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.Heels, jOnisviMe Jliircil pllace bio. iror by Mark Whicker Sports Editor LOS ANGELES - Last week in Morgantown, West Virginia (and you can't get there from here), Dean Smith sympathized with Frank McGuire's task of preparing for a consolation game. "They should either count them as exhibitions," Smith said, "or either try out rule changes. At least they should make them meaningful." Now his Tar Heels face one of those consolation games, today at 3 p.m. EST against Louisville in the Sports Arena. It precedes the UCLA-Florida State clash for the national championship. Although the thought "'runner-up Vol. 80, No. 135 vb-racl COI1F by Ann Berman Staff Writer The GPSF Senate met Thursday night to discuss the graduate court and judicial system, a constitutional amendment, and the budget for 1972-73. Sam Masarachia, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, delivered the committee's report proposing a graduate honor court based on the undergraduate structure. Masarachia said there would be somt differences, however. The GPSF Judiciary Committee will fill the functions which the attorney general performs for undergraduates; defendants will have the right to request public or private hearings; and the court will be composed entirely of graduate students. Copies describing the proposed system will be distributed to representatives of every department on campus, said Masarachia. He also said the proposed changes apply only to departments that are not currently under professional school courts. Jim Becker, speaker of the GPSF Senate, said the Senate was interested in finding out what the departments think about the proposed system. The plan will be considered for approval in late April. The Senate also approved a resolution calling for a constitutional referendum on Tuesday, April 4. The constitutional amendment proposes to delete words in the preamble of the GPSF constitution which refer to the GPSF as an independent student government. TODAY: Considerable cloudiness and cool; high in the 40's, low in the 30's: probability of precipitation 20 percent today, 30 percent tonight. SUNDAY: Chance of light rain early Sunday morning; high in the 40's. Weather fP 3 ''V I r"I - r ., i. , n "! n 1 1 1 ;! Ill iTi J sr"'lix.' . ' ;: ii k! M kT '. - . . : J j ' i -.. 1 0 , , I ll n-mtll flnin Tun . il Ofc. .. frJXv - 1 "I always enjoy coming uptown to play around the campus, because there's so much to see and do. For instance, it's always fun to slide down the Union railings. 1 can make it all bowls" is r3ther disgusting to the Heel; after their 79-75 loss to FSU in the semifinals Thursday night, they're still competitors. Presumably once the game gets under way, at least one team will feel the urge to win. Smith said Thursday he is treating this game with utmost importance after "consolation losses to Houston in 1967 and Drake in 1 96. But to beat Louisville, coached by former UCLA assistant Denny Cram, they must do something about Jim Price. Price was the only thing right about Louisville in their 96-77 loss to UCLA. The 6-3 All-American guard gunned in 30 points on 1 1 for 23 shots, and got u Belli FOBO Student Legislature recently released funds in the 1971-72 and 1972-73 budgets contingent upon the passage of such a resolution, said Becker. Becker also said the Student Legislature granted the GPSF SI 8.000 in the 1972-73 budget, a reduction from S26.000 from the previous year. All graduate organizations who want funding for 1972-73 must notify Ralph Steuer, chairman of the GPSF Finance Committee. They should leave their requests at the Union Information Desk. Any graduate organization that fails to notify the committee that they need finances will not be funded. The finance committee will prepare a budget which will be submitted to the GPSF Senate meeting before the end of April, according to Steuer. Student Legislature has added a qualification to budget figures prohibiting any GPSF money to be spent for social purposes except for the entertainment of lecturers. Since the GPSF Senate was unable to finish all business at the meeting Thursday night, a short meeting will be held next Thursday night. Told MusMe of plans anford Duke University President Terry Sanford said Wednesday he will look toward primaries in New York, New Jersey or New Mexico and acknowledged that he told Sen. Edmund Muskie of his plans to run for president. Sanford, former N.C. governor, opened his state headquarters in Durham Wednesday before a group of supporters and newsmen. The deadline for eligibility to enter all other presidential primaries by petition or otherwise has closed. Sanford said he would look toward the remaining three states to test his vote-getting ability in a presidential preference primary outside the South. the way down without i C S! I I fit m ! ! " 1 1 ii ri til HI : D p r corr.phrr.er.ts from Florida State's Hugh Durham.. "He can sti.k Henry birby. -.hat's for sure."" the Seminole coa.h f.aid after Price got Bib by into foul trouble early. "But he was backing in. doing a io: o: one-on-one stuff." John Woolen countered in B:tby" defense. "We knew the; like that." With Price are muse it forward Re: Thomas who almost crushed re Reggie Copeiand's head with the before thinking about it. forward Mike Lahon. guard Her.rv Bacon and .enter Al Vikheck. Crum thought his team played about as well as they could against the Bruins. implying by not saying it was just about a ft Chapel Hill, North Carolina. wuiiW fi im I a - x y d i tT5' ' :'s .;; -v o X iVSi. ,Mjc&L. x, r S A ' I ....... ; i ,s 11 " ' s XI -V A group of Lumbee Indians and friends visited UNC yesterday in an effort to call attention to their drive to preserve a building on the Pembroke State campus. The group to enter He confirmed he met secretly with Muskie in Florida Feb. 25. a week and a half before announcing his candidacy, but denied he specifically asked the Maine senator not to enter the N.C. primary. "Yes, 1 went to Florida and talked with him about my intentions and advised him about what I wanted to do," said Sanford, who was N.C. governor from 1960-1964. He added Muskie "was good enough to call me before he filed here." Muskie was the first of five Democrats to enter the Tar Heel primary when aides paid his filing fee March 3. Recently there have been reports falling you know." (Staff Photo by Johnny Lindahl) l:s: ciuse before : started. Carolina's loss, on the other hand, was- a genuine disappointment, which cc-ld be interpreted to eve Louisville an advantage. However, the Heels m.iiht feel thev have something to prove to LA people. hich would be a shrewd observation on tneir par:. . read like USC's Tom Rtker did las: weekend in Moreantown. Held to 10 points in the semifinals by Bill Chamberlain, he came back with 3e against Villa r.ova in a consolation victory. None of the Heels plaed at anywhere near peak efficiency Thursday r.lghl. with n c p c A c v j. t . .. v. iCv.v.l McAdoo. v.ho scored 24 roints v. ::h 15 Saturday, March 25, 1972 inw!!ir!iJ'rTWI fin - U. n n. .in .n.m, mr,.ri. ......n , mi iiiii-.ii n in .mi-i nnnf --i otner primaries Muskie will not campaign in the state because his presence would only further split the moderate-to-liberal vote and give Alabama Governor George Wallace a better showing. However, Muskie backers in Raleigh and Washington have denied the reports. Besides Sanford, Muskie and Wallace, other Democrats in the Tar Heel primary are New York Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm and Washington Senator Henry Jackson. Sanford announced his candidacy Mar. 8 and said he hopes to be able to win enough delegate commitments from North Carolina and about 10 other states The second week of the 1972 Carolina Symposium will begin Sunday with a panel of southern journalists and a tribute to Frank Porter Graham at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. The panel, first of a series of panel discussions scheduled for "The Mind of the South." will discuss "Old Times There." Chancellor N. Ferebee Taylor will present the tribute to Graham, former Consolidated University president and U.N. mediator who died in Chapel Hill recently. Taylor will be assisted by former New York Congressman Allard Lowenstein, president of the Americans for Democratic Action. Panelists will be Eugene Patterson, former editor of the Atlanta Constitution; Harry Ashrnore, Pulitzer-Prize winning editor of the Arkansas Gazette: William Emerson last editor of the Saturday Evening Post: Claude Sitton, editor of The Raleigh News and Observer; John Popham. former New York Times Southern correspondent, and Harold H. Martin columnist for the Atlanta Constitution. The panelists w ill discuss some "not to be forgotten" stories about the South. Patterson is professor of the practice of political science at Duke University's Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Graliam rebud bef Peak met: 4 turnovers 1 54 as far as the chantable statisticians in the Sports Arena said, or maybe they lost count). Dennis Wuycik shot " for lb - although he led Carolina back from 23 down to five dou n in an eight-minute spurt - and George Karl with five for 14 Steve P:evi had eight assists but five turnovers In fact, the turnover column w-as as w el! balanced as the sconnc column usually is. All ihe Tar Heel starters had at least four, entranced by Flonda State's fast tempo and filling the f.rst row ar. J the e .or.vi - - - - c, . third with stray passe' nn V 4 took time out to display a part of their heritage and entertain students in the Pit. (Staff Photo by Johnny Lindahl) to be in a bargaining position by national convention law. 'T don't think a candidate ought to try to go into every primary," he said, "but the candidate needs to demonstrate his vote-getting capability in every section of the country." He said there is a "strong movement by people in one of these states to get petitions going." Sanford said he plans to open an office next week in Washington that would serve as his national headquarters. The office will be manned by a North Carolinian. Meanwhile, the Durham office will also serve as national headquarters. tribute Today's Symposium 8 a.m. Walk Against Hunger Institute of Government 8 p.m. Mark Twain Tonight Memorial Hall 8, 9:30 11 p.m. - Ghost Stories -220 Peabody Hall Affairs. He won the 1966 Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing as editor of the Constitution and served as vice chairman of the U.S. Civil Rights Commission tor four ears. A native of Charlotte, William Emerson is a vice president and chairman of the board of The Learning Child. Inc., which he' helped found in 1970. During the '50's, he directed coverage in the field of the civil rights struggle, personally covering developments in the South ranging from the rise of Martin Luther King to the New Orlean's riot. ChamberUm played only 22 m;nute? 15 in the second half, because he i seer. minutrs late for a pre-game meal, getting lost while touring Be-veriv H.lls . . r' . Going home as the flop of the NCAA finals is an unpleasant but vaguely familur feeling for Carolina. However, no one can take the Tar Heels ear jiv from them They are now 25 and five, with the Sugar Bowl, the Spanish Internationa! Tournament. The Big Four Tournament, the ACC and the Fastern Regional-; to their credit. J k i.iC Uu'Lit V-4 ...Cit.l. V C - v i. v career on a winning note, atier that record, should he incentive er.ouih. Founded February 23, 1893 .Majority reqruests CD' 1G fee by Mike Fogler Staff Writer More than 51 percent of the total students paying activities fees have now signed the NC-PIRG petition calling for an additional SI. 50 per student to the student fees to be used in the interest of the environment and consumer protection, according to coordinator Wendy Wailitt. Wallitt said the purpose of the petition drive was primarily to show more than half of the fee-paying student body supports the efforts of PIRG. The PIRG petition is the first one in UNC history to collect more thjn 50 percent of the students' signatures, according to Wallitt. PIRG workers now plan to bring the petition and the referendum which passed Feb. 29 to the Board of Trustees for final approval. If the Board of Trustees gives the okay, a professional staff of lawyers, natural scientists and social scientists will be hired. If a person with a particular expertise is needed, he may be hired temporarily. In addition, students will be able to volunteer their help. It is possible PIRG will hire students as researchers. According to Wallitt, the major problems in the Chapel Hill area include consumer protection, landlord tenant problems, excess litter and the unnecessary use of styrofoam materials. The PIRG group here is trying to get other N.C. colleges and universities to circulate similar petitions. UNC plans to elect its local board and' organize a faculty advisory committee, which will provide counsel and expertise to the general organization. St. Andrews College and Meredith College have also collected signatures from 50 percent of their student bodies. Wallitt said. Duke has passed 3 petition, and Wake Forest is in the process of petitioning. Sitton has been editor of The News and Observer since 196S. Before that, he was the New York Times' chief Southern correspondent for six and a half years. He has served as the U.S. Information Officer and Press Attache at the American Embassy in Ghana. Atlanta Constitution columnist Martin is the biographer of Ralph McGill, editor of the Constitution until 1960. At his death Patterson succeeded in the editorship position. Martin formerly was a contributing editor of the Saturday Evening Post. Now president of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, California, Ashrnore was editor of the Arkansas Gazette in the 1950's and 60's. A native of South Carolina, he received the Pulitzer Prize while editor of the Gazette. Popham of Virginia was the Times' Southern correspondent during the 1940's and '50's and is now executive editor of the Chattanoona Times in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The two-week biennial Symposium has chosen the "Mind of the South" theme to explore major economic, social, political and cultural forces in Southern life. Free tickets for Symposium activities can be acquired at the Union Information Desk. set
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 25, 1972, edition 1
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