U.::.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chl Hill. LC Teaching Awards Any student may make nominations for the Tanner and Salgo teaching excellence SUS y SCeing Mrs- Robert Lagle m 103 South building. The deadline for nominations is March IS. 7 'I-, JSC Dance The ISC will sponsor a dance tonight in the Granville Towers cafeteria at 9 p.m. The Impacts will be featured and there will be a light and body paint show for enterprising couples. IN l' u r III ! I J . f V 76 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 119 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MARCH 8, 1968 Founded February 23, 1893 r W Ike CDp 9 ' 111 J jm f I . Hleels n n k Sj! I vv ? i i UNC Advances To Tourney Semi-Finals '.iV DTH Staff Photo by STZVE ADAMS If? 1 Warm weather is luring cold-weary students out of doors at JLvGiuX last but its me as usual for the camPus dgs who just don't seem to get very excited about spring. ecerity Increased. For Carolina TV T vuo.eo.s By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The University ad ministration has decided to cut back bushes near the doorways to girls dorms, install more lighting and inspect screens as measures to increase1 dorm security. University Busi ness Manager, J. A. Williams said these measures would "go into effect immedi ately, which means about two or three days." The measures are the result of two administrative meetings that took place Thursday. At tending the meetings were Dean of Women Katherine,. Carmichael, Dean of Men James 0. Cansler, Head of the Physical Plants Division Walter Hamilton and Universi ty Consultant J. S. Bennet. The University Buildings Department will check the screens on the first floor and basement windows to insure that they are in good con dition. "There shouldn't be too much to do," said Williams. "The dorms are usually kept in good shape." The dormitory maids will be required to inspect all screens every day to make sure they are locked. Williams said heavy screens Education Pro Mem In Dorm Security By TERRY GINGRAS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael said Thursday the chief problem with dorm security was educating the girls to take the proper pre cautions. "If we could educate the girls to lock their screens at all times," said Miss Carmichael. "This would be a major im provement in dorm security." Miss Carmichael said an open window with an unlocked screen was a major uauger u "Having a bed right under an open wincow is an obvious danger," said Miss Carmichael. "Girls should think about these things and take precuations." Miss Carmichael reem phasized the importance of educating girls to take the pro per precautions, placing this above other security measures. "The dorms at the present time are fairly safe, said Miss Carmichael. "I'm all for burglar alarms and such things dorm security and a powerful if toe giris want them." temptation to passers-by. "If you go by so- and- so's window and she has the win dow open and the screen unlocked," said Miss Carmichael, "What's to keep a student from just going in the window?" Miss Carmichael said girls should also keep security in mind when placing their beds. Miss Carmichael termed night watchmen for dorms a "useless expense." ' N i ghtwatchmen couldn't have prevented the incident at Winston, Monday night or the one at Cobb Wednesday af ternoon," said Miss Carmichael. "I don't see how a nightwatchman dozing at the front door is going to help." or some protective devices would be put on the first fldor bathroom windows in all girl's dorms. Large bushes adjacent to dormitory doors will be trim med or removed and replaced by smaller plants. "This is so girls going into dorms won't be in jeopardy of having someone jump out at them from the bushes," said Williams. "We will cut back all bushes around entrances so no one will be able to hide behined them." Williams said additional lights would be placed in areas around girl's dormitories,, particularly near , J o y n e r. , Winston, Connor, Cobb and along the South Rd. between the library and Winston dorm. Williams said these lights would be installed im mediately. "We can't wait until we finish the lighting study to in stall these lights." Williams has been working on a study of the outdoor lighting on campus in an effort to find "dark and potentially dangerous areas." Williams in dicated additional lighting would be installed when the study was completed. The Campus police will add two men to the third shift (11:30 p.m. to 7:30 a.m.) and one man to the second shift (3:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m.). Williams said it would be necessary to ask the State Assembly for a budget revision to pay for the additional policemen. "The State Assembly will probably come around," said Williams. "I don't think there will be any problem in getting the revision." CONT. ON PAGE 5 Bv LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff CHARLOTTE North Caro lina, keeping the opposition at bay when it tried to make the contest close, advanced into the semi-finals of the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament here Thursday night with an 83-70 victory over Wake For est. The top-seeded Tar Heels led by 11 points at halftime. 40-29, behind the hot hand of Larry Miller., The 6-4 senior Ail American finished with 31 points, 22 in the opening period. With Rusty Clark and Char lie Scott getting into the scor ing act in the second half, Carolina ran the lead to 21 points. At this point Wake Forest, which had been in control of the game early in the first half, set out to make a come back. The Deacons got within eight points on a basket by Paul Crinkley65-57 with 7:37" remaining when Carolina stop ped the surge with a timeout. The lead was eight again, 67-59 before the Tar Heels be gan to pull away. back scores by Scott lifted UNC to a 73-60 advantage with 3:58 showing and the Heels were never again head ed. The four corners offense was called with 1:53 and Carolina top, 77-b4. with tne mar- Miller's 22 first half points, which came on 9 of 11 field goals and four of four free throws, gave the Tar Heels the offensive punch which no one else could provide. Wake Forest opened up a 6-1 lead before Bunting ma neuvered inside for Carolina's first basket with 16:24 to go. Field goals by Grubar and Clark and two free throws by Miller all set up by steals in the Deacons' backcourt put UNC ahead for the first time, 9-6. The lead was five, 13-8. when Todmann and Walker keyed a 12-2 spurt that sent the Wake five up, 20-15. Carolina tied the score at 23-23 and 25-25 before taking the lead for good. A Clark tap did the trick. 27-25. The Tar Heels expanded the two-point advantage to 11 by outscoring Wake Forest 13-4 in the final five minutes and fifty-one seconds. Miller scored the last two baskets of the half, the final one coming from the corner at the buzzer. Miller got very little first period scoring help as Clark had six points and Grubar four. . The Deacons, who made 11 of the 25 shots the Tar Heels' fine defensive play allowed, was spurred by the inside play of Todmann. The 6-3 sopho more scored 10 points and bad six rebounds. North Carolina made 16 of 35 from the floor and eight of 10 from the line. It trailed in rebounds 19-16 at the half. North Carolina, now 23-3, outshot the Deacons by mak ing eight more field coals on only five more attempts. The Tar Heels shot 46 per cent and recovered 42 rebounds while Wake Forest made 37 per cent and had 41 rebounds. Trailing Miller for UNC was Scott, who had 17 points and Dark, who had 16 before foul ing out with 5:10 remaining. The 6-10 junior also brought down 11 rebounds. Jerry Montgomery paced Wake Forest with 21 points while Norwood Todmann had 16 and 10 rebounds. Model UN Begins Today Students Representing 73 UN Nations on gin 17. at 83-66 and only 43 seconds remaining, Coach Dean Smith cleared his bench. By FRANK BALLARD ' of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Hundreds of college students representing 73 foreign coun tries arrived on c a m pus Wednesday for an international Back-to- " political meeting. The 10th annual Middle South Model United Nations brought the delegates, who all speak English and dress like American college students WHICH THEY ARE. They came from 42 Eastern Seaboard colleges and universities, and each school represents a UN member na tion. After studying the coun try they . represent, the 325 delegates began their mock political action Thursday in at tempts to foster the interests jof their country. "The delegates try to present the views as the country itself would even to the point of ' abstaining from voting on cer tain issues," .a UNC student host for the conference said. The Model UN is being held in connection with Interna tional Week, and the con ference center is at the International Student Center Center in. Carr Dormitory. Wednesday night the Indonesian delegate to the real the Peace Corps director, will UN, H. R. Abdulgani, speak in Memorial at 11:15 delivered the keynote address a.m. today also. The meeting to tne student representatives, is open to the public. Coed Goiirt System Given a reception with UNU's in ternational students followed the speech. Thursday was filled with committee sessions in which the delegates initiated, debated and voted on resolutions to be presented at today's General Assembly and Security Council University meetings. Nearly all committee members represented their na tion in daily total of almost nine hours in session. The -four committees are Special Political, Political, Economics, and Finance, and Social, Cultural and Humanitarian. The resolutions Of the bills produced by yesterday's lengthy Moden UN committee sessions, the pro clamation of Namibia as a new independent nation may prove to be a landmark. Harry Simmons, a Somali representative from the of South Carolina, yesterday called it the first time an infant nation has sought recognition in Model UN session history. Usually new countries are already recognized before they attend the conferences. Somali backed the bill through the Special Politic Committee yesterday and will AdmiMstfator s'i Appro va. discussed in them ranged from introduce it in today's General uuis uu uiujrnauonai uquiaiiy Assemmv. By REBEL GOOD of The Daily Tar Heel Staff . Dean of Men James O. Cansler and Dershie McDevitt, Assistant to the . Dean of Women approved Thursday the proposal to set up a coed Honor Court. The proposed court would try all violations of the Honor Code and the existing Men's and Women's Honor Courts would have jurisdiction over Campus Code Offenses. Randy Myer, Men's Attorney General, Gene Moncrief, WHC Chairman, Howard Miller MHC Chairman, Ben Hawfield, MHC Vice-Chairman, and Ann Merricks, WHC member, presented the proposal. Cansler and Miss McDevitt were "very much in favor of it," said Myer. Dean Cansler raised the question of whether the court members should be elected or be rotating members from the Men's and Women's Honor Courts. It was his opinion that the members be elected. A question was also raised as to the position of the new court in relation to the MHC and WHC. It was determined that all three courts would be of the same rank and all appeals would go directly to the Faculty Review Board. Dean Cansler asked if the proposed system would place too much of a workload on the MHC and WHC Chairmen. It was pointed out that the Vice Chairmen would act in place of the Chairman when the new court is in session. The system calls for the MHC and WHC Chairmen to act as Co-Chairmen of the new court. The possibility of restruc turing the Men's Residence Council, and Interfraternity Council was also discussed. The minor changes were made in the working draft of the proposal, the name was changed to Honor Court from Coed Court, and the quorum was set at seven, instead of the previous "seven or nine." The proposal will be presented Tuesday to the Judicial Committee of the Stu ' dent Legislature. Steinneman Nominated Duke Steinemann was selected the University Party candidate for president of the Carolina Athletic Association at their convention Tuesday. The Daily Tar Heel had reported that Duke Stone was their candidate. and payments to a favorite of the real UN, admission of Red China to the world organiza tion. Today's General Assembly meeting from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall is open to the public. The Security Council session in Morehead Planetarium is closed. C. Payne Lucas, deputy director of the, African Peace Corps region and special assis tant in Equal Opportunity to Arrangements have also been made for Ethiopia to take the floor from Somali after the bill is introduced, Simmons revealed. Ethiopia is a Securi ty Council member and can open discussion on it there. Somali's concern for Namibia stems from her in terest "as a fellow Africa na tion," Simmons delcared. "We want the whole world to recognize Namibia as a free (CONT. ON PAGE 6 'Talk Not War9 Says Abdulgani Petition Backs Gov. Rockefeller CPU To Interview For New Members The Carolina Political Union, a non-partisan discussion group, will hold preliminary in terviews next week to select about 12 new members to replace graduating seniors and graduate students who are finishing their degrees. Interviews will be held 3-5 in Roland Parker III Monday, March 11; Wednesday, March 13; and Thursday, March ' 14. Tuesday interviews will be held 3-5 in Roland Parker 2. , Sign-up sheets for interview times and application forms will be available at the GM in formation desk by Friday. Ap plications should be returned to the GM desk prior to in terviews. , . The CPU also announced yesterday the names of of ficers elected at its March 3 meeting. They are: Chairman, Eric Clay, a junior from Durham, maonng in Political Science; Vice Chairman, Jeff Gayner, a graduate student in History from Cleveland, Ohio; Secretary, Martin Eaton, a junior form Lake City, Fla., majoring in International Studies; and Treasurer, Dick Mitchell, a law student from Haw River, N.C. Students in the Political Science classes of the late Professor E.J. Woodh'ouse, who were concerned with the changes being injected into American society by the New Deal and the turmoil in Europe, organized the Union in 1936. The CPU was re-organized in the Spring of 1964 by student leaders who felt that such a non-partisan discussion group has a place in the University Community. In the past two years th Bv RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff A petition is being circulated on campus to encourage New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller to seek the Republican nomination for the presidency. The petition was originated by English instructors A.D. Stewart, James Nichols and Richard Dozier who feel that a wider choice of opinions should be offered to the people in this fall's presidential election. Stewart said, "We feel that the similarity on many stands by President Johnson and Richard Nixon represent only insignificant differences and that - Governor Rockefeller's sensible, sane opinions represent the moderate and liberal powers that we feel are still in the majority of the Republican Party." He emphasized that the peti tion was a "plea for Gov. Rockefeller to run, not a Union has met with such noted pledge to vote for him. We are pumic tigures as Senators Jacob Javits, Strom Thur mond, Edward Kennedy Congressmen Charles Weltner' Morris K. Udall, and Charles Marthia, John Kenneth Galbraith, Louis Harris, and James Reston, among others. asking that signatures b e limited to persons connected with the University and who are of voting age." The group wants to present the Republican Party with a representation of "black in terest" and "legal voting opinion." Three copies of the petition with its signatures will be sent. One each to Governor Rockefeller, GOP chairman Ray Bliss and the Republican Governor's Convention. Stewart said "We could send a separate petition of signatures of students not yet eligible to vote, but would like to express their opinions of the powers that be in the Republican Par ty." The petition reads: "We, the undersigned, both Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, concerned lest the Republican party repeat the political disaster of the 1964 election, and believing that a politically responsible and viable Republican party is absolutely essential to the survival of this nation, do hereby urge that Nelson Rockefeller, the one responsi ble Republican who has demonstrated both his political courage and his ability to win, receive untied support from all elements of the party and be encouraged to seek the Republican presidential nomination." Anyone who is interested in the petition should contact Stewart, Nichols or Dozier either at home, or in room 303 Bingham Hall. 1 m By WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff "It is far better that the UN engage in oratory than that the nations engage in war," the Indonesian representative to the UN told delegates to the Middle South Model United Na tions Wednesday night. Dr. H. Roeslan Abdulgani, the Indonesian ambassador to organized world opinion we feel we have a better chance of modifying its behavior," he ex plained. Abdulgani, who was active in the Indonesian Youth Independence Move m e n t before World War II, said that it is "young people who suffer most from the conflicts of mankind and that the youth the UN, delivered the keynoted wish to have a future of peace, !3 Sctrv"-J.l 1 f VTA- IQ- 7. t 1 ' NMk'tfll'il address to the 10th annual model UN composed of 74 "na tions" and 325 delegates from 42 colleges. Abdulgani told the delegates that talk was better than war freedom, and justice. "You young people meeting nere are lite United Nations: But your ideal United Nations a miniature UN in small of a Model makes you in answering what he said was great. You are not just copying common criticism of the UN for being "long on oratory and short on action." He added that "willingness to negotiate should not be regarded as a sign of weakness." "It is the courage to know and discuss divergent views that finally leads to con ciliation." he said. For the nations of the world or imitating tne UN as it is now. You are not imitators. Rather, you are initiators. You have initiated a Model United Nations as the UN should be. You are the fron tiersmen for a better UN and for a better world." He added that "there is sure ly nothing more depressing than a college student who is to work together harmoniously ready and willing to swallow DTH Staff Photo by STEVE CHAPEU HILL'S, cemetery is on campus where the University could use the space but if the University can't use it, the students do. For instance coeds from surrounding dorms sunbathe there in warm weather. We don't venture a guess as to what else goes on there but someone left a beer can. they must establisn common ends, Abdulgani said.. "The ultimate end of all must be peace and progress, he ad ded. Although countries may establish common ends, . Abdulgani said, "the means to the end may be as diverse as" the countries that belong to the United Nations. "In spite of all the widely antagonistic positions all the nations of the world must be able to communicate with one another," he said. "Discussion and com munication are vital to reaching a consensus," he told the delegates. It is for this reason, he said that the United Nations should the universal, even to the point of allowing Communist China to enter the organization. "By confronting Peking with whole all that has been handed down to him by his elders." Abdulgani had a good word for former UNC president Frank Porter Graham, who be said, 'played a vital role in our struggle for national in dependence" from the Dutch. "It was he who said, at a crucial point in the negotia tions (with the Dutch) that we should turn from 'bullets to ballots' " "This was good advice, and still is applicable to many world situations." The Model UN continues to day with a General Assembly session from 8:30 sum. to 9 p.m. in Memorial HalL Saturday the General Assembly will meet from 8:30 ajn. to 4:30 p.m. Si. Ruoro, Kenyan ambassador to the UN will speak to the assembly at 1 p.m.

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