E o 070 fuibVsWVded The Chapel Hill Tutorial Pro ject needs 'more volunteer tutors. If interested, ask at 102 or 104 Y Building, or call 933-2333. 4 TP, Chance Of Shoicers Chance of scattered showers today with highs in the upper 60s. Sunday variable cloudiness and continued mild. 76 Years of Editorial Freedom CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1968 Volume 75, Number 126 Founded February 23, 1893 r ventare roiMiice 9 jm. A XI .Heels .Bona 91-72 i , ' ;, ' V. i if J. '-' J V - -v. 1 - . , nm .. ..t.f.i Mi4K.. Li wr nil ,. ." DTH Sta Photo by JH1JU JHctiOWAN Charlw Scott glides past St. Sonny's BUly Kalbauch on a tost break. EG IE Scott And James Colleges Chosen By MARY BURCII ' of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The- Chancellor's Advisory - - Committee on Residential Colleges has announced that Scott and Hinton James Residential Colleges have been chosen for special ex perimental projects next year. Prof. Samuel S. Hill, chairman of the committee, and Dr. Harry E. Smith, Special Assistant to the Chancellor, said the "the Residential College program James. for 196&-69 will involve all six "Freshmen, bavejj p eci a .1 of the colleges in a an active needs," said Dr Hill. It is way," though special projects , good to have a d d.it ional k iorww tnr. Tomoie -rA leadershio for them. Coeds are Will UG Lil.CLlUi.WA 1V1 UHUUa fc Scott. The two systems were singl ed out for their "peculiar in stitutions" according to Dr. Hill. Scott was selected because it will be coeduca tional next year with women students living in Parker. The: high proportion of freshmen prompted the 'selection of lip DatUi aar ?rrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International mm m . - r an mtergrai pan oi campus life, therefore we feel it is good to have the program include them." The experimental programs are being set up now by Dr. Smith and" the committee. They will plan programs which will include special films and lectures. An important part of the Radio Station Signal Only In Operation Johnson Meets With Gold Pool WASHINGTON President Johnson conferred with his highest monetary and fiscal advisers Friday on emergency steps the United States and its European banking allied can take to halt the run on gold and protect the world integrity of the dollar. The future course of the gold crisis was expected to hinge largely on the outcome of a meeting of the seven-nation gold pool, starting with a luncheon Saturday at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington. The president stayed close to the White House and maintained public silence on what many financial experts regarded as the gravest threat to the international monetary system the stability of the dollar and British pound since World War II. When the central bank governors of the six other active pool members-Britain, Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Switzerland gather, Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler and William McChesney Martin, Chairman of the FED, were. ex pected to urge restrictions aimed at keeping gold out of the hands of private speculators, Allies Press Largest Offensive SAIGON A huge assault force of Americans and South Viet namese pressing the biggest allied offensive of the war in to its sixth day Saturday morning reported killing 233 Communists In the five provinces ringing Saigon. Reports from field commander posts of the search-and-destroy mission Friday night placed U.S. losses at 11 killed and 94 wound ed while South Vietnamese casulaties were described as "light." Fifty battalions of infantry as many as 40,000 men under the personal command of Gen. William C. Westmoreland were in volved in the big push dubbed "Resolved To Win." The offensive included a nouse-to-house search for Corn- By FRANK BALLARD l of The Dally Tar Heel Staff Signal qnly, James'. Residence College radio sta tion, has been holding on4he air test broadcasts since late last month and should begin its regular programming within two weeks. Station Manager Mark Tempest said that - all necessary electronic equip ment has been purcha ed and installed. "We're waiting to build the disc jockey's counter and some shelves." A number of James res dents helped set up the sta tion, under the guidance of John Hutchinson, Signal Only Technical Director. The station is located at 1030 on the AM band. "We've been testing the equipment on the ai five nights a week from 8:00 to 10o;00," Tempest cont nued. "A different announcer is program will include faculty fellows who will have offices in James and Scott Colleges. : The faculty fellows, who are . being -selected -nowj will work r with the residence college pro-; grams and they may do some teaching in the colleges ac cording to Dr. Hill. At least three full-time faculty members will be associated with each college with responsibility for being accessible to the residents in academic and social life. "The residence college pro gram will not replace the fraternity," said Dr. Hill, "but it will accomplish some of the goals of a fraternity. The residence program will parallel with the fraternity program." The experimental programs next year at Scott and James will aid in organizing programs for the residence system in the future. " "We hope by planning in depth for two colleges, the overall program might be im proved," said Dr. HiLL By LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff RALEIGH North Carolina, following the form of its At lantic Coast Conference tour nament victory of last week, sent previously unbeaten St. Bonaventure into the consola tion round of the Eastern Re gional here Friday night witfc an awesome 91-72 victory. The Tar Heels play David son for the right to advance into the final four next week, tonight at 8:30. The Wildcats . made it a most enchanting evening for the Old North State i by defeating Columbia 61-59 in i overtime. & North Carolina was superb throughout against the nation's S ; third ranked team. i St. Bonaventure, now 23-1 while fourth-ranked UNC is 26 3. had to relv on its starting five almost entirely. That's $: where the Bonnies, with no $ Qydes to call upon, met their : downfall. . ij ,' The Tar Heels, substituting $ ' frequently, ran and ran and :: then ran some more. Defen- $ sively, they were their own old $ selves, as pressing tactics held : SL Bonaventure to 14 points : . below its season's average. Larry Miller's 27 points led : I North Carolina's scoring as his $ sixteen rebounds keyed that de- i partment, too, but the rugged : : AU-American had plenty of :i jfaelp. i Charlie Scott hit nine of 13 : shots and scored 21 points. He i ' and Dickie Grubar, who tallied ; : nine, did an outstanding job :: i of putting pressure on St. Bon- : . venture's smaller guards, 6-2 :Jimmie Satalin and 5-11 Billie ' . Kaldaugh. Rusty Clark, too, was out I standing. His offensive cre - dentials showed 18 points on 9 of 13 attempts and his re- bounding mark, in the key1 de '! partment which North Carolina 1 led 48-39. was 10. i Clark's true brilliance came defensively, though. His man, 6-11, 265-pound Bob Lanier, t scored 23 points, the last eight -coming in -the three minutes before he fouled out with 1:11 . to go. Lanier had nine re bounds, seven below his aver age. St. Bonaventure's best play er was Bill Butler. The only senior in the line-up scored 23 points and corralled , 12 re bounds. The Tar Heels were able to 9 extend their 40-30 halMime lead to as much as 27 points (85-58 with 3:17 remaining). Their constant offensive and defensive pressure forced St. Bonaventure into the same fate which befell N. C. State in the ACC finals. "North Carolina was too tall, too strong and had too much of a bench," lamented Bonnie Coach Larry Weise afterwards. The Tar Heels hit 37 of 71 . field goal attempts for 52 per cent compa red to 28 of 72 and 39 percent for St. Bonaventure. Each team made just over twenty turnovers, although the losers' seemed, much more ob vious. St. Bonaventure did not sub stitute at all in the first half, even though Lanier and Hayes drew three crippling fouls. The -Tar Heels' fast-paced attack wore the Bonnies down. St. Bonaventure led three times in the first five minutes of play before Miller scored two baskets that sent Carolina up to stay, 10-8. Then the Bonnies called time out, but when the two teams returned to the court UNC made matters worse with the rested backcourt due of Scott and Grubar. The two had gone out at 15:07 along with Bunting, in favor of Eddie Fogler. Gerald Tuttle and Joe Brown. Carolina added seven straight points to the 10-8 advantage. St. Bonaventure, which made only 13 of thirty-four field goals and was out-rebounded 24-16, never got closer than nine later in the first half. The Tar Heels biggest lead was 14 at 2:13 on a Miller field goal. Clark led North Carolina's scoring with 14 points on seven of eleven attempts. Miller, who like Scott had eleven points, paced the rebounding with nine. Despite some early outside shooting troubles, the Tar Heels ended with better than fifty percent of their attempts made. 18 of 25. ......:... f ..Right In Mddle Of Big Time By RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff "I don't know how you did it. Somehow you got there, and somehow you got tickets. I want to thank you." Dean Smith, head basketball coach for Carolina had stepped to the mike and ad dressed the 5,000 students who were packed into Polk Place behind - South Building to send their team off to the Eastern Regionals.in Raleigh to defend -the crown that they won in College Park, Md., a year ago. He had been preceeded by Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson who told the one-third of the student body that showed up, "Twenty-eight miles away there is an in stitution that we go to from time to time. This team is not going over there tonight because they like the campus, and we're with them all the way." To that the students responded with a cheer that bounced off the back of South Building and then reverberated from the front steps of the Louis Round Wilson Library. Then Coach Dean Smith stepped to the mike to introduce the team. First was Larry Miller. Smith said that Larry had said that "he might dance tonight," in reference to' Miller's appearance on . stage with the Mitch Ryder Show the night before to" show off his footwork. Miller spoke: "I won't dance tonight. I'm waxing up by surfboard, letting my hair grow long, and I'm planning to bleach it when we get to LA. (site of the NCAA nation;! finals)." The the other starters spoke, and all were greeted by cheers from the crowd. Halfway through the proceedings, just as the Bell Tower was signaling the begin ning of class Joe Brown came forward: "Well, here we are, right in the middle of the bigtime. . .and we couldn't have done it without your help." Then there was Charlie Scott who doesn't "mind carrying the coaches suit cases, as long as I carry them to LA." It was almost over when Ricky Webb, the thirteenth man on the squad, and therefore ineligible to dress out said, "I know ya'll are looking forward to seeing the game. I've had a pretty good seat all year, and I cant wait." That broke up players, coaches and students alike, and the pep band broke in to Dixie. The players slipped back into South Building, the student who was in the same tree he occupied for last year's pep rally climbed down, the mob broke up, and everybody, wandered away, waitingr",' . . " . I a Elections Put Off To Alar 9 1L By SL By WAYNE HURDER of The Dally Tar Heel Staff Student. Legislature Thurs day night changed the date of the Spring elections to April 9. ... The change was made at the in April. The surprise move in the debate came when April 9 was offered as the date of the elec tion. Most legislators thought that this too would be illegal since it would make it im- SDS To Picket Dow Recruiter, Cair Announces . - i By RICK GRAY . activities as far as the war is of The Dally Tar Heel Staff concerned." Dow Chemical Company will The group wants, he con be recruiting on campus Mon-, tinued, to point out how seem day, and the Students for a ingly harmless jobs actually Democratic Society will be contribute to the war effort, picketing. - As far as Carr knows mis is : Jerry Carr. president of the the first time that any broadcasting each day of the SDS, said that the pickets will recruiter has been picketed on request of the chairman of the possible to hold a run-off Carolina -Symposium, Taylor before Easter vacation. Branch, who said the election However, Doug McKeown, a would hurt the Symposium, former chairman of the elec- which is beins held the week of tions board, explained that it week a couple of them are be in front of Oardner Hall at professionals." 8:30 a.m., even though the The station was bothered by recruiting will not begin until 9 a.m. Carr some prooiem witn recep tion" but Tempest believes it has been almost eliminated "As far as we know the signal reaches all over the dorm. There's a little distortion up on the 10th floor, but it will be corrected." v A carrier current station. munists in Saigon itself by South Vietnamese paratroopers and signal Only operates through national route muu. Detroit Newspaper Strike Ends the dorm's electrical system. DETROIT The Teamsters Union ended a four-month strike against the Detroit News Friday, but the nation's fifth largest ci ty was still deep in a publication blackout. Strikes by four other newspapers' unions continued unsettled. Both the publishers and the unions expressed hope that the Teamsters settlement would open the door for a return to publication. The Teamsters at the News, an afternoon newspaper, ap proved a new contract by a 336-194 vote, ending a strike that started Nov. 16. Twice before similar votes had failed. Although the station has only for the picketing, according to 1- t J A - . ' oeen Droaacasiing ior mree uarr, weeks, its format has several professional touches. With a "field mic" announcers can do remote coverage that i s relayed immediately to the station's listeners. campus here m connection with the Vietnam war He ex pects from 35 to 40 pickets to show up. He said, "We probably will not try to stop students from going in. We want to confront the recruiters and debate the use of napalm. They have pro vided debaters on other cam puses, and we want to debate them here." J)ow Chemical has been a favorite target of anit-war demonstrators across the na- Maoi n rrocniinp . tion, and they have been a ... " i. rj k . ill tauvi . said, "We are asking that the University deny the use of their facilities to Dow, at least until a representative of Dow i engages us in debate about the use of napalm in Vietnam." Thef fact that Dow is the sole manufacturer of napalm for the Vietnam war is the reason which bursts into flames when it hits the ground. It is used in Vietnam to combat Viet Cong forces hidden in dense underbrush. "The general objective of the Carr said, "is to picketed on many of the cam puses that they have visited, usually without undue disturbance. Most recently the company recruited at Duke, and some UNC students participated in March 31 to April 3. Two moves were made to hold the election on March 26 or April 29 before legislature settled on April 9. Legislature had voted to hold the election on April 2 last Tuesday. The original bill set ting the date called for March 26, but this was changed to April 2 at the request of the Elections Board chairman Norm ZetteL In making his request by let ter Tuesday, he said the board didn't have the time to check the qualifications of all the candidates because quality point averages wouldn't have been computed in time. Branch reported to legislature Thursday night, after talking with persons in the Dean of Men's office, that the quality point averages could be computed in time. However, the date of the election couldn't be moved back to March 26 because of a stipulation in the election laws that all candidates, not en doresed by a party and peti tioning their names on the ballot, must turn in the petition within 12 days of the elec tion. Since the date of the election would be decided within 11 days of the March 26 election, and it wouia mane u im would be possible, under the election law to have a run-off after the holidays. If there is a run-off it would be held the second Tuesday after Easter vacation. Branch told the legislators that "scheduling the Sym posium's presentations and spring elections con temporaneously will produce undersirable and potentially disastrous effects on both events." RFK Will Announce His Candidacy Today By zfnlfd, Pros Intmartoncl Sen. Robert Kennedy, D N.Y., will announce Saturday that he will run for the presidency against President Johnson. The younger brother of the late President John F. Ken nedy also will announce at a Washington news conference which state primaries he in tends to enter. The Nebraska primary May 14 was con sidered likelyforastart. Kennedy's decision leaked out after he told a private meeting of housewives at Kings Point, Long Island: "I'm going to make an an nouncement tomorrow. You nouncement. Kennedy planned to elaborate on his candidacy Sunday before "Meet the Press" television interviewers, bumping the previously scheduled guest, Henry FordH. 'The 42 year old Senator told 175 Democratic women in a private Kings Point home he did not support McCarthy can didacy because "I have a special responsibility." Kennedy insisted he wanted to speak out not about personalities but about Viet nam and other troublesome issues facing the nation. It is recognized that when I can help me in the effort which have spoken frequently on this I am going to undertake." Kennedy was reported to be considering entering the primaries in Indiana, Oregon and California against Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, M i n n., point that it has been in terpreted as almost a person ally struogle nothing to do with the issues or my feel ings about Vietnam," he told the women. Theodore Sorensen, an in- "We carried the James Senate meeting and are plan- picketing," ning to have a debate between bring to the minds of the peo- the picketing there. Carr said the student body presidential pie on the campus the problem that he expects several Duke candidates using the remote of being aware of the con- students to be in the lines here unit," reported Tempest. sequences of their everyday Monday. the peace candidate for the Democratic presidential timate Kennedy adviser, told the ballot by petition, ine pro- - "c uau oui" Aicuaruiy nas maue ciear ne ui 2uxy uui oi me race uecause intends to carry on his fight for of the political realities. Ken the nomination no matter what nedy agreed, he said, that the 'Kennedy does. The Minnesota Democrat called a news con ference at Green Bay, Wis., one-half hour after Kennedy's scheduled 10 a.m. EST an- nosal was ruled improper. An amendment was made to hold the election on April 30 but this was ruled illegal under the elections law because it orders that elections be held between the third Tuesday in March and the third Tuesday prospects were dim that could ever displace an cumbent president. (Continued on Pare 4) he in-

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