W ake it oiresiL Up 11 r; v rT'r-:- r. mt ... MfTmmmfj; -r--, -y i- ,.. y,..,,,.,. ,.,...,-r,i -i I t -r. o -.c o '. rf -. , r. ( y y " -r ' 1 ---SI3 It was Band Day at Kenan Stadium Saturday and high school bands from all over the state came to Chapel Hill to join in the festivities. The field was full of bands at , .; ; - -.;. Ike Oglesby strolls through the VMI line of the afternoon... Harrisom peak 10 Harrison Symmes, former U.S. ambassador to Jordan, will speak here Monday night on the Mideast crisis m Carroll Hall at 8 p.m. Charities: Apply Now For Money Chapel Hill and UNC charity organizations who would like to receive money from the 1971 Campus Chest drive must submit applications by Nov. 17. The annual drive is co-sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity and Gamma Sigma Sigma service sorority. The student charity drive gives money to campus and community organizations that express the need for it. Groups should submit an application in writing. The application should state what the money is needed for, from what other sources the group receives money and the group's basic operations and purposes. Applications should be sent to Campus Chest, co Alpha Phi Omega, Smith Building. Insight enroute to one of his three touchdowns bymmes Moeday The title of his address will be "Palestinianism: Idea and Reality." Symmes has been associated with the Mid-East throughout his Foreign Service career. He has just returned from the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan where he served as U.S. Ambassador. , An alumnus of UNC, he received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1942. He is a native of Wilmington. He received his Master of Arts Degree from George Washington University in 1948. Ambassador Symmes' experience with the Middle East has been both varied and extensive. Between 1946 and I960 he has held posts in Alexandria, Damascus, Kuwait, Benhaiza and Tripoli. He has also served in Intelligence Research and the Division of Research and Analysis for the Near East. In 1965 he was appointed Director of the Office of Near Eastern Affairs. He became intimately acquainted with the explosive Arab-Israeli conflict in 1966 when he became Director of Israeli and Arab-Israel Affairs. Symmes is currently serving as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State-designate for Congressional Relations. Symmes' visit is being sponsored by the Carolina Forum and the Department of History. Freshmen on Carolina ...page three halftime, but there was enough space left Kolovson) air by Chris Cobbs Sports Editor Chris Lee rose from the obscurity of his position as second string quarterback on the B-team to engineer a scoreless -s7 Za And the cannon exoiodes as he continue to romp over the Keydets for by Cliff Kolovson) Hee 6-1 I III IWIVf JVHf evoloitiomiairies TP litl by Sue English Staff Writer An organizational meeting to interest students and Chapel Hill residents in attending the Revolutionary People's Constitutional Convention will be held at 9 p.m. Monday in 202 Carolina Union. The Convention will be held in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 27, 28 and 29. Sponsored by the Radical Coalition, which is composed of the New University Conference, Students for a Democratic Society and the Young Socialists Alliance, the meeting was called by John to spell out UNC. (Staff photo by Cliff 78 Years Of Chapel Hill, North Carolina, fourth quarter and ease a king-size headache for Carolina Coach Bill Dooley Saturday. . ' ' " - It appeared that there was no way the coach could prevent the Tar Heels from breaking the school scoring record of 65 points as they rart up 62 in the first three heads tor the bench, and the Tar Heels their sixth win of the season. (Staff photos Wheeler, a former graduate student of the University. The purpose of the convention is to allow "oppressed people" from all over the country to gather and to write a constitution to replace the present one. "The constitution will be concerned with the rights of all people, and will not be used by the power structure to keep people dowri as the constitution now does," Wheeler said. The Black Panthers made a call for a constitutional convention last June in Washington. The first convention was held in Philadelphia in September. More than 6,000 people were present. Although the writing of the Id Wh " ! 1 -;';- Dl'RHAM 1 1 Hi Q.utxcjh i jm Gjrr?n scored two UHiehJowm cich SjiusJav a WjU Ytcl .i.i-vd j 2S-1 4 Atbniic Ctut ConJcicnec etor oci !.kc. The vj tXjke's first r; ACC ph i? Rusei! J-!h"J immJ Sen e;-J Inn ifw tn the llf nenoJ jnj vi?eJ jn S-wr in the ih.irJ persiKi. Gjrrett nnk j paeiuHis ftoui RveU jhJ ran m iV.u'i the three m tth cen seeunJ?. left in the tut lull" Kpe the IVuetni j 4Uta!ltmv IcaJ. With 15 Jell in the cjnie. Garret! bulled his a m f"fn t!ie tnne t up un 0-asJ dreona pljy in which Duke defene tjr Dick BiJJ'e wis inaned avJl left the cjhu. Duke qujtieibjkk leo Hart, who l'ou;?d Wjke Korexi" pjN deferv u:d m the first half, svtued two touchdowns, the first on j tio-.nd p'ance with 2 21 lelt in the third peiiod to end a o4-ard Jme. Hart led his team Si yards in m pljvs. inclndins: two pjvs interference calU against Wake Forest, for Duke's final score wuh 4:44 fell in ihc canto. He wotcd on a two vard run. t!ieu ran for the two-point conversion. Russell mixed his running and passing plays well and ga:r,Med xucccssfuU tour times on fourth down, keeping, the bal hn.iseif tw see to capture .'e fii5 u.'.ms. Han brought Im team to the Wake Forest 15 in the fu! period, but the baH vjn knocked front hi hand and recovered by Wake Forest's John Piu!hp. Duke end Wes Chesson set a new ACC career feccption iccorj. He can Jit live passes for a total of 14l in Ins career, breaking the old in.uk nci b Fred Zeigier ol South Carolina, who graduated last ear. Tlte win gave Wake Forest a tie with Duke for leadership in the race for the ACC championship. Both held identical 4-1 records after the came. mm- Edito'.al Freedom Sunday, November 8, 1970 .9 periods against hapless Virginia Military Institute. VMI was certainly incapable of containing the onslaught, since its defense has held an opponent below 40 only once in nine games this year. Dooley played his first team only half of the first quarter, turned it over to the second stringers for about 20 minutes, then cleared the bench. Only when he inserted Lee, however, did the Tar Heels stall. The Elizabeth City sophomore, who has served as backup punter in addition to his B-team duties, completed three of five passes but succeeded in keeping UNC out of the visitors' end zone, leaving Final score 62-13. Although the Tar Heels managed as best they could to keep it respectable, the statistics indicated that the game was not as close as the score. UNC made 31 first downs and 543 yards in total offense to 13 and 179 for VMI. The Tar Heels set three conference and two school records. Don McCauley established an Atlantic Coast Conference single season rushing mark as he increased his total to 1,257 for the year. The senior tailback touched the ball only 14. times but still' got 127 yards. Two 'more would have given him the ACC career record, 2,695 yards, which is still held by Virginia's Frank Quayle. Placekicker Ken Craven converted eight points after touchdown to give him 27 for the year. Both Figures are league records. McCauley's two touchdowns gave him 13 for the season, good for 78 points-and two more school records. VMI may also have set some kind of mark for futility. At least four opponents have set records of some description against the Keydets, who have now lost 26 ot their last 28 games. The Tar Heels ground out 174 yards and scored 21 points in the First quarter. Both McCauley's TD's, which came on short runs, and the first of three by his backup man, Ike Oglesby, helped put the game out of reach early. Oglesby's 50-yard dash, in which he VMI as Meet Monday constitution began at the meeting in September, the major part of it will be written in Washington during the latter November meetings. Wheeler stressed the point that although all national Black Panther leaders" will be involved in the-writing of the constitution, all oppressed groups will be represented. "It's not just a Black Panther thing." Wheeler said. "It's for the oppression of all groups, especially blacks, women, homosexuals, street people. w.rking class and all third-world peoples." When asked Sboui the structure of the Ka.U j-J Ken n vjivp i tor U it t - , I - Founded February 23, 1892 made a couple of quick cuts that would have embarassed much more competent defenders, preceded his four yard run and a 32-yard pass from Mike Mansfield to Bill, Sigler for Tar Heel second quarter touchdowns. The Greensboro soph carried the ball 16 times for 106 yards as the Tar Heels gained 365 yards on the ground. Quarterback Mansfield, who took over for starter Paul Miller midway through the first period, hit 1 1 of 1 5 passes before yielding to Lee late in the third stanza. Fullback Tim Kirkpatrick and tight end Ken Taylor joined Oglesby in the scoring parade in the third quarter. Taylor tied a school record with two TD pass receptions. VMI finally got on the board with a 94-yard drive that consumed some six minutes of the third period. End Jim Conlan caught a . 10-yard pitch from quarterback Gary Shope for the score. Shope also accounted for the other tally with a nine yard toss to Buster Venable late in the fourth quarter. It seemed certain that the Tar I! -els would surpass the school scoring record, which was recorded against something called Virginia Medical in 1912 and duplicated 16 years later against Wake Forest. When Carolina drove to the VMI 33 early in the final period, however, Dooley opted to punt on fourth down instead of sending in Craven to shoot for the filed goal and the record-tying 65 points. UNC also had the ball at the Keydet 25 as time expired. The coach, while adhering to collegiate tradition in attempting to keep scoring down by letting everyone play, also deprived McCauley of a chance to erase Quayle's career rushing record. "Don is not the kind of young man who would have wanted to run for records today," Dooley said. Some 28,500 Band Day fans would have enjoyed seeing him get just one chance, however, with the mark two yards away. It was an odd sidelight to a ludicrous game. constitutional convention, Wheeler said there will be separate meetings of particular groups to put together their parts, and then the whole thing will be put together. "I think it's important for people to bein to articulate the conditions in this society, and to make clear what oppressed people feel are necessary for the liberation of all people." Wheeler said. "The constitution will be used as an organizational tool to educate people to their conditions, and to motivate them to participate in more militant actions tor their liberation," he said. if (7

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view