Yanks Blast Cards, 8-3
SEE STORY PAGE FOUR
Petite Musicale
Concert pianist Allen Brown,
will present a program of clas
sical music Sunday night at 8 in
tlie Graham Memorial Lounge in
the first Petite Musicale of the
yer. ,
Campus Calendar
Check today's Campos Ca!
endar for the latest listing: of
local movies. Page 3.
Founded Feb. 23, 1893
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1964
Associated Press Wire Service
rfnl .of
msm
mm
AT YACK EVENTS
-
Girls, Fashions
Are On Tap T
"Yack Beauty Queen Diane Moore will relinquish her
title at 8 tonight in Memorial Hall amid the glamour of
coed smiles and glittering evening gowns.
A fashion show will precede the contest, from 3:30
to 5, featuring outfits from five local merchants. Guests
have been invited to a tea in Memorial Hall after the
fashion show.
The suspenseful pace will be lightened by Masters
of Ceremony Gary Eden and Charlie Brown, WKIX disc
jockeys.
Tickets may be bought from
the YACK staff or at the door
for 25 cents.
The queen and her eight
member court will be chosen
on the basis of poise and pre
sentation. Judges will be Dr.
Peter Walker, assistant profes
sor of history; Dr. Frank Ryan,
associate professor of history;
Dr. David Lapkin, professor of
economics; Larry McDevitt,
assistant dean of men; and
Mrs. Edith Ott, admissions .
office.
Contestants; representing
fraternities are Ann - McDaniel,
Sigma Nu; Matilda Gholson,
Zeta Psi; Ada Lea Birnie, Sig
ma Alpha Epsilon; Zackie
Ifoyle, ' Delta Kappa Epsilon;
Madeline Hechenbleichner, Phi
Delta Theta; and Kay Cowan, :
Pi Kappa Phi.
" Also Judy Dudley, Alpha Tau
Omega; Katherine Atkins,' Chi
Phi; Mary Cherry, Delta Up
silon; Ann Woodley, PI Kappa
Alpha; Pam Hooper, Phi Kappa
Sigma; Ann Lynch, .Tau Epsi
lon Phi; Judy Howerton and
Pam Kesler, Beta Theta Pi;
Linda McDonald, St. Anthony
Hall; and Donna Hartman, Pi
Ttolta Phi
Sponsored by sororities are
Barbara Lauder, Phi Mu; Gail
O'Donnell, Alpha Gamma Del
ta; Sally Wiggins, Pi Beta Phi;
Dennie Kay Saunders, Kappa
Delta; Becky Rhodarmer, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma; Suzanne
tMicaud, Chi Omega; Joyce
Watt, Delta Delta Delta; and
Lois Shepherd, Alpha Delta Pi.
Beauties competing from
men's residence halls are Bon
nie Davis, Carr; Ella Stephen
son, Ehringhaus; Terry Keller
man, Graham; Mary Futterer,
Battle-Vance-Pettigrew; Doris
Suetta Smith, Stacy; and Lou
Clarke, Everett.
Also Kathy Cloninger, Ay
cock; Alice Creech, Lewis;
Julie Zachary, Ruffin; Patty
Fields, Craige; Samantha
Townsend, Old East; Patricia
Lee Strupler, Avery; and
Cydne Wright, Winston.
Contestants from women's
residence halls are Gretchen
Morgan, Mclver; Glenda Lee,
Whitehead; Peg McQueen,
West Cobb; Susan Ehringhaus,
Alderman; Judy Haley, East
. Cobb; Karen Gibbon, Spencer;
and Sue Bennett, Nurses.
Others are Roxanne Kalb,
Daily Tar Heel; Anita Wilkin
son, Tarpit; Gwen Grice, In
dependents; and Betty O'Bryan,
Tarbaby.
Students in the fashion show
will model merchandise from
Milton's, Fireside, Little Shop,
Town and Campus, and Rob
bin's. Hair stylists for both
events are Aesthetic Beauty
Salon and Town and Country.
Models are Trudy Williams,
Anita Strickland, Pam Kesler,
Martha Capel, Pat Stebbing,
Linda Wyatt, Tena Blanton,
Mary Davis Riddle, Diane
Crockett, Joy Cain, Ginger
Prince and Nancy Price.
Also Gayle Munroe, Connie
, McCulIoch. Bernie Bazemore.
Freida Collins, Pam Weddle,
Jane Price, Judy Allen, Kathy
Old and Betsy Burton.
MINOR ACCIDENT
A minor collision between
two convertibles at the east
corner of South Columbia St.
and West Cameron Avenue
caused no injuries yesterday.
The accident, which occurred
at 2:50 p.m., caused light dam
age to the front of both
vehicles.
DRAWINGS NEEDED
The Carolina Quarterly needs
drawings, etchings, woodcuts and
calligraphy. Send them to P.O.
Box 1117, Chapel Hill. Art work
will be returned if self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed.
Student Life
Insurance
To Be Sought
A committee to study life
insurance policies for UNC
students has been appointed by
Student Body President Bob
Spearman.
The committee will contact ,
life insurance companies in the ,
state to find out what policies
and benefits are offered by
each, Spearman said. The com-
mittee will recommend the
program best suited to student ,
needs after all propositions ,
have been evaluated.
' The committee is expected .
to give careful attention to a
$10,000. life insurance policy
offered at special rates through
the U. S. National Student As
sociation.
All undergraduate and grad
uate students, full or part-time,
are eligible, if they are under
33 years of age and are attend
ing NSA member schools.
The NSA policy, underwrit
ten by the American Health
and Life Insurance Co., will
charge a premium of $20 to $30
per year, depending on the age
of the insured.
Committee chairman is
Kathy Cauble. Members are
John Randall, Bob Wilson, Pete
Wales, Neal Jackson 'd
George Ingram.
"The area of student life in
surance needs careful explora
tion, and student government
is looking for a sound, low-cost
policy which will not over
burden the student during this
low-income portion of his life,"
Spearman said.
Cases Are Continued
As Confusion Abounds
m
m
The burglary, resisting arrest,
and assault and battery cases
against William Earl White, Earl
Holsclaw, and Tommy White have
been continued in Chapel Hill Re
corder's Court until next Tues
day. !'
The cases originally were to
have been heard Tuesday. Con
fusion as tb when the trials were
to have been held, however, led
to the three not being tried, and
capiases being issued for them
af ter they failed to show up in
court. All three are required to
post additional bonds, and to
show cause next Tuesday why
their first bonds should not be
forfeited.
William White, Holsclaw and
Tommy White are charged as a
result of an attack on an inte
grated student party in Univer
sity Heights two weeks ago. The
party was stoned, shouted at and
shot at by a party of men among
whom allegedly were the defend
ants. William White is charged with
burglary after he allegedly broke
into the residence of the party's
hosts, J. E. Causey, a University
senior student; and Tom Brame.
Causey swore out the burglary
warrant against W. E. White,
and Bingham Township Con
stable Hugh Wilson also swore
out a resisting arrest warrant
against him. Holsclaw and Tom
my White are charged with as
sault and battery after they al
legedly struck Wilson.
The three cases were not on
British Bettors Having A Field Day
LONDON UP) British bettors
are pouring tons of pounds
sterling upon the bookies, try
ing to profit from" next Thurs
day's national election. Bet
tingwise it's the biggest elec
toral rat race in United King
VAW Strike Against GM Continues
DETROIT (AP) A United
Auto Workers strike against Gen
eral Motors continued Thursday
as the automotive giant's chief
competitors Ford and Chrysler
scored production gains on
Rusk Declines To Discuss Nuclear Fleet
WASHINGTON (AP) Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk yester
day brushad off as premature
the prospect that the United
States and West Germany might
have to go it alone if the pro
posed nuclear fleet for NATO is
to become a reality soon.
Man Arrested For
CLEVELAND (AP) A man
carrying a rifle wrapped in grey
paper was arrested Thursday
while walking along a downtown
street a few hours before .Presi
dent Johnson's arrival in Cleve
land. Authorities said the 47 year-old
man 'denied knowing : the Presi-
racts
Are Curbed
A resolution to curb contract
infractions by comboes hired
by residence halls was passed
by the Men's Residence Coun
cil Wednesday night.
The resolution, introduced
by Ehringhaus President Byron
McCoy, would require the
MRC to list all combos not
keeping agreements and urge
residence halls not to hire
them.
Jim Fullwood, MRC presi
dent, announced that a joint
MRC-CWC meeting is - being
planned to improve relations
between women's and men's
halls.
A meeting of MRC and head
residence hall advisors was
also announced.
New members were also in
stalled. One of them, John
Leonard, was elected to fill an
MRC Court vacancy.
Tuesday's court docket, but the
bonds were returnable then. This
situation arose, according to
Clerk of Court B. J. Howard, be
cause when the warrants were
served and the bonds set, the
returnable date of the bonds was
given on the warrants as Sept. 29,
later changed to Oct. 6; but the
Sheriff's Deputy who served the
warrants allegedly told William
(Continued on Page 3)
Attorney Will
SpeakTonight
William Stringfellow, New York
attorney, will speak in Howell
Hall tonight at 8 on "God, Guilt,
and Goldwater."
The talk is sponsored by Wes
ley Foundation, a Methodist stu
dent organization.
The law firm which Stringfel
low helped found devotes much,
of its practice to clients in East
Harlem and other slum areas of
New York. Stringfellow has ser
ved as deputy attorney general in
New York and is counsel for a
number of church organizations
there.
He has written four books and
numerous magazine articles.
When .Swiss theologian Karl
Barm visited America recently,
he spoke of Stringfellow as the
person "who caught my atten
tion more than any other.'
WORLD
NEWS-BRIEFS'
dom history. 1
That little election over in
the States? The British books
are
laying 5-1 odds if you"
choose Sen. Goldwater. Ift
President Johnson's your, man,7
you have to put up 8-1.
1965 models. J.
With the strike nearing the end
of its second week, Ford has aR
ready overtaken GM in the out
put of new cars and Chrysler is
creeping up.
"This is a contingency that has
not yet arisen," Rusk declared
at his news conference in refus
ing to discuss it,
NATO military experts' have
decided the proposed fleet would
be invulnerable to destruction by
the Soviets.
Carrying Rifle
dent was coming to the city and,
said he was taking the gun homel
to suburban Mayfield Heights to1
hang on a wall. They said he .
had a history of mental illness, i
Police took him to central police
station for questioning but he
was not charged.
Lady Bird's Trip
RALEIGH CAP) The warm re-
ception accorded Mrs. Lyndon B.
Johnson on her campaign foray
into North Carolina this week
brought equally warm smiles to
the state's Democratic leaders
Thursday.
Gov. Sanford said the big,
friendly throngs "reflected the
admiration with which North Ca
rolinians regard our first lady."
But, he said, they also "indicated
the strong support of North Ca
rolinians for President Johnson's
administration.
"I think the campaign is going
very well - in North Carolina,"
Sanford added.
'Kissing9 Flick
WINNIPEG, Man. (AP) The
Manitoba Censor Board prohibit
ed the showing of a 36-minute
film of continuous kissing to a
university audience last night. A
board spokesman said the film,
titled "Kiss," was not suitable.
It consists "of 12 three-minute
sequences of couples kissing. One
sequence involved two boys. The
film was created by Andy War
hol, a film-maker who specializes
in photographing everyday oc
currences with a motionless cam
era. Allen Brown
Plavs Here
Sunday Night
Pianist Allen Brown will pre
sent a program of classical mu
sic Sunday night at 8 in Graham
Memorial Lounge.
His performance will mark the
beginning of this year's Petite
Musicale series.
Brown, frequently praised for
his technique, has played at col
leges and universities in the Uni
ted States and in Central ond
South America. His recent Euro
pean debut was met with enthu
siasm by audiences and critics
alike.
A graduate of both North Caro
lina College and the American
Conservatory of Music in Chi
cago, he has studied at the Moz
arteum tin Salzburg, Austria.
Commenting upon the recent ap
pearance of its former student,
the Salzburg newspaper declared
that "with an extraordinary va
ried program of stylistic and
technical demands, Allen Brown
attained excellent results."
His Sunday evening recital will
include "Bailecito" (Little Dance)
by Carlos Grastavino and "Bail
ecito" . (Argentine " Dance) by
Luis Gianneo as well as selec
tions from the works of Beethov
en. Brahms, and Liszt.
His appearance will give stu
dents, the opportunity, to hear an
artist described by the London
Times as "unquestionably a pi
anist of high caliber."
jLIB
J Mailed
i IV
airry
Goldivater
On Morality
Theme Again
LUBBOCK, Tex. (AP) Sen.
Barry Goldwater kept up his
drumfire attack on. Lyndon B.
Johnson yesterday as he swept
through the President's home
state, convinced he's tearing into
his opponent's strength.
A source close to the Repub-.
lican presidential candidate said
Goldwater believes grass roots
reports of an increasing number
of "undecided" voters reflect
growing concern about a lack of
morality in government.
The feeling that Goldwater's
strength is on the upswing is
based on GOP polls showing for
instance the undecided as much
as 18 per cent in Colorado.
"You don't have this many un
committed at this stage of the
campaign, unless there is a rea
son,' tne source said. The Bob
by Baker case and the scandal
that surrounded the collapse of
West Texan Billie Sol Estes' $200
million empire, are two of the
issues troubling voters. ,
In Lubbock, the Senator took
sharp exception to claims he said
Johnson had made in a speech
recently. '
"He took credit for all that is
good in the world. Then, by in
nuendo, and without any honest
regard for the facts as they are,
he opposed all who oppose him
for all that could possibly be
bad."
Goldwater claims that Johnson
had distorted the facts on Gold
water's position on social securi
ty and on farm policy.
"I have supported social se
curity by my voting," Goldwater
said. "I intend to see it strength
ened when I am elected."
Goldwater claimed Johnson
was "dodging the major issues."
He said he wanted the President
to say what will he do to remove
the shadow that such scandals
as Billie Sol Estes and Bobby
Baker cost over the White House;
and explain how will he make
our streets safe from crime and
riots. .
"Instead of answering or even
facing such questions," Goldwat
er said, "He appeals to special
interests, offers political pork
barrels and tries to raise the de
tails of political programs to the
stature of national issues."
Goldwater ran into heckling
Wednesday that drowned him out
in speeches at Asbury Park and
West Orange, N. J. The hecklers
appeared to be, in the main,
teen-agers. . He was hit on the
hand by an egg as he left Tean
eck, N. J., . that night. Rocks
have been thrown at his car and
he has been spat at.
One associate of the Senator
claims a certain man was seen
at San Diego, also a scene of
violent heckling, and twice Wed
nesday at New Jersey rallies.
Goldwater, in his campaign
stretch drive, believes there
should be no change in his tac
tics, nor any" departure from
scheduled affairs, including a
New York rally.
An American folk-singer
who has carried her ethnic
messages around the world will
be on campus Wednesday
night.
Odetta, whose vibrant con
tralto has contributed much to
contemporary folk singing, will
appear in Memorial Hall. She
is one of today's most sought
after American folk singers,
and has been enthusiastically
received by European audi
ences. Odetta combines the plain
tive songs of the deep South
with folk music and blues to
present a varied program. Born
in- Birmingham, Ala., she
moved at the age of six to Los
Angeles, and began trained
singing in junior high school.
A voice teacher suggested
that she be a contralto in the
Tears
Peggy Jones - -
'Hurricane Peggy 9
To Strike UNC Soon
By JOHN WHITTY
The young lady was late for
rehearsal. Quite late. iBut in
typical leading lady fashion, she
dashed through the side door of
the theater, threw off her rain
coat and scrambled on stage
just in . time to pick up the
cue for her first song.
Her name was Peggy Jones,
dubbed Hurricane Peggy by her
fellow cast members. She was
recently cast as Eliza Doolittle,'
the flower girl turned lady, in
the Carolina Playmakers pro
duction of the musical hit, "My
Fair Lady."
The cause, inconveniently
enough, for Miss Jones' tardi
ness was not the rain in Spain,
but the waterspout in Washing
ton. After a weekend trip to the
capitol, sandwiched in between
Playmakers rehearsals, our
heroine was grounded by rain,
and had to seek devious means
to return to Chapel Hill.
One of the memorable lines in
"My Fair Lady," Lerner and
Loewe's musical . adaptation of
Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion,"
is the speech exercise which
Professor Higgins assigns to
Eliza, "In ' Hertford, Hereford,
and Hampshire, hurricanes
hardly ever happen." Obviously,
Hurricane Peggy has never vis
Odetta: A 'Blue' Folksinger
style . of Marian Anderson, but
Odetta found other types of
singing more expressive of her
mood.
Odetta began singing folk
- -jet .-:V j.
4: ' r '-
ODETTA -
songs while ..on a tour of
"Finian's Rainbow," which
took her to San Francisco. It
was the first time she had ever
been away from home.
In Midwest i
nfo
rr A -
t. -y i
'1
'My Fair Lady'
ited Hertford, Hereford, or
Hampshire, or these shires
would have felt the effect:
A medical secretary at Duke
Hospital, Miss Jones brings to
the role of Eliza Doolittle, the
Cockney flower girl, not only a
great deal of musical and thea
trical experience, but an un
common amount of energy. In
portraying the transformation of
Eliza from dirt to Duchess, she
will need both of these ingredi
ents. Playgoers in the Triangle area
will recall her performance
with the Playmakers last season
of the title role in "Litttle Mary
Sunshine," and as Magnolia in
Durham's Triangle Theatre pro
duction of "Showboat" last sum
mer. A native of Rocky Mount,
she majored in voice at Salem
College in Winston-Salem, and
appeared in several college pro
ductions, including "Twelfth
Night."
The eye of Hurricane Peggy,
described by director Thomas
Patterson as 'a benign storm,"
is expected to pass over Chapel
Hill Oct. 23, 24, and 25, when
the Playmakers present "My
Fair Lady," the opening pro
duction of their 1964-65 season,
in Memorial Hall.
Continued on Pa2e 3)
"I felt so melancholy," she
said, "that when I met a couple
of Bay Area folk singers, I
was probably a lot more re
ceptive to their songs than I
might otherwise" have been."
From these singers she heard
for the first time the powerful
work song, "Take This Ham
mer,' which is today, one of
her favorite numbers. It was
at this time that she taught
herself to play the guitar. To
day she uses it to accompany
her singing.
Her first public appearance
as a folk singer came while
she was still in San Francisco.
She was in the audience of the
"hungry i" and was introduced
from the . stage as a touring
singer. Her folk-singing career
had .begun.
She sang as a folk artist in
ten
President
Terms Rival
A 'Phantom'
WITH JOHNSON IN THE MID
WEST (AP) President Johnson
staged a "get-out-the-vote" drive
across Indiana and Ohio yester
day that pictured Republican riv
al Barry Goldwater as a sort of
phantom candidate who wants to
go backward instead of forward.
"I'm not sure," Johnson said,
"whether there is a real Repub
lican candidate to vote for this
time."
The President pounded the
campaign circuit in states Gold
water considers vital, from Chi
cago to Gary, East Chicago and
Indianapolis in Indiana and on
to Cleveland before heading for
Louisville to spend the night.
Summing things up a bit differ
ently in the text of his Cleveland
speech, Johnson said the cam
paign issues are emerging dear
ly now.
"The issue of our foreign af
fairs, of war and peace, is one
issue and it has to be bluntly
stated of responsibility versus
irresponsibility."
- At the IndiangpoJis airport no
more than 400 to 500 people were
on hand to welcome Johnson and
the turnout was skimpy and scat
tered along the eight-mile motor
cade into the city.
Johnson was putting personal
touches into the campaigns. He
was touching hands with every
body in reach, and shying away
from outright hand clasps, his
right hand had a bandage on it
from previous contacts.
After making his Indianapolis
speech, Johnson made a circuit
of the downtown circle, hand
shaking, kissing babies and at
one point having a whispered con
versation with a comely brunette
who promptly burst into tears of
hysterical joy.
The President, continuing his
tour of the crowd, came to a con
struction site where a laborer
in cover-alls and a hard hat in
vited him behind a high ply
board fence surrounding the pro
ject. He tried a new campaign stunt
in Indianapolis something that
might be called the hat trick.
Arriving at Monument Circle in
downtown Indianapolis to make
a speech, Johnson waded into the
crowd and then climbed to the
top of a temporary wooden plat
form erected for the convenience
of. news photographers.
Looking down on the thousands
massed before him, Johnson dof
fed his white Texas-style hat and
in a burst of exhuberance, sca!ed
it over the heads below toward
someone holding a placard that
read "Love Tbat Lyndon."
Johnson's welcomcrs liked the
stunt so well that he did a re
peat several iimes, scaling out
paper campaign hats, which were
shredded into small pieces by the
grasping hands below.
night clubs on the West Coast.
After a year her fame spread
to the East Coast, and she was
invited to play at New York's
"Blue Angel." Odetta has since
made tours of many college
campuses, has performed ex
tensively, and has appeared in
two films. Her latest part was
as Nancy, the murderess in
"Sanctuary."'
She has recorded albums for
Tradition, Vanguard and River
side, and is presently appearing
under the RCA label. Numer
ous television appearances
have spread her popularity.
Tickets for the Wednesday
night performance are on sale
in the GM lounge from 10 a.m.
to 11 p.ra. daily. Student tick
ets are 50 cents, and date tick
ets are $1. Some 800 tickets
remained yesterday.