions policy and recruiting. Charles Marrow, dean of the College of Arts and Science and chairman of the Advisory Committee on Admissions and Records, said a program to recruit Negroes "is something that the University would ap preciate." He . explained that the University couldn't undertake the program because "under Che law the University cant pick out a certain group to recruit" Clay said the University should do more than give the program its moral support, it "should really get in wim both hands and seek to utilize talents as it does in other areas.1" The resolution passed by the AAUP "endorses the Clay pro posal and urges its members and other members of the university community, students, faculty and ad ministration, t o participate personally and organizationally in its support. It also asks support of other well-considered programs to assure that all Nortl), Caroli nians know of the opportunities provided by their system of public higher education." Jed Dietz, vice president of the student body, explained to the crowd of about 50 faculty members thai the legislature had denied the Clay proposal funds for three reasons. These were: because legislators , thought the bill 'discriminatory, because recruiting wasn't the proper job for students, or because Student Government couldn't afford the cost He added that he personally had favored the gill. George Krichbaum, SP floorleader from lower quad, and an opponent of the Cay hill in legislature, explained that the legislature had felt "it was out of line in recruiting a particular segment of the students." He said legislature would give the proposal its support in any other way. Dean Smith, head basketball coach, explained that the recruiting policy of the athletic department is to "look for prlayers who have the character to fit into the University and can meet the admissions requirements." He said that although newspapers may give less coverage to athletic events, this doesn't effect his recruiting because he finds out about the top prospects from other sources. David Robinson, co-chairman of fee Scholarship Information Center, said that "because of the long discrimin a t ory policy of admissions offices in the South, Negroes havent been able to adjust" to the new policies and there a recruiting program is needed. Robert Gruber, a law school student and organizer of Talent Search Program to get Negroes to apply to the UNC law school, explained his work, which he said had been en dorsed by the Student Bar Association. Referendum BUI. Passes Committee By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A bill to hold a referendum on major issues for the Na tional Student Association was passed out favorably by the judicial committee of Student Legislature Wednesday. If the bill, which will be con sidered by legislature tonight, passes, the referendum would be held the same day as the Honor System referendum, WRC Oe Rimles: A Discrepancy Group Passes Contradictory Rules After Confused Meeting By KAREN FREEMAN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Coeds living off campus next, semester were exempted from closing hours by the Women's Residence Council Tuesday but town students were left sugjedt to dormitory regulations. In a rules change to ac comodate seniors who will move into apartments a t semester break, WRC amend ed the closing hour rule to read: "All undergraduate women students residing in University at Alumni, Howell, Morehead ' residence halls must abide oy Planetarium and GM," he University closing hours.' something said. "It takes over an hour sometimes to track down." The plan for the lost and found includes keeping index cards on each found . item listing the date it was, found, where it was found and by whom. A resolution passed only two minutes previous to the closing hour amendment, however, said a change exempting apartment-dwelling seniors from dormitory regulations should not include non-senior town students. The adopted resolution was a modification of one introduced last week by Lesley Wharton, of . the Senior Apartments Com mittee, which said, "women students" living off-campus will not be subject to dormitory regulations.' ' The passed version excluded town students by declaring "women 21 years of age or senior women wiih parental permission residing in off-campus housing" exempt. With the addition of this clause, non-senior town students will remain theoretically under closing hours if it is considered a 'dormitory regulation. Mrs. Heather Ness, assistant dean or women, then told WRC that town women don't come under closing hours anyway by administration standards. The administration only sug gests to the parents of town coeds that closing hours be observed, she said. But Candy Hodges, a. Women's Honor Council member, said that town students have been tried for being in the Chapel Hill area after closing hoursin con nection with other offenses. . BOTH DECISIONS came after confusion as to where WRC was meeting. The ma jority of WRC met together in Oil Peabody and voted the resolution and rule amend ment ) But Sharon Rose, chairman, and ten other members were in another room only yards away in the same basement-arid never found the main meeting. "What business do we have making rules if we can't even find the right room to meet in?" Miss Rose quippeal Wednesday. It was noted by Lesley Wharton in Che main meeting that by specifying "University housing" in the modified clos ing hours rule, WRC was also exempting coeds who live in Granville Towers East, of which she is president But, she "continued, "girls in Granville always assume that all regulations apply to them probably Jan. 9, according to judicial committee chairman Tom Benton, SP from Craige. The bill to hold an Honor System referendum will pro bably be introduced into com mittee next Wednesday and be considered by legislature on Thursday. The NSA-requested referen dum, introduced by campus NSA coordinator Charles Jef fress, UP from MD HI, would determine student opinion of three resolutions passed by the NSA Congress on black power, drugs and the draft The referendum would also ask students' opinion of the minority report of the draft, submitted at the Congress last summer. The referendum is being sought because of the con troversial nature of the resolu tions, according to the bill. The bill had geen introduced into legislature before Thanksgiving but had died when the 43rd Assembly of legislature ended. The ballot for the Honor and they havent done anjihing System referendum is being about it yetj Changing uta closing hours rule in mid-year is a break from the tradition of rule changes only going into effect each September, but WRC felt mat "unusual circumstances" warranted the change. A proposal that WTIC be able to make such mid-year charges was suggested at a prior meeting. It will probably be put into the form of a mo tion and passed next week, Miss Rose said Wednesday. drawn up by a committee of seven : persons appointed by student body Presdent Bob Travis and chaired by Charles Gowen, vice president oi the D i alec tic-Philanthropic Societies. The committee was ap pointed as the result of a peti tion circulated by the Bi-Phi asking for a referendum. The referendum will be designed to determine to what extent students support the Honor System and how ef fective the system is.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 7, 1967, edition 1
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