Sec T moarv ose ! -at.? -:: i .. I IL. -. - :.;.c " - 'A j P -o - Fails eels by A I Thomas -1 v,. V7i I ihuir M W ORII S. U. ; i, ,,;!,. ; ..v,f, : . , running jinc vwtli pjs.-i,- o-;tl..ed. V.rth f a .:.! 2 priihahlv he jummi-! I ho che teams m the With. Since passing is allowed. however, jm! ver :::'jJi J pari ol the game, the I if II..!- aie fi. IWO-gaUIC loMli'J streak. sjJJLJ v.;I: lulallC klCW (U- I.;. LL," VveaklC--s il! the J c I c n t c secondary, and called m second. Mi:::: quarterback M.ko Walker i li!! the air with pa w.-s. f L J d. jjid I ui.jnc won 24-1 7. Walker connected on nine '' IS parses lor 192 ard- here in cavernous Sugar Bowl Siadiuin. cauMn'j a superb Carolina rushing exhibition !o ho m vain. Iho loss was ihe second in a low lor llie lar I lech, who now si and a I 4-2. "'ulauc came out thrown;.; the ball and never quit. On the second play ol the game, tailback David Abercrotnbie look a pitch out Irom Walker and threw a long bomb lo Sieve Marios on iho I'NC 2'' who then went in lor (he score with I 2 02 remaining in the first quarter. The Tar Heels had to play catch-up from there, and for a while it looked as if they might succeed. Carolina began its first scoring drive with 12 minutes left in the half when Bill Braflord recovered a Tulane Tumble on Ihe UNC 19. Seven plays later, Ail-American candidate Don McCauley crashed in liom the one yard line to knot the score. p..r. i Lrci ki.u ( f v ; : - -I v J - 2'u;-' ? J-'u: Jo g'-" I ( ?... LaJ !-". 'lu'a:e was to !-: t up :K r-oj?J. v.,i!i W'i: .J'H-' oor tn- .. the two v. :! -:o ..' J - :"" " -': u the hah lo.'Iovung a 4-' j.-J dm. ; rbvv A Green Wave Iw'A .ji earU in the th-.rd quarter p-i 1'datie ahead b seven "but iho;. the Tar Hee.'s heja'i to Carolina wontniualiv cracked the :n; J JIo i the Tufarie Other Scores ? ... . .. " . , t . I . ; i-i w. ,0- :: 2 the iO ji I ')c- A:vrv ro::'b:e u .::! ta.kle the rc! ri-v fo the ejr "t o? , t , Ik ; o i lh u s.,! --iU i C Tu!ane gncJ j;i M::preve 2 j-J n ihe a;r euipjred wnfi Csoh-ia' 5. On t ;se g;t-.:s;J. !uneer. :!w Tar HecK held a vorriir.iKi edee wiiii 2i ot.- v.fth the Green W'on' 2". e -:-e ' v .. ,-. - .';e j.'f ee week .;.. -V e.."'.'e ... : s "' " .' s ei 1 e ' i o t p..Nve - Jaw Ih r.: W.Ae i . . - U - v . s -,:.. '.S 8 Duke 22, N.C. State 6 Virginia 21, Army 20 Wake Forest 36, Clemson 20 Tennessee 24. Alabama 0 Syracuse 24. Penn State 7 Southern Miss. 30, Miss. 14 Ohio State 28. Minnesota 8 Michigan 34, Mich. State 20 Notre Dame 24. Missouri 7 Southern III. 14, ECU 12 How About That P Terps 21, Cocks 15 COLLLGI-' PARK. MD. LPIi - A surprising Maryland defense turned two Mocked punts into fourth quarter touchdowns Saturday and the Terrapins went on to stun I4th-ranked South Carolina. 21-15. for its first ictory in the 1470 campaign after five straight losses. With the score tied at 7-7. John Dyer Wkt 3 mm -fV' Volume 78, Number 29 y.ars uj zattortai rreeaom .ill, North Carolina, Sunday, October 18, 1970 WTO Founded February 23, 1893 Lewis, Graham Alter Hours 'Dorms Back D) ILi Policy by Lana Stanies Staff Writer Lewis and Graham dormitories have passed resolutions supporting Student L e g i s i a i u r e s p Dlfry of-Self-Determination. Joel Edwards, president of Lewis, said a resolution was passed at an official dormitory meeting and that a petition is now being circulated to reinforce it. The resolution reads as follows: "Whereas the students of UNC are mature and responsible individuals; and "Whereas the students of UNC are best qualified to decide for themselves their own open house hours and policy, particular to each dorm, be it resolved that Lewis dorm goes on record as supporting the student's right for self-determination, for each housing unit; and "But it further resolved that the undersigned residents of Lewis do hereby . accept the Guidlines for Open House as approved by the University, with the exception that the hours of visitation shall be Monday through Thruday, noon to 1 a.m., and Friday noon to 1 a.m. . Monday morning. ( A . " , f - "This shall take effect at such time s the Lewis dorm president feels such action wise." A similiar resolution was passed by Graham dormitory. Meetings to discuss the resolution are scheduled this coming week by other members of the Morehead Residence College. The MRC includes Lewis, Graham, Aycock, Stacy, Everett and Cobb dormitories. Action by Lewis and Graham was in response to a resolution passed last Wednesday by the Morehead Residence College Senate. The resolution, introduced by Edwards and Fletcher Mann, called for support of the SL policy from all members of the residence college and the campus. A meeting is scheduled with Dean of Men Fred Schroeder Tuesday to discuss visitation. Edwards, Mann and Chip Shore, president of Graham, will then present their dorms' policies. "The main reason I have for backing the resolution is that I hope it will become a campus wide thing in support of Student Legislature." said Tom Pace, legislator from Lewis. "Possibly if the residence college comes out in full support other dorms on campus will follow," he said. ": " ' "Visitation shouldn't even be an issue what with all the other problems the University has," Pace said. Project Hinton, fourth floor Hinton James dormitory and Carr dormitory are the other housing units on campus which have rejected the administration's policy and adopted self-determination. The visitation dispute began this fall when the University administration released an Open House policy which limited the hours of visitation. Student Legislature passed a policy last spring which allowed each individual residence house to determine its own hours of visitation. A resident of fourth floor James was convicted last week of violating the administration policy and sentenced to probation lasting until Jan. 31, 1971 . i 4 Alsop To Speak At UNC Monday Stewart Alsop, noted columnist for "Newsweek," will speak Monday in Carroll Hall at 8 p.m. Alsop is the third speaker in the "Students and Politics: The Election ot 1970" series sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the College of Arts and Sciences. A panel of North Carolina political leaders will be in Hill Hall, Wednesday at 8 p.m. The speakers are leading members of the Democratic and Republican parties. They are: Charles Jonas, Jr., chairman of the N.C. "Nixon for President" campaign in 1968; James Holsho user, chairman of the state Republican Committee: John Boger, state Democratic Executive Committee; and Charles Winsberry, president of the N.C. Young Democrats. Alsop's most recent book, "The Center," was a best seller in 1968. Alsop joined Newsweek in 1968 after serving as National Affairs Editor and Washington editor with the now-defunct Saturday Evening Post. Alsop and his brother, Joseph, now a columnist with the New York Times, wrote the nationally syndicated column "Matter of Fact," which won three Overseas Writers Awards. His column appears weekly on the hack page of Newsweek. blocked a Billy Parker punt .u! :ecoe;ed in the end one to put the Terrapi" ahead and moment later led Sterner blocked another Parker punt that set up a J 2-yard touchdown run r ! Ihonus. South Carolina bounced back on a 10-yard TD pass from Tomm Suees to Doug Hamriek with 3:3 3 lei t to play. The Gamecocks then recovered an onMde kwk but failed to score when Suedes was intercepted by Dyer on Mar land's 34-yard line with 2:55 left. The Terps then ran out the clock to defeat the Gamecocks at B rd Stadium for the ninth consecutive time dating back to ll46. South Carolina scored first early in the second period when Suggs tossed a 37-yard pass to Jim Mitchell, and Billy Dupre kicked the extra point. But Maryland bounced back later in the same period by taking advantage of a bad snap. Parker had dropped back to kick when the Gamecocks ran out ot downs on their own 41. The snap from Danny Dyches sailed over his head however, and Maryland's Bill Reilly recovered on the South Carolina 30. In less than a minute, Maryland u;.n5c:Kuk lv.b I uker wrapped I he Icrp s !jrv! v,-,re w ! h a 2c- ard NmhI to w .'K v k I o f-i M ! 'cr Souih t .-.w' :' Mar!.md 0 " O s 1 o "oi4 ;i SC M.tchcU 7 p.iss trotu Sus ( Dupre kick. Md Milier 2c pass Jrom I'ucker i Soporow sk i kick ) Md Der Blocked punt in end one I Soporow sk i kic k ) Md Thomas 12 run (Soporow ski kick) SC - Hamriek 10 pass Jrom Suggs (Suggs to Hamriek pass) Attendance 15.4(H) Statistics of the South Carolina -Marviand Football game: S. Car. Mars, f irst Downs 1 1 6 15 Rushing Yardage 3c 20c PassimYardage 299 75 Return Yardage 1 20 NO Passes 21-44-2 5-14-1 Punts I" humbles Lost 4 1 Yards Penalized 75 j-'. : r3 I " ' : "' .'- - 'h I XV . ' V A A 'fl (r if " " " - - - y " , . , I i ....... ... . . y " ... 4 s J - ; -. - 7 ' s. y H'f Ma , ' After an exciting time at the M.Y.F. Carnival, fatigued father and wide-eyed son head home to TV football and mother's cooking. (Staff photo by Johnny Lmdahl) Bello Optimistic On Visitatioe I - Remembering. Remember your little Kid days Sticky cherry suckers Running through flowers Football cuts and bruises Having fun Playing war (Staff Photo by Johnny Lindahl) by Bob Chapman Staff Writer Student Body President Ton; Bello expressed optimism that the visitation issue discussed by the advisory Consultative Committee to the University president Wednesday will be resolved in their meeting in Charlotte on Oct. 26. The committee met Wednesday to discuss the visitation controversy which has been Ihe center of attention at the University this fall. The University administration has passed an Open House policy which limits the hours of visitation while Student Legislature has passed a self-determination policy which would allow individual residence houses to decide themselves what kind of visitation they want. Bello termed the committee's discussion "si-anificant" since it marks the first time a great deal of student input lias come before the committee. Alter hearing student opinions for twund-a-half hours Wednesday, the committee met in closed session tor two hours to discuss the issi.e ot self-determination in the formulation of a visitation policy. am glad we did not resolve the issue hi two hours." Bello said. In what he termed as a "knock-down, drag-out session." the committee decided to keep the issue within the committee for recommendations rather than turn the matter over to Ihe whole Board ! Trustees or the General Assembly. . "Ihe senlimenl is thai I lies- bodies uouhl not resolve il to Ihe beiielM oi anv body. Bello sjid. A major problem in the discussion is an isnoranee on the part of b.t!i I he- trustees and the students of each other's feelings about visitation, sjid Bello. He added, however, that both groups are willing to listen lo another viewpoint. The reason for the postponement until the 261 h. Bello explained, was the committee's reluctance to make a decision hastilv. Committee Chairman William A. Dees said the committee :ouU not do justice to student sentiment lit a I wi-hour session. "The whole day (Oct. 26) is set aside to debate the issue and reach a compromise." Bello said.