I J pjJfl C, J Hl 7 in i UN M Vcl. E2, No. 53 i 1 Vw, 7 Carolina's student visitors from the University of Toronto found Chapel Hill weather much to their liking this weekend as temperatures fell to near-Canadian levels. They Avery by Laura Yandell Staff Writer A new student locator service providing student phone numbers and addresses will begin operation Monday night. Butch Butcher, coordinator of tht: service, said residents of Avery dorm will operate the Features editor named Tlie Daily Tar Heel welcomes Kevin McCarthy as the new Features llditor beginning with today's issue. McCarthy is a 20-year old Journalism major from Lancaster, Pa. He has worked for the D 77 since October, 1972 as feature writer, Taster's Choice columnist and assistant features editor. McCarthy has had experience in YJEC official by Bill Welch Staff Writer Campus Young Republican Club president Richard Robertson intended to make a statement Sunday supporting the impeachment of President Nixpn, but at t he last minute club members apparently persuaded him against it. In a call to the DTH office Sunday afternoon, Robertson " asked if the newspaper would be interested in a personal statement in favor of the impeachment of 'the President, and asked whether such a story could appear in Monday's paper. Assured that the DTH was interested, he said he would finish drafting the stat ement Carolina falls t liar by Elliott Warnock Sports Editor North Carolina's defense, only a whispered rumor of its former self, collapsed under the onslaught of quarterback Ken Pengitore and company as the Clemson Tigers ran over, around and through the Tar Heels for a 37-29 Atlantic Coast Conference victory Saturday. Despite the efforts of Nick Vidnovic, who started at quarterback for the first time since his injury against Maryland, Clemson was abletooutscoretheTar Heels in the first half, 30-21, and hold off Carol i na's offense in the second half of play to hand the Heels Uheir fourth straight ACC loss before 37,500 chilled fans in Kenan Stadium. At first, it appeared the Clemson offense wouldn't ever be able to get out of its own territory as Pengitore fumbled a pitchout on the first play of t he game; linebacker Terry Cantrell recovered the ball for the Tar Heels on the Clemson 15 yard line. Directing Carolina in for the touchdown was simplicity itself for Vidnovic as he called three straight running plays, fullback Dickie Oliver getting around left end for 13 yards; tailback James Betterso n hitting up the middle for one yard and Sammy Johnson bursting over the right side of the line for the score after 1:03 had elapsed. Starting on their own 12 yard line follo wing a clipping penalty on the kickoff, the Tigers drove 88 yards in 15 plays, showing fine ball control offense behind Pengitore's passing and the running of Jay Washington and Smiley Sanders. ' Clemson scored its first touchdown of the game 1- 7 v - .V v.. I .J' . sjf V4L4 jltoll I IMS? jf resumes 'locator service on a volunteer basis. He said he and other Avery residents had talked with officials of the Department of Housing and the Department of Students Affairs about the possibility of establishing a new locator service after the Carolina Union discontinued their service in October. Housing will install the phone in the Avery journalism dating back to his seventh grade when he was editor of his neighborhood newspaper, The Golden Nedlog. He also was a reporter for the Lancaster Sunday News this past summer. "We will place increasing emphasis on writing and developing news features," McCarthy said. "We will also continue our current level of coverage of the cultural scene in the Triangle area." c lii sum and bring it in within the hour. Half an hour later, Robertson called and said he would come in with a statement in five minutes. Then Republican club member John Molen called the DTH and left a message for Robertson, instructing Robertson not to make any statement until he first discussed it with Molen. Robertson never showed up with the. statement, and called an hour later to say he had changed his mind and would make no statement. He said he had decided against making any statement after discussing the matter with various club members. In a follow-up call by a DTH reporter. to Clemson, 37 - TT TT defense .iriieeii when Sanders circled out of the backfield and snagged a 23-yard pass from Pengitore, scampering into the end zone untouched by defenders hands. Bob Burgess kicked the extra point for Clemson to tie the game at 7-7 with 7:49 left in the first period. Carolina took the ensuing kickoff from its own 24 to within one inch of the Clemson goal line Stuck with a fourth down and two yards still to go to the goal line, Carolina's Mike Voight hit up the middle of the Clemson defense and tried to reach the ball across into the end zone. The officials ruled that the ball was short of the goal line when Voight was down, turning the ball over to Clemson with its back to the wafl. Pengitore led the Tigers out of their own territory and into the North Carolina end zone, driving over 99 yards in 10 plays and giving Clemson a 14-7 lead with 14:36 left in the first half. Carolina tied the game back up at 14-14, driving 83 yards in 11 plays that included a 16-yard run by Betterson, and passes from Vidnovic to end Charles Waddell and wingback Ted Levercnz for 13 and 23 yards respectively. The Tar Heel's second touchdown came on an eight yard pass from Vidnovic to Oliver with 9:55 yet to play in the second period. It took Clemson only five plays to score their next touchdown, Pengitore passing 66 yards to Sanders who was caught just short of the goal line by linebacker Jimmy DeRatt. Reserve running back Toni Matthews scored two plays later hitting up the middle of the line for three yards and giving the Tigers a 20-14 lead. 5 Mrarj Of Editorial Freedom Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Monday, November 12, 1975 celebrated the cheery weather by watching the Clemson UNC football game while everyone else froze. (Staff photo by Bill Wrenn) 9 house office and Avery will provide the manpower. Butcher said. The service will operate between 7 p.m. and II p.m., Monday through Thursday. Butcher said Union records had shown the heaviest concentration of phone calls during these hours. He said class schedules and extracurricular activities hamper daytime operation of the service. The service will be provided on an interim basis until a permanent program can be set up by Housing, Butcher said. Avery president, Mike O'Neal, said he was glad Avery residents volunteered for a service to benefit the entire student body. O'Neal emphasized that, although the Avery service will not duplicate the previous service, it still should receive around 65 per cent. use. The new student locator number is 933 7625. mied Robertson had a little different story. He said he never really had any intention of issuing a statement supporting Nixon's impeachment and said his first call was just to find out "if there was room in the paper" for a statement. Robertson added that he had "no intention of submitting a statement in the foreseeable future." In a subsequent telephone call, Molen denied pressuring Robertson not to make a statement. He said he had not discussed the matter of such a personal statement with Robertson, but added that he had told him he should not speak for the Young Republican Club. 29 ffinni n by Laura Yandell Staff Writer Undergraduates residing in University housing will get a chance today to indicate preferences in housing alternatives in a survey set by the Residence Hall Association (RHA). Janet Stephens said Sunday. Stephens, RHA president, said the survey questionnaire is designed to find out what options students would like University Housing to provide in three areas: ECOS Bike-A-Thon draws 230 cycles by Nancy Pate Staff Writer There were 10-speeds, three-speeds, one speeds and one that was built for two. The bicycles came in all sizes at the second annual ECOS Bike-A-Thon and so did the people. Some 230 cyclists, ranging in age from 8 to 60, biked the 22-mile route Sunday and raised approximately $3,000. "It's a success and we're happy about it," Watson Morris, ECOS, Inc. director, said as he checked in riders at the Morchead Planetarium parking lot. ECOS Inc., a non-profit group organized to inform the public about the environmental crisis, sponsored the event. Sixty per cent of the funds raised go to ECOS, while the remaining 40 per cent is divided equally between the N.C. Heart Association and the Eno River Project Group. Before participating in the Bike-A-Thon, cyclists find sponsors willing to contribute a certain amount of money per mile completed. "Usually it's a nickel or a dime a mile," Morris said, "but we also have about 25 merchant sponsors who will contribute $1 a mile." Many riders go around the circle route between Durham and Chapel Hill more than once. By 4 p.m. Sunday two members of the Duke track team held the record for the most miles completed. Both had been the route four times for a collective total of 176 miles. Morris said the majority of the participants were high school and college students from Durham and Chapel Hill but the rest could not be classified. . "It's just anybody who wants to." Morris Weather TODAY: Mostly sunny with near zero per cent chance of precipitation. The high is expected In the upper 50's to low 60's. The low tonight is expected in the upper 30's to low 40's. Outlook: clear and continued cold. collapses North Carolina's offense sputtered on its next possession; Johnson fumbled on the first" play of the drive, turning the ball over to Clemson on the Tar Heels' 40 yard line. Eight plays later, Matthews scored his second and Clemson's fourth touchdown of the game, rumbling across the left side of the line with 3:25 left in the half to boost the Clemson lead to 27-14. North Carolina struck back with a 7 1-yard drive that ate up all but 45 seconds of the first half, Vidnovic hitting split end Earle Bethea for five yards and a touchdown that closed the gap to 27-21. After Billy Wingo returned the following kickoff 50 yards to midfield, Pengitore made maximum use of the 35 seconds left in the half, leading the Tigers down to the North Carolina 26 yard line. Burgess then kicked a 43-yard field goal to give Clemson a 30-21 lead over the Tar Heels as the two teams headed for the locker room. North Carolina defense woke up.in the second half, holding the Tigers scoreleis throughout the third period, but as the quarter ended, Clemson was pushing towards the Tar Heels' end zone, Sanders going in for the score with 1:49 elapsed in the fourth quarter. Faced with a 37-21 deficit with 10: 15 left in the game, the Tar Heels put on their last scoring drive of the game, after Peter Talty knocked Pengitore loose from the ball and Tom Embrcy recovered for Carolina on the Clemson 14 yard line. Vidnovic found Leverenz open for an eight yard touchdown, then Johnson hit the left side for a two point conversion and ending the scoring for the game at 37-29. smurvey o coeducational living, visitation and security. "Students should be allowed to live in lifestyles they desire instead of under bhmket policies," Stephens said. "It seems more reasonable to have housi ng policies students want to enforce." she continued. Five alternatives are listed in each of the survey's categories. Students are asked to rank their housing alternative preferences on a one to five scale, with one being the highest and five lowest. said. He pointed out 60-year-old Rcve;re Mogcl of Mogel's Bicycle Center in Burlington as an example. Mogel had already finished the route and as conferring with several cyclists stopped for a brief rest. "It's really a lot of fun," Frank Schust cr. a Durham High junior who had been around twice, said. "It's cold at first, but once you get started it's o.k." Tracey Mullen, a UNC sophomore, said the route was a pretty one. "But 1 think, it's all uphill between here and Durham," she said. For cyclists who had difficulty with the hills or had any other problems. "Sag Wagons" patrolled the route all day. Morris said safety precautions, for the Bike-A-Thon included over a hundred signs marking the way, patrolling cars, six check points and a First Aid vehicle staffed by a nurse. Morris said there had only been one accident as far as he knew. One cyclist suffered a collarbone injury and was treated at N.C. Memorial Hospital. But the rest of the participants, although ..cold and tired, expressed satisfaction with the Bike-A-Thon. Reasons for riding ranged from "It's fun" to "It's a good cause" to the comment of a weary youngster. "1 just had to prove I could do it." Rally set for tonight A rally calling for the impeachment of President Nixon will be held at 9 p.m. tonight in the Great Hall. Guest speakers will be Congressman Paul McCIoskey, R-Calif.. Al Lowcnstein, Democratic committee member, and William Van Allstyne Perkins Professor of Constitutional law at Duke. The rally, being coordinated by Bill Snider, first-year UNC medical student, is sponsored by the UNC Student Government and the Carolina Union. The rally will be preceeded at 8:30 p.m. by a press conference with McCIoskey. Lowcnstein and Van Allstyne. "77' 1.1 vs. 1 - Carolina wingback Jimmy Jerome fends off Cltmson defender Lynn Carson after catching a pass from Nick Vidnovic. The Tar Heels scored on this second-quarter drive, but the Tigers came back to score a 37-23 victory over the belooguered Tar Heels. (Staff photo b y Bill Vrenn) Founded Febru 'ary 23, 1893 BUS The following options appear ur.de r tht co-cdu cational liing category: a fesidence unit comprised of rnemr. of one sex only. a coeducational residence hall vu'h filterna.ting floors of all-male and a ll-fcmal c -occupants. a coeducational residence hall with alternati ng male and female wings. a coeducational residence hall with alternating male and female suites. a coct lucational residence ha'il v it h a hall arrangem ent of alternating malo and female rooms. Visitation options include: open Iiours: residents permitted to hae guests of t he opposite sex in their rooms at any hour of the day. open weekend hours: residents permitted l'o have guests in their rooms except front I a.m. to 1 1 a.m. Monday through Friday and 2 a.m. to II a.m. Saturday an d Sunday. limited weekend hours: residents permitted to have guests only on weekends, except from 'A a.m. to 1 1 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. no guest hours. In the security category, the following options are lis ted: external security:. Residence hall entrances lock ed at present closing hours. Students mus t call campus police from house phone a nd present ID for entry alter hours. Student s may leave the building at any lime. internal security: Residence hall entrances locke d at present closing hours. Students must .knock on door and present ID to desk att endant on duty after entry hours. Students may leave at any time. key securit;: Residence hall entrances locked at closin g hours. Each resident has own key. open securit y: Residence hall entrances remain unlocked at all times. The RHA su rvey reveals a desire to protect the, privacy and, freedom of the resident, Stephen; s said. RHA is trying to get a 100 percent ret urn on the survey, she said. RAs will distribute the questionnaires to the dorm residents . They should be returned to the RAs as soo n as possible. McCIoskey is presently sponsoring a bill to impeach Nixon. In 1972 he ran against Nixon in the Repub lican primaries. Lowcnstein. a 19 49 UNC graduate, is a former Democratic congressman from New York. In 1968 he wa s a leader of thc"Dump Johnson" movement and is presently a member of the Democratic National Committee. Van Allstyne. a graduate of Stanford University, is on the National Board of Directors of the American Civil Liberties Union. C ' - : ' S " 1 ' " J 1 ' i . t I -. ! i - ; ' I - I -fn . ; if j v 1 i 1 f i I w I , -Jtt - - -

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