U.iC Library Scriala D?pt. Bos 870 Chassl Hill, t;. c. ' State Game Tickets Monday. y ,he Game Is W "" llUllHimii ' ,al,"l,Bl,i'i Attorney General Staff Men's and Women's staff meeting at 2 p.m. in front pi GM for Yack piclores to be taken. I 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 93 C"H.PEL HILL, XORTH CAROLINA. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 7, VJSS Founded Februarv 23. 1S93 JL wo TED Ji FOIS CMS; i I A . KS7 TMT Mamlg virginiia. l(jSa(S4:1 v r J v war By STEVE KNOWLTON of The Daily Tar Heel Staff ' Two University professors discussed and debated toe draft and the Vietnam war Monday night in Hinton James College m preparation for the J!tc 1 campus referenda on NisA resolutions passed this summer. , About 40 students listened and discussed for 2 hours while vr. E.M. Adams of the philosophy department and Dr. Lou Lipsitz debated the issues of universal draft, a lottery El New Red Offensive Seen Near SAIGON U.S. Marines battling street to street recaptured provincial headquarters in the heart of Hue Tuesday, hauled down the North Vietnamese flag and raised the Stars and Stripes atop the building. In Saigon allied troops fought Communist forces with tanks and planes and more Viet Cong troops were reported entering the capital from the south. In the northwest Communist gunners fired heavy rocket, artillery and mortar attacks 'against the besieged U.S. Marine post of Khe Sanh, surrounded by at least 16,000 North Vietnamese troops believed poised for an offensive. U.S. spokesmen disclosed that about 12,000 troops of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division and the llOst Airborne Division had been moved north to the Demilitarized Zone area where they had kill ed 627 North Vietnamese in two weeks of furibusghting. The air cavalrymen and paratroopers were poised for an even larger invasion from North Vietnam that U.S. officials believed will follow in the wake of the unprecedented wave of Communist attacks thalt have left 21,330 Communists dead during the past week more than the total American combat deaths for the whole war. LBJ Asks Consumer Protection V': WASHINGTON President Johnson asked Congress Tuesday to protect American consumers from '"unsatisfactory" auto in surance, "meaningless" guarantees, dangerous recreational boats and uninspected poultry and fish. He proposed six bills to help "assure every American con sumer a fair and honest exchange for his hard-earned dollar", that also would cover four other common marketplace hazards. "A hundred years ago, consumer protection was largely un necessary, the President said in a special message. "If the buyer had a complaint he went straight to the miller, the blacksmith, the tailor, the corner grocer. It was easy to tell the excellent from the inferior." But today he said, "It is the government's role to protect the consumer and the honest businessman alike against fraud and indifference." No Korean Agreement Reached SEOUL A South Korean 'government official said Tuesday the United States and North Korea havd ifailed to reach any agree ment on the return of the USS Pueblo fcnd its crew of 83( men. He said the first meeting was 'held last Friday at the United States' request. The second took place Sunday, this time at the North Korean's request. The third was held Monday, the official said. He denied reports that a fourth meeting was held Tues day. The official said there had been no agreement between the two sides at any of the meetings. His report further dispelled the flur ry of rumors and speculations that North Korea had agreed to return the dead and wounded Americans and that the rest of the crew would be freed through a neutral country. U.S. officials in Washington had earlier disclaimed such reports. N.C. Integration 'Slow But Steady9 RALEIGH The process of desegregation in North Carolina colleges and universities continues to be "slow but steady," the board of higher education said Tuesday. "In the fall of 1967, nearly 1,700 Negro students enrolled in predominantly white Colleges and universities in North Carolina," the board said in its February newsletter. "The percentage of Negro students in predominantly white colleges and universities increased from 0.4 per cent in 1963 to 1.6 per cent in 1967," the board said. "Obviously, desegregation in higher education in North Carolina is slow," the board said. 'This is clear from the facts which indicate that about two per cent of the total enrollment in predominantly white institutions are negro students and about one per cent of the total enrollment in predominantly Negro institutions are white students." The board said it would be fair to say, however, that "opr portunities for higher education are increasingly being made . available in North Carolina to all students without regard to race. . . " U.S. Destroyer Runs Aground RHODES, Greece The USS Bache, a Sixth Fleet destroyer ran aground and was being abandoned Tuesday night after strong winds and choppy seas broke her anchor chain outside the port of Rhodes. Witnesses said the Bache seemed to be cracking up on the rocks near the Rhodes Yacht Club and that the crew had been ordered to abandon ship. l They said the crewmembers were climbing off the ship wear ing life jackets and were being picked up by small boats that rushed to the area. There was no immediate indication whether there were any casualties. system of selection and selec tive objection to a particular war. Lipsitz and Adams differed most sharply on the NSA measure calling for selective objection (receiving a defer ment for a particular war) on philosophical ' or moral grounds. "Historically, an individual has had a responsibility to authority of his government and his awn judgment can not countervene with the judgment of governmental authority," ffr Daily aar 2?rrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International Adams said. This country has recognized the higher authority of a diety as institutionalized by the structure of a church in granting CO. status, he said. Lipsitz said the draft "is totally different from anything else our government asks us to do. We are risking being killed or killing someone else for an issue the individual perhaps isn't too enthused about." He said the decision to go or ' not to go to war involves "a deep moral choice either way" and that an individual should decide for himself if he can agree with that government's policy. "All governments do immo , ral things, and certainly all important governments do them regularly," Lipsitz said. "1 believe that's what the Nuremberg Trials were all about." He said the institution of selective objection would pro vide - a check on the" government's "arbitrary decisions". He said Johnson was elected primarily as an anti-escalation candidate in 1964 "and what could the peo ple of this country have done in tl. ist four years about hat' being done in Viet nam? "Nothing," Lipsitz said. The NSA also passed a resolution declaring that . the Congress has the right to draft only in times of national emergency : and only for the duration of a declared war. "This is a horse and buggy kind of proposal," Dr. Adams said, "which might have been "meaningful vin the 19th century. It is totally .unrealistic in today's world to think we won't recruit forces until war is declared. Lipsitz agreed with Adams on the necessity of the draft, ,, adding that a widespread lot tery system ''wouM be th most equitable system" that has yet been suggested. lipsitz said a volunteer army, as suggested by the NSA resolution "would not be equitable because it would ap peal to the lower classes "and would not provide a check on the administration's authori ty. "Doing away with student deferments and the drafting more and more middle class citizens . would put a psychological check on the government, even if a small one," Lipsitz said. Lipsitz said the middle class "has more power, more money, more friends on the draft 'board and more of everything that is influential politically," and that "it wasn't surprising that President Johnson and the administration weren't interested in abolishing Cr rTT l v DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS JUAN VOLDEZ AND His Rich Colombian Has-beens couldn't find a convenient central location to practice so they decided on McCorkle place. The group is composed of Mont Hedrick. David Litt, Buddy Snipes and Jeff Finn. Who is Juan Voldez? 11 4't I Larry Miller goes in for a hook over Virginia's Carmichael ... in last night's 108-64 Carolina victory By SHARI WILLIS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Students, graduate students and faculty members in terested in taking an active part in the Carolina Talent Search should fill out ap plications at the G.M. Informa- T o O t tion Desk Feb. 7-19, according to director Phil Clay. The Carolina Talent Search aims to provide information about UNC to persons outside the normal recruiting network of the University, especially to underprivileged students in North Carolina high schools. Members of the Talent Search will be expected to travel to North Carolina high schools in February and March to tell students about Carolina. -"In the i last six weeks, we have sent letters to 400 high school students in North Carolina," said Clay. "We told them about the program at UNC, and have gotten a good response." The program is not aimed solely a t underprivileged students. Clay said that a fall trip to prep schools in New England had, raised much in terest about coming to Carolina among students there. " There are no specific qualifications for members of the program, said Clay. "Prospective members should be willing to travel on weekdays and be able to com municate to small groups of people." Clay is looking for a cross-, section. of mera b e r s ' f r aternity men, freshmen, athletes, anyone who is interested and willing to work." The Talent Search will - be preparing, a manual for high school guidance counselors, to be published in April. The manual will tell counselors how to identify those students who are outside 1 b e University's recruiting range and how to encourage tim to take advantage of higher education. Clay said the group will be working to find a way to get the program permanently established in circles of higher, education in the state. '"Students who have been working with the program already have reported that this was a good opportunity for T y - " f . ' , . DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS Jobs them to get involved," said Clay. "You see problems you previously knew about only through magazines." This is an official Student Government activity, so members who occasionally may have to miss classes will have their absences officially excused. The program does need peo ple with cars for" transporta tion, but this is not a re quirement. Clay said that members who drive to in Photo Lab's 1600 Mugs The UNC Photo Lab is faced with a mystery which would baffle even Sherlock Holmes: The Case of the Missing ID Pictures. A roll of film containing 1,600 student mugshots has been lost in the mail somewhere between here and New Haven, Comm. According to Ross Scroggs, director of the Photo Lab, the films were mailed out on December 14. They haven't been heard from since. There has been some speculation that the films perished in the Morgan Street Post Office fire on December 15, but authorities here and in Raleigh feel that the chan ces are slim that the film was at that station. Scroggs also said that the students whose pic tures were on the roll had temporary IDs which ex pired Jan. 2. He advised them to come to the Photo Lab to have their pictures retaken. Missing Tar Heels Take 13th Straigh By LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff It may not have looked like much during the first three minutes and 52 seconds, but after that it was all North Carolina as the Tar Heels put on a devastating 108-64 basket ball show at Carmichael Audi torium Tuesday night. ' The visiting Virginia Cava liers watched and wept. And after it was all over their coach Bill Gibson called this the "greatest" Carolina team he has ever seen. The accolade is just when based on the manner in which the Tar Heels handled every department rebounding, de fense and offense. The fast break was awsome. For North Carolina it was the 13th straight victory, equalling a string set in 1961. The Tar Heels overall record is now 15-1 and their Atlantic Coast Conference leading mark is 6-0. Virginia, which had played two good games last week in defeating Navy and losing a close contest to Duke, never knew what happened. Now 6-12 and 3-6, the Cavaliers opened an early 12-6 lead before Caro lina switched on its fast break attack and shot little but lay ups the rest of the evening. The Tar Heels erased the Cavaliers' early 12-6 advant age that was posted with 16:18 to go with three straight bas kets by Charlie Scott, Rusty Clark and Larry Miller. . A.Mike Katos bucket let Vir ginia have the lead one more - time at-14-12 before Carolina went ahead for good. Clark's connection with 12:34 left was the stopper. Carolina's biggest scoring spurts of the first ' half lifted the score from 6-12 to 21-14 and from 27-22 to 42-22. The second 15-point streak came in four fast paced min y utes and broke the game open for good. The Heels' biggest lead of One terviews will be reimbursed by Student Government at a flat rate of seven cents ter mile. There will be a brief orien tation for the group, so that the members will know exactly what they are doing when they recruit. Questions about the program should be directed to Phil Clay at 929-2722. Orientation Program Drop-Add Course Planned By MIKE MC GOWAN and WYLENE COM MANDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Although Drop-Add 1 may not appear as a freshman elec tive in next year's catalogue, it's part of a voluntary, four Week course the Orientation Commission is planning for fall. The course, to be taught in groups of no larger than 25 students, is intended to help an incoming freshman or transfer student to adjust to the new environment at Carolina. However, the course would not concern itself only with the practicalities of campus life. It would also initiate discussions about the concept of a modern university, the theory of thought behind at tending a university and responsibilities 'of the student in an academic community. Presently, the orientation commission is seeking support for the new plan from the faculty. According to Joe Ritok, men's coordinator of the commission, the faculty sup port is needed so there'll be so meone to teach the course. "The course is just a further t the half came 11 fore the buzzer seconds be when Joe a steal into Brown converted a layup for a This was a 50-26 lead. came in which Carolina could do little wrong. In the first period Virginia was forped into 16 turnovers it finished with only nine more and the Heels took full ad vantage. UNC put five men in double figures. Only Ricky Webb fail ed to scratch at all as the team went over the century mark for the third time this year. The 44-point victory margin topped even the 32 points that beat Clemson. 115-83. Scott and Clark shared high scoring honors with 19 points each. Miller bucketed a sea son low 16, all in the first half. Bill Bunting played his second fine game in a row and finished with 12 points. Reserve Brown had 16. , The Cavaliers, who lost early in the season to Duke 103-61 a lesser 42 point spread were lead by Norm Carmichael's 18 points and Mike Katos' 15. Carolina's biggest lead of the night was 49 points. It came first with 8:37 to go when re serve Jim Delaney made the score 88-39. The two other 49 point spreads were 90-41 and 92-43. Another, substitute, Ralph Fletcher, put the team over the century mark. He followed a, missed shot by Brown with1 3:11 remaining to up the mar gin to 100-56. Carolina hit 51 per cent of its attempts but only six of 14 from the line. Virginia made 26 of 71 per cent and was outrebounded 57-37. Clark's 16 recoveries and Bunting's 10 paced the Tar Heels in that department. International Forum Reschedules Meeting The Inernational Forum will meet on Wednesday instead of Thursday this week. An- informal discussion on German Reunification will be led by Dr. Robson of the History Department. The Forum will meet at the International Student Center (Carr Dorm) from 8-9 pjn. Coffee will be served and all interested students are invited to participate. For Fa attempt at orientation said. humanizing the program," Kitok Earlier he had announced dispensing with most of the large convocations and gearing of the fall orientation to the needs of the residence .college system. According to Ritok, what the commision needs now is stu dent participation. "We're conducting in terviews all this week from 3 to 5 in Roland Parker I" he said. "Interest is - the only qualification ,we ask for." The object of the interviews is to find people who will turn orientation into a "precision program where students will get more out of it," Ritok said. "The present set-up is too much of a rush job." Positions open in orientation include: executive secretary, treasurer, foreign coordinator, and directors of married women, counselor manuals, publicity, academics, religious emphasis, men's honor systems, women's honor systems, medical affairs, library coordination, student government, picnics and UNC . G dance. 11 3. jf .. , ... ,