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27514-
Face The Ration
Richard Nixon will appear
before a panel of newsmen on
CBS television's "Face the
Nation" today at 11:30 a.m.
Previous guests on the show
have included Hubert
Humphrey, Spiro Agnew, and
Edmund Muskie.
76 Years Of Editorial Freedom
Volume 76w Number
CHAPEL HIT I. N'ORTH CAROLINA. SUXDAY. OCTOBEK 27. 19G8
Founded February 23. 1S93
Wake Forest, Wins, 48-3
eells
eacoia
F
tin, 'mZf
LJ I
3
Jin
.Dance
a
S9
Heels
Rudely
Jolted
By ART CHANSKEY
DTH Asst Sports Editor
WINSTON-SALEM-The
Carolina Tar Heels saw what a
good football team looks like
Saturday and then tried to
imitate what they saw but as
usual, it was too little and too
late.
With nothing to help them
this week but their own ability,
the Tar Heels put high hopes
back into the pockets of their
chilled fans who had journeyed
an hour and a half to see a
game that resembled the old
Parker's Bakery-Boys Club
clash of '62.
The Heels, apparently still
taking bows from the upset of
one week ago, played the first
35 minutes like Wake Forest
was just another Southeast
Conference team,
By the time they woke up,
the Deacons had amassed such
a lead that many of the 30,000
fans had already scampered
home for the warmth of the
fireplace.
But instead of dying, the
Heels thought it would be a
good idea to run through a
little offense before going
home, and roasting their, own
marshmallows. 1 ...
As a result, the rest of the
offensive unit joined
quarterback Gayle Bomar, who
before that had been like a
man on a raft fighing off a
schoel of sharks, and finished
the debacle with what ight be
termed good football.
The first two Tar Heel
touchdowns in the second half
came fast and furiously, but
unfortunately, they followed
three Deacon scores of the
same variety.
Bomar passed to tight end
Tony Blanchard for
touchdowns of 74 and 76
yards. But not before Deacon
quarterback Freddie Summers,
tailback Jack Dolbin and
defensive back Gary Williard
had raced 33 and 58 yards for
scores that made
Winston-Salem look like the
site of the National sand lot
Championship.
With Wake leading 48-17,
Don Hartig tried the first of
two successful on-sides kicks, a
play that coach Bill Dooley
obviously had enough foresight
to installl in the Tar Heel game
plan.
"We work on the play every
week," Dooley commented
after the game, as if to say he
expected they might need it.
Sophomore Rusty Ross
recovered the first and
linebacker Mark Mazza
pounced on the next, and for a
split second, an extreme
optimist could have visualized
a superhuman comeback.
But the line between
fantasy and reality became
apparent when a Bomar pass
WP intercepted by Wakes
Terry Kuharchek with the
score 48-31, the way it ended.
Rut Bomar could hardly be
Ulatnod The SeniUI
senior
quar
rtprback continuea io w
mnsistent
l cnnt as lie
his iinesi
collegiate
IOOiuau "uw
rne of the
best in Tar neei
history.
Rnmar broke
the all-time
UNC and
ACC total oiiense
on
the ground anu "b
tnH cummers put on an
air.
un
uL.Wo offensive show that
unDr r.,nves stadium take on
m oranre of a three-ring
the appearance oi a
circus.
It might have been only a
"insolation for Bomar
Smf nt fo?Tar Heel fans. For
bUt "fhat remain loyal, Bomar
those that rerna j
is their seven-day noH
future.
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DTH Staff Photo By Steve Adams
GETTING READY Sam Austell begins preparation for the walk on coed visitation to be held on
Monday night SSOC which has lead the movement for visitation rights hopes to demonstrate to the
administration the amount of student support for the issue.
Visitation9 Wa
By
BRYAN CUMMING
DTH Staff Writer
A peaceful walk in support
of the student-faculty
committee on coed visitation
has been planned for Monday
night by the University and
Student Committee, an action
group of Southern Student
Organizing Committee.
The walk will begin at
South Campus at 6:30 and
pick up groups waiting at other
dormitories. The walkers will
stop at Lenoir Hall where the
Student Eights Group Callet
By TOM SNOOK
DTH Staff Writer
A study group comprised of
representatives of the local
chapter of the American
Association of University
Professors (AAUP), the
Student Body and the
Administration, is being
organized to review and
evaluate how well this campus
complies with the principles set
forth in the Joint Statements
on the Rights and Freedoms of
Students.
The study is expected to
.... 1 ' L L 1.
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Dog Sought For Role
The Carolina Union will
-hold auditions Tuesday
evening, Oct. 29, for Toto,
Dorothy's dog in "The Wizard
of. Oz," in Roland . Parker
Lounge Number 2 on the
second floor of Graham
Memorial.
The musical production
based on the 1939 M.G.M.
movie is scheduled for Dec. 13
and 14 in Memorial Hall.
John Haber, director of the
production, describes Toto as a
visitation committee will meet.
The issue of coed visitation
was brought to public
attention with a petition'
initiated by the University and
Student Committee earlier this
month. The petition was signed
by over four thousand
students.
Sam Austell, an SSOC
organizer who planned the
walk, says that the purpose of
the walk is "to show student
1) Freedom of Access to
Higher Education
2) Student Records
3) Student Affairs
4 ) Freedom in the
Classroom
5) Off Campus Freedom of
Students
6) Procedural Standards and
Disciplinary Proceedings.
The joint statement was
drafted several years ago by
representatives of several
educational organizations and
has been endorsed by the
National Student Association,
the AAUP, the National
Association of Student
Personnel Administrators, the
National Association .of
Women Deans and Counselors,
charcoal or black
miniature-sized wire haired
terrier or "scotty." The animal
need not have had special
training other than being
housebroken and friendly. The
dog selected (he or she) will
not be required to attend many
rehearsals.
Questions may be answered
by calling Haber at 968-9021.
Any interested dogs fitting the
above description are urged to
attend the auditions.
1 i
ILr
Rule Change Is Objective
support for open visitation."
The terms of visitation as
requested in the petition would
be decided by each dormitory.
According to Austell, many
women have expressed concern
that the drive for visitation
involves men in women's
rooms, but at the present time
the issue of visitation is limited
to men's dormitories.
The route of the walk will
start at Chase Cafeteria leaving
the. American Council
of
Education, and others.
The group on this campus,
which will evaluate how well
UNC meets these guide lines, is
being organized by a joint
committee composed of Dr.
Richard Cramer, Chairman of
the Student Academic
Freedom Committee of the
local chapter of the AAUP,
Charles Jeffress, appointed by
Student Body President Ken
Day to represent the student
body and Dean James 0.
Cansler, representing the
University Administration.
Each sub-committee to be
set up by the study group is to
be composed of representatives
of the University
Administration, the AAUP,
and the Student Body.
These groups will study
current priorities on campus in
all areas covered in the joint
statement and evaluate them
by the standards set forth in
the statement.
Each subcommittee will
report to a full committee
composed of all the members
of the various sub-committees.
The full committee in turn will
submit its report to the
Chancellor and to the
appropriate Student
Government, administrative
and faculty agencies.
omar Breaks A CC Offense Mark
By OWEN DAVIS
DTH Sports Editor
! WINSTON-SALEM-A
Winston-Salem dance contest
was held in Groves Stadium
Saturday afternoon.
' Carolina quarterback Gayle
Bomar, with a combination
shing-a-ling, boogaloo and
funky, won the individual pass,
but Freddie Summers and the
Wake Forest dancing Demon
Deacons took the team award
in the football game.
What happened was that the
Carolina and Wake Forest
football teams danced,
pranced, ran and passed all
over the gridiron in the greatest
offensive show in Atlantic
Coast conference history.
Wake won the game 48-31.
But Bomar, galloping Gayle
from Clifton Froge, Va., broke
SSOC Plans To Hold
'Non-Election ' And Shit
By BRYAN CUMMING
Dth Staff Writer
A negative Presidential
campaign, a booth on the
newly formed North Carolina
Draft Resistance Union, and a
rumored performance -by the
Guerilla Theatre are among the
events on Time-Out Day, Oct.
planned by the University
and ' Socfety Cornmittee 'and
the action group of Southern
Students Organizing
Committee.
The negative
campaign
laxeciu
at 6:30 past the South Campus
dormitories, Scott College,
Winston, Connor, Alexander,
Joyner, upper and lower quad,
women's quad, Carr dormitory,
Old East and Old West,
reaching Lenoir Hail at
approximately 7:15.
A separate group of
marchers will start at Granville
Residence College and pick up
students waiting at Whitehead
dormitory before going to
Lenoir.
AT the end of the walk, a
rally will be held with short
speeches on visitation and the
students' right to make
decisions for themselves.
Austell terms the walk
"peaceful, orderly and
supportive," since it will
demonstrate student support
of the visitation committee.
Many students feel that
they have the right to make
this decision for themselves,
according to Austell. "Students
are tired of being told what to
do in their social conduct.
"We don't feel that this is
an unreasonable demand,"
Austell says. "Students are
mature enough to make that
decision."
The walk was initiated at a
University and Student
Committee meeting on Oct.
17. The final plans were
discussed at a meeting held last
Thursday, Oct. 24.
In most dormitories, groups
have been organized to meet
the walk when it passes in
front of their dormitory.
The student-faculty
committee on coed visitation
that will meet Monday night is
comprised of six students and
six faculty members. The
student chairman of the
committee is Bill Darrah.
The petition on coed
visitation was first presented
on Oct. 3. in an afternoon
information session which
drew over one thousand
signatures in three hours.
The petition requested that
the ACC total offense record in
his yardage dual with Summers
to salvage something for the
Tar Heels.
Bomar amassed 416 yards
to totally crack the old mark
of 376 held by Virginia's Bob
Davis. The southpaw with the
silver slippers passed 243 yards
and ran 173.
Summers, fast Freddie with
the quick hip and whip arms,
gained 342 yards. He lost the
mano-a-mano to Bomar, but
the game was decided on team
performance and the Deacons
won that.
Summers, defending ACC
total offense leader, now has
1302 yards for the season and
Bomar, second to Summers last
year, has 1132.
Lost in all the frills and
chills of the brisk afternoon,
which featured 21 rap.h.
program to be presented
Tuesday will consist of
mimeographed critiques of the
three Presidential candidates
and their platforms and three
students who will act the parts
of the candidates to stimulate
dialogues. This is in
preparation for the
"non-election" to be held on
Novr ffi in-which--stttdente ifrr-
be given a . chance to register
their discontent.
Students who are helping
with the election group and the
Monday
each dormitory be allowed to
decide if it wanted to allow the
visitation of women in men's
rooms and the hours of such
visitation.
Copies of the petition were
circulated in most of the
dormitories where the four
thousand signatures were
collected. The collected
petitions were presented to
Dean of Student Affairs CO.
Cathey on Oct. 17, after which
the committee on visitation
was established.
An independent petition on
visitation has been conducted
in Morrison Residence College,
suggesting the allowance of
coed visitation for
homecoming weekend. This
system would follow the
pattern in effect at North
Carolina State, where visitation
is obtained by the students on
a weekend basis.
The petition from Morrison
has been forwarded to the
student-faculty committee on
coed visitation.
Nixon Supporters
To Meet Monday
Members of the Student for
Nixon Club will meet in an
informal ' meeting Monday
night, October 28, in 111
Murphy Hall.
The meeting, open to all
students, will be to arrange
plans for the UNC YM-YWCA
election and referendum vote
to be held on Time-Out Day
October 29. The non-partisan
group, a branch of the United
Citizens for Nixon, will
distribute campaign literature
after the meeting in a
do or-to-door effort to
publicize the campus election.
According to Jeff Gayner,
chairman of Students for
Nixon. the door to door
campaign is to '"make people
aware of the campus election
and thus get a better turn-out.
winds, was that Wake won its
first game of the season.
The Deacons as a team
totaled 632 yards although
they previously were last in the
conference scoring offense
pace.
Summers had a stampede of
swift, cutting runners in his
backfield and h i s
thoroughbreds were ready to
race from the starting bell.
Lee Clymer, Jack Dolbin
and Buzz Leavitt, who had
performed poorly in the Deacs'
first five games, ran behind a
crack blocking offensive line
which left UNC's defense
resembling a sieve.
Wake rushers averaged
nearly seven yards a carry.
They ran for 421 yards.
Summers on the other hand
hit on 10 of 12 passes for 211
yards with his line drive tosses.
Guerilla Theatre will meet
Sunday, Oct. 27 in 205 Alumni
Hall, at 7:30 p.m.
The SSOC coordinators of
the project are Scott Bradley
and George Vlasits. Bradley
says that the non-election is to
show that "none of the
candidates are worth a shit."
According to Bradley, the
egativJcampaigR . program on
Tuesday is designed to
stimulate students' concern in
preparation for the
non-election, Nov. 5, which
will provide an opportunity for
students to vote their
discontent.
The non-election is designed
for students who wouldn't vote
if they could. Peter Hatch, an
SSOC spokesman, stated that
the purpose of the non-election
is to "dramatize the absurdity
of the '68 elections."
The North Carolina Draft
Resistance Union, a newly
formed statewide organization
of draft age men who are
publicly announcing their
refusal to serve in the armed
services, will have a booth on
Time-Out day. Begun by UNC
students, the Union has the
support of the New University
Conference and SSOC.
In collaboration with SSOC,
the New University
Conference, a group of about
100 graduate students and
faculty members, will present
election comments parallel to
the negative Presidential
campaign sponsored by SSOC.
Bradley reports a rumor
that their Guerilla Theatre
"will be seen and heard" on
Time-Out day.
The University and Society
Committee will also sponsor an
information table on the draft,
racism, and imperalism which
will be open all day Tuesday.
The more people who vote in
this the greater the likelihood
is that Nixon will win."
The group will set up a table
in Y-Court with Nixon
literature, buttons, and
bumper-stickers during the
polling hours.
At the meeting, students
will be asked to sign up to help
in the last week of the
campaign which will include
mailing out literature on
Nixon's stands on current
issues to area residents, and
setting up a table on Franklin
Street with campaign materials.
At the Monday meeting,
students will receive literature
on Nixon's stands on Vietnam,
the urban problem and
discontinuing the draft.
Two wen for touchdowns, and
both were over 45 yards. The
Wake sprinter-thrower also ran
in one score himself.
While UNC's defense was
befuddled by the rocking
Baptists, Bomar twisted the
Deac defenders into knots.
He gained more yards than
the whole Carolina team has
previously totaled in a single
game all season. Alternating
keeper plays around left and
right end, the UNC
quarterback ran 191 raw yards.
He picked up sharp blocks
from pulling line men and
Saulis Zemaitis, Ken Borries
and Don McCauley in the
backfield. And after they
cleared Bomar to the line of
scrimmage, he worked on Deac
linebackers and defensive backs
himself. Bomar feinted and
dodged for six to eight yards a
carry, leaving Wake linebackers
panting.
Once he ran 59 yards,
UNC's longest run in several
years. He ran one touchdown,
and threw two others to tight
end Tony Blanchard.
Carolina, 2-4 overall and 0-4
in the ACC, exposed its
defensive leaks just after the
opening kickof f.
Wake Forest began the game
from its 20 and went 80 yards
in eight plays for a touchdown.
Summers discovered he could
find open receivers at will. He
threw passes of 18 and 32
yards to set up a 20-yard
Clymer run which culminated
the drive.
Clymer ran through a iright
side trap which left' a movie
screen-size hole, and he was
untouched until he reached the
end zone.
That made it 6-0 as Wake
missed the extra point.
Later in the first period the
Tar Heels, with the strong wind
at their backs, watched a
30-yard Digit Laughridge punt
die at their 42. With the aid of
a 15 yard penalty UNC moved
to field goal territory, which
means Don Hartig's time to
dance.
Hartig did a short scene, but
what resulted was a 36 yard
Tar Heel three-pointer. The
quarter ended 6-3.
Midway in the second
period, UNC punter Chip
Stone lifted a high kick from
his 20 and the ball found an air
pocket going the other way.
His punt blew two yards
behind the line of scrimmage,
and Wake had it first down at
the Tar Heel 18.
Fast Freddie passed to the
three but a penalty on the
same play sent the penitent
Baptists back to their 29.
They settled for a field goal,
Tom Deacon soccer-styling it
from 41 yards out.
Next time fast Freddie
touched the ball, he got rid of
it quickly. Starting from his 47
after a Stone punt, Summers
hit flanker Rick Whit on the
left sideline, White evaded
defensive back Rusty Ross and
scooted down the line chalk
for a touchdown.
Th 53 yard-play made the
score 15-3.
Summers treated the pigskin
like hot grease the following
Wake's series of touchdowns,
and he held it only one play
before throwing for another
touchdown.
This time he was at the
Carolina 47, and again the
Wake offensive line gave him
excellent protection.
Fred Angerman glided
behind the UNC defense and
caught Summers' ariel at the 5,
backing into the end zone.
At the half Wake led 22-3.
Thirty-three points were
scored in the third quarter,
19-14 Deacons.
The Baptists opened the
second half just as they did the
first, going 80 yards in 8 plays
for a score.
Summers ran 33 yards for
the long gainer and did the
final 8 himself when he
sauntered into the right corner
of the end zone.
(Continued on page 4)