Saturday. March' 27, 1965
TmDAnY TAR HEEL
acre 3
4 Arrested In
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The sponsors for Fall Germans, and their es
corts are: Top row (left to right) Becky Bryan
with Nat Taylor Phi Delta Theta, president of
Germans Club; Bonnie Raines with' Sonny
Thompson, Zeta Psi, , vice president; Judy
Merritt with Jake Fuller, ATO, -secretary;
Sandra Johnston with Bill Schmidt JJKE,
treasurer. Second, row Elsie Barnes with
Charles Wilkens, Phi Gamma Delta; Judy Cow
man with Jeff Parker; Sigma Nu; Judy Shu
Coiintin
g
Election Board's
By JIM SMITH
DTH Feature Writer
Ever wonder how 69,000 votes
get counted?
It takes an enormous amount
of work and must be done in a
few short hours.
This is the task that faces
the UNXU Elections "Board each
spring.
The chairman and his crew
of 15 workers go to it about a
month before "The Day." They
wait for Student Legislature to
approve elections laws and to
set the day for election.
After the nominating jconven
tions a candidates meeting is
called. The board informs the
hopefuls about the .numerous
regulations. Copies of the elec
tion laws are given out. . Most
of - the Elections Board's $225
budget is spent here and on
printing the ballots,
After candidates are cleared
through South Building, -thd
board can take a slight rest un-
Humphrey At Duke
Vice President ' Hubert JL
Humphrey will give a public ad
dress at Duke April 24. .
Joint sponsors are the Duke
Student Union, Law School and
Men's Student Government As
sociation. The next day, Humphrey will
give the main address at the
centennial observance of nation
al reunification at Bennett Place
near Durham, -where the Civil
War ended when Confederate
Gen. Joseph E. , Johnston surren
dered to Gen. William T. Sher
man.
Hey,
VSR:
; m ggy gsssM ""f ::.:i. if-
i? '
Get acquainted with the trRoute of the Pace
roakers" the area served by Piedmont Air
lines. Then, next time you're traveling along:
this route a trip home, to .a friend s for a
holiday or to an athletic event, call Piedmont
Airlines or your travel agent. Discover how
easy and economical it is to fly. YouTl find
Piedmont E-27 prop-jete or 404 Pacemakers
mighty comfortable, and Piedmont's friendly
'hospitality mighty enjoyable.
u J
mate .with -Charles Baucom, Phi Delta Theta;
Tommie Turner with Lee Lodey, .Kappa
Sigma; Nickie Yokeley with George- Venters,
,Zeta Psi. Third row Bobbie Bailey with Olin
McKenzie III, Kappa Alpha; Anne Woodhull
with John Egnert, . DKE; Susan' McLemore
with Sandy ' Welton, .SAE; Anne B. , Radley
with Bob Cates, Sigma Chi; Sandra Grizzard
with Manton Gfier, ATO.
Of 69,000 Votes:
Big
til the night before election.
A hectic four-day period be
gins. Polling places in fraterni
ty districts are set up and bal
lot boxes are distributed to res
idence hall presidents.
Fun Begins
The 'fun" really begins about
6 on election night. Spectators
and candidates begin to pour in
to the top floor of Graham Me
morial and the Rendezvous
Room to wait for returns.
Many of them are drafted into
the service of the board.
Ballots are sorted and the
work begins. Usually they start
with student body officers and
go to senior class and editor
of the Daily Tar Heel.
The most frantic time comes
with the counting of legislative
ballots. One hopeful legislator
iights with another to get his
own district counted first.
"Couldn't you count mine
us
All Campus Calendar items
must be submitted in person at
the DTH offices in GM by 2 p.m.
the day before the desired publi
cation date (by 10 a.m. Saturday
,f or Sunday's DTH). Lost and
Found items will be printed on
on Wednesdays and Satursdays
only.
Y iMurdock Committee 1:30
pm., Morehead Planetarium
parking 'lot. Note change in
date; all interested invited.
Signatures for telegram to Pre
sident Johnson will be gather-
IVIe O ver I
(EM
Oamp
--MINMC
limh - II Hi milium , X
Task
again?" some dejected candi
date pleads.
"Look, dammit, five times is
enough for anybody now, get
lost!"
Other Ballots
After NSA, Honor Council,
president of the Carolina Ath
letic Association, and many oth
er ballots are tabulated, the
counters and the Elections
Board can . go home usually
around 4 a.m.
But the board's job still isn't
over. There's still some re
counting and final tabulations
to do. Almost every year will
bring a run - off election, to
say nothing of investigating
charges of dirty politics.
With luck with a lot of
luck, the board's work is over
about 10 days after the elec-.
tion, and they "reluctantly"
turn over their duties to the
newly appointed board.
Calendar
ed on Franklin Street.
Peter Nero tickets now on sale
at GM Information Desk, 50
cents with ID: $1 for date or
sppuse.
Seniors must register with the
dean of their school by April
ltd graduate.
Presidents of all campus organ
izations if organization's
write - up in the 1964 - 65
Carolina Handbook needs to
be changed or if your group
is new, come by the GM In
formation Desk and leave no
tice, according to instructions
there; on the blue 3x5 cards
provided at the left end of the
desk. Deadline is 6 p.m. Wed
nesday. .
MOVIES
Carolina He rides Tall
Varsity - Fanny Hill
Free Flick Sons and .Lovers
LOST AND FOUND
Lost Blue cardigan sweater,
reward. Send card to David
M. Allen, J211A Hillsboro St
Lost .fair Diack loafers in
Joyner area Friday night
Jim Martin, 220 Joyner, 968-
9179.
Found Brown patterned mon
ey clip, claim at DTH office.
SUNDAY
LSA 5:30 p.m., Student Cen
ter, supper followed by a rea
ding-. of "No Exit" presented
by Dale Neiberg.
Episcopal Student Congregation
.5:30 p.m., supper followed
by a program, public invited
Westminister Fellowship 5:30
p.m., discussion groups on
' 'Apostle's Creed," "Art
Loving," "Three Secular
. Thinkers," and "Cainpus Mo
rality," will follow supper.
Hillel Supper Forum 6 p.m
Hillel House. Nan Hassert c
WUS will show slides of work
in India.
Transportation is available to
Binkley Memorial B a p t i s
Church at Y-Court or call 942-
4964.
Five Initiated Into
Five new members, an asso
ciate member and four regular
members were initiated here
last night at special ceremon
ies conducted by the Sigma
Theta Tau, Alpha Alpha chap
ter, honorary nursing society
at the School of Nursing.
The society selects its mem
bers on the basis of their scho
lastic achievement, profession
al promise and desirable per
sonal characteristics. To be
eligible for associate member
ship, a candidate must have
shown marked achievement in
the . field of nursing at the lo
cal, state or national level.
Sigma Theta Tau is the only
national honorary, society of
nursing in the U. S. Chapters
Ttvo Professors Atcarded Fulbrights
Two professors here have
been award grants under the
Fulbright - Hayes Act to teach
and conduct research in other
countries next year.
They are Ralph Lee Wood
ward Jr., assistant professor in
the Department of History, and
John Douglas Eyre, chairman
and professor in the Depart
ment of Geography.
Woodward will lecture in Uni
ted States history at the Catho
lic University and the National
University in Valparaiso Chile,
and continue his research on
the Spanish American merchant
French Philosopher
Gabriel Marcel, the French
philosopher, playwright and lit
erary critic, will give a public
lecture in English Friday in
Gerrard.
He will speak on "The Myth
of the Death of God in Contem
porary Thought." Marcel's vis
it is sponsored jointly by the
Department of Philosophy and
the Department of Religion.
Marcel is best known as a
Christian existentialist, a posi
tion which he expounded in such
well known works as "Being
and Having," "Creative Fideli
ty," and in his Gifford lectures
1 Beethoven Spectacular9 Is Sunday
WUNC Radio will present a
"Beethoven Spectacular" begin
ning at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Featuring the best , of Ludwig
von Beethoven's works, WUNC
will broadcast the composer's
9 symphonies, 5 piano concertos,
the Violin Concerto, the String
Quartet No. 7, the Grosse Fugue,
selected overtures, and incident
al music from Edgmont.
Psychology Professor To Join Staff
Dr. Martin Syden, head of the
Department of Psychology at
Nassau College, an affiliate of
the State University of New
York in Garden City,,N. Y., will
join the staff of the School of
Education here for the f i r s t
term of the 1965 Summer ses
sion, June 10-July 16.
He will teach two courses,
one in the psycholoev of men
tal retardation and the other a
Valkyrie Sing Set
The hooded .ceremony of tap-
Dine into Golden Fleece will
Drecede the eav.harmonv of the
M. - W 9f
annual ValKyrie Smg program
in Memorial Hall at 7 p.m.
Monday.
-There -will be no .charge for
admission, but the xloors will
close promptly .at 7 p.m. for
the Fleece tapping.
Then will come . the music. In
the women's sing tdivision ,ADPi
will present "On .Sentimental
Journey." Delta Delta Delta will
render "Oh, Let the . Sun Shine
In," followed by ''Never Never
Land" done by Kappa Kappa
Gamma.
Chi Omega will perform a
medley entitled "Carolina," aft--er
-which Phi Mu will "Say It
With Music." Mclver residence
hall women will sing about "The
Double Mask of a Woman," .and
a West Cobb group will close
out this portion of the program
with "On the Campus."
Each of the singing groups
will have five minutes.
The next segment of the
program will feature .men from
Delta Epsilon in a ikit called
"Bye Bye Birdie."
-ni .rsi iratermty will open
the men's sing division with ,&
performance by "The Bibiean's
iNine. raige s Mavericks are
Sigma Theta Tau
are established only in collegi
ate schools of nursing fully ac
credited by the National League
for Nursing at all program lev
els. Dr. Berton H. Kaplan, a so
ciologist in mental health at the
UNC School of Public Health,
was the speaker for initiation
ceremonies. His topic was
"Leadership."
The four new members of the
society are Judith Ann Bartlett
of Raleigh, Karen Gunderson of
Lewisville, Marie Ann Phillips
of Charlotte and Jeanne Wiltsie
of Ashville, N. Y.
Selected as an associate mem
ber was Miss Carrie M. Spur
geon of Raleigh, secretary of
the N. C. Board of Nurse Reg
istration and Education.
guilds. He and his family will
be in South American from
June 1965 - June 1966. .
Eyre will conduct his research
at Osaka University in Japan.
ihe second largest ;city in Ja
pan, Osaka has a population of
seven- million. Eyre will study
selected characteristics of
growth of this metropolitan ar
ea.
He will work with city plan
ners, professors and metropoli
tan experts in the area. He and
his family will be in Japan
irom September 19S5 - Septem
ber 1966.
Marcel To Speak
entitled "The Mystery of Be
ing." His William James lec
tures delivered at Harvard in
1961 were published under the
title of "The Existential Back
ground of Human Dignity."
Gabriel Marcel received the
literary Grand Prix of the Aca
demic Francaise in 1949, and
was elected a member of the
Institut de France in 1952. In
1956, he was the recipient of
the Goethe, prize : bestowed in
Hamburg, Germany. He won
the French National Literary
Award in 1958.
Commentary will be by Thur
.man ' Smith, music -director.
Smith, encouraged by WUNC's
four spectaculars last year, has
asked for listener criticism and
suggestions- during the broad
cast of this year's first spec
tacular. Call 933-2085.
Interruptions in the music and
commentary will be for brief
news. items only.
course ' emphasizing mod
.ern techniques in teaching the
mentally handicapped child.
Syden holds the bachelor and
master's degrees from City Col
lege of New York and the doc
tor's, degeree from Columbia
University. Prior to entering col
lege and university work, Syden
spent 10 years in the classroom
working with the educable and
trainable retarced children and
adolescents of New York.
Monday Night
.bringing Jn "Mac Grundy's Old
Time Band" to sins before "The
Thirstv Thirteen" from St. An
thony's Hall. . "Hit Songs o
1964" will be the theme of Beta
Theta Pi, and Phi Mu Alpha will
do a medlev called VSea Chan
teys."
Pi Beta Phi will open the
women's skit portion of the pro
gram with "Pi Phi Girls." Wo
men from the Nurses Dorm wil
reveal "The Nurses Lament
If Our Doctor Don't Kill You,
Our Sineine Will." and t h e
KD's will perform "The H i 1
Story."
: r -
OB JSALE: AUSTIN -HEALY
1963 red convertible, Mark :n
3000. Car in excellent condition.
If interested call: 968-1361 after j
FOR KAT.pt- iU HONDA 90
Motorcycle Excellent condition.
ess.than 1000 miles. jsestiOi-j
ter takes. Call 963-2062 after)
FOR SAT.T5T- fi4 CORVAIR
Monza Tlavtnnn hlne. 110 ho. 2i
door automatic, -radio: Contact
H. Wally Baird, 505 Craige '
LOWNDESBORO, Ala. ;t
FBI agents arrested four Ku
Klux Klansmen from the Bir
mingham area Friday on-charges
of conspiracy in the highway,
ambush slaying of a vivacious
civil rights worker near Big
Swamp.
President Johnson announced
the arrests in Washington and
immediately declared he was
stepping up his personal war
against the Klan.
The four Klan members were
xharged under a federal statute
with violatinj the civil rights
of Mrs. Viola Gregg Liuzzo, 39-year-old
mother of five. She was
shot in the head as she drove
along a dark, lonely stretch of
U. S. 80 between Montgomery
and Selma, Ala., Thursday
-night.
The President said he was
calling for special legislation .to
root out the Klan, which lie
termed "a society of hooded
bigots."
The announcement of the ar
rests came 16V. hours after
Mrs. Liuzzo, who "grew up in
the South, - slumped over- dead
while returning ,to Montgomery
. after ferrying, a group of. civil
rights marchers to Selmav She
was en route to pick up another
-group. - - - .-
Arrested were" Eugene Thom
as, 43, . and J William : Oryille
Eaton. 41, both of Bessemer;
Gary. Thomas' Rowe, 31, of Bir-
- mingham, and -Collie Leroy Wil
kins Jr., 21, of Fairfield, Ala.
Acting pn direct orders from
the President, scores of FBI
agents plunged into the invest!
gation that led to the arrests.
The agents were in the Selma
Montgomery area because of
racial troubles stemming from
a Negro voter drive.
Only a few hours before the
slaying, Mrs. Liuzzo had joined
with thousands of others for a
march to the capitol to drama
tize alleged ' voter discrimina-
UNC Expands
1 raining
For NROTC
(AP) Three universities .in
the United States were desig
nated Friday as summer train
ing grounds for a novel plan in
expanding the Navy ROTC pro
grams in colleges and univer
sities throughout the nation.
The three cooperating univer
sities are UCLA for the West,
Purdue for the Midwest, and
at UNC for the Atlantic Sea
board states.
The announcement was made
by. Capt. Rex Warner, com
mander of the Naval ROTC at
UNC.
Men sophomores in colleges
and universities from New Eng
land to Florida may be eligible
as rising juniors to enter the
six - .week initial training at
Chapel Hill this summer.
Upon completion of two - year
ROTC training, and their regu
lar university work, plus the
summer training, they maytbe
come ensigns in the Navy or
second lieutenants in the Ma
rines. The two - year plan - an
nounced by Warner is a new
design over and above the four
year program now in effect at
.UNC and at other colleges andj
universities having KOTC units
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To obtain an application, complete the information required
on this form and return to North Carolina Volunteers.
Name
Last
j u quarters completed
' semesters completed
College Mailing Address
City and State .
Mail to:
NORTH CAROLINA VOLUNTEERS
P. O. BOX 687
DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA
tion rnd police brutality in Ala-
In a national television ap
pearance, the President said
Mrs. Liuzzo was murdered by
enemies of justice who had used
"the rope and the gun and tar
and feathers" to terrorize
people.
'I had fought them all my
life because their loyalty -is not
to the United States of America,
but to a society of hooded
bigots," he said.
' Gov. George C. Wallace of
Alabama declined to comment
on the arrests. He had posted
A
itions
The Carolina Playmakers will
hold auditions -at 4 and 7:30
p.m. Monday in III Murphey for
its production of Tennessee Wil
liams prize - winning play, "A
Streetcar Named Desire."
Six men and six women are
called for in the cast. The three
principal roles are Blanche Du
bois, Stanley Kowalski and Stel
ft
D1
leeneaaers
(Continued from Page 1)
Wilson assured the body, "I turn to Dick as a cheerleader, not
as a fraternity brother. " ' ,
"This is the rankest, appeal to emotion I have ever seen,"
Neely charged. "Rep. Wilson is engaged in a blatant attempt to
railroad his bill through. '
"My amendment will provide the best way of representing
the cheerleaders on the selection committee," he said.
"Can you imagine all members of the previous year's squad
being rejected by the selection committee," Neely said in answer
to Goldman's remarks.
Neely said seniors were the best type of cheerleader represen
tation on the committee because they were leaving school, had no
need to try out for the squad again, and because seniors were
always on the cheerleading squad every year.
His motion was passed by voice vote, as was the bill itself.
The cheerleader bill was the only measure considered in
Thursday's session. Next week the new Legislature will be in
stalled, Mid. consideration of the 1965-66 budget will continue.
Speaker Don Carson announced the Student Government
inauguration will be held Tuesday in Howell Hall.
0
If she doesrrt give it
Mm
Cologne, 6 oz $4.50
After Shave, 6 or, $3.50
Deodorant Stick, $1.75
Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 oz.,
Spray Cologne, $3. SO
Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00
Cologne, -4 oz $3.00 V?
After Shave, 4 oz, $2.50
.
First
Middle
$1,000 reward, the maximum al
lowed by Alabama law. The
governor had said earlier he
regretted the slaying.
In Tuscaloosa, Ala., the Im
perial Wizard of the United
Klans said he knew nothing of
the slaying but "it would ap
pear to me that according to
Johnson everyone in Alabama
is Ku Klux Klansmen."
The Kian leader, Robert M.
Shelton, Jr., also said: "I don't
have any knowledge of any par
ticipation in any acts of vio
lence by any members of our
organization."
Monday
la Kowalski.
Scripts are available in
reserve reading room of
university library and at
the
the
the
Department of Dramatic Art of
fice, 307 Bynum.
"Streetcar" production dates
are set fortay 11 through 1G
in the Playmakers Theater.
to you . . r
get it yourself!
$8.50
.gjg
Swank; new vodk - sole distributo
Marital Status
Single Married
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