rac"tbrajp"-"--' Serials Eept. , Box ,870- V - -Chapel Hill, IT. C, Frosh Photos Freshmen may have photos taken for the Yack this week. e3 the schedule posted in graham Memorial for time. Volume 74, Numhpr 23 f ' A Yoder To Speak At CPU Meeting Edwin M. Yoder, Jr., associ ate editor of the Greensboro Daily News and a 1956 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of UNC, will speak with the Carolina Political Union tonight on "State Politics, 1967: The Legis lature, ECC and the Gover nor's Race.", The talk, at 7 p.m., in the Grail Room of Graham Mem orial, will be open to members and invited guests only. Yoder, who was co-winner of the Abernathy Award for ex cellence in student publications as co-editor of The Daily Tar Heel in 1956, was chosen for membership in Phi Eta Sigma, freshman scholastic honorary, and the Order of the Golden Fleece. Upon graduation from UNC with an A.B. in English, Yoder was selected to study at Oxford on a Rhodes Scholarship. He received a bachelor's degree with honors in philosophy, politics and economics from the English university. The native of Greensboro served as an editorial writer for The Charlotte News from 1959 to 1961, and won first prize for editorials in 1959 and 1962 from the N.C. Press As sociation. In 1961 Yoder also won the Grenville Clark Award for editorial page comment on international affairs. From 1961-1964 Yoder was an editorial writer for the Greens boro Daily News, and from 1964 until he was named As sociate Editor of the Daily News on September 7, 1965, Yoder was Assistant Professor of History at UNC-G. Currently secretary of the N.C. Rhodes Scholarship Selec tion Committee, Yoder has published articles and reviews : .v J J" 1 ' ... - tW' 1 : i ...... 4 ZljPx Guess What Finally in Saturday Review, South Atlantic -Review and New Republic. Dr. Raymond H. Dawson, Associate Professor of Politi cal Science, former Fulbright fellow and Tanner Award win ner, has been named faculty adviser to the CPU for the 1966-67 academic year. Dr. James Prothro, CPU ad viser for the last two years, is on leave this year in Latin America. The CPU voted at its first meeting this year to invite faculty advisers to serve one year terms. The Carolina Political Union is a non-partisan discussion group of thirty students which meets each Sunday night with persons prominent in the field of public affairs to promote de bate of current political prob lems. Dawson, who received his bachelor's degree from the College of the Ozarks and his master's degree from Vander bilt, received his doctorate at UNC in 1958. From 1955 to 1957 he was a teaching fellow and part-time instructor here, and from 1960 to 1962 was an as sistant professor of political science. He was a Fulbright Lecturer at the Department of War Stu dies of King's College, Univer sity of London, during 1964-65, and served as Acting Chair man of the Department of Po litical Science in 1964. Dawson was a visiting as sociate professor of political science at Duke last spring and is now Director of Graduate Studies of the Department of Political Science. He also serv es as consultant to the Army Research Office in Durham and to the U. S. Army Special War fare School. IK 3 1 - -V if 7 ii fsi i . JP- -v- - UNC-C Water Flowing Again, But Will It Star That Way? CHARLOTTE fAP) Th water flowed freely again Sat urday at te University of North Carolina at Charlotte and the college was back in business. The school was clo-pd at 9:30 a.m .Friday when the deep well water system lost its pres sure, putting rest rooms, the kitchen and other utilities out of business. Maintenance men worked through Friday night and fin ally isolated a leak, adjusted valves and made other repairs. They got the system working again Saturday morning. "We're back in business," said public relations director Ken Sanford. "I don't know how long we'll be able to say that. Our real tough days are Mondays, Wednssdjays and Fridays when we have a peak SP To Discuss Women's Rules Women's rules will be dis cussed at tonight's meeting of tha Student Party. ; Leading tha discussion will b3 Susan Gretz, chairman of the WRC, and Dot Folgum, assistant to the Dean of Wom en. Time has been provided for questions from the floor. The meeting, at 7:30 in Ger rard Hall, is one of a number of SP-sponsored weekly meet ings which have centered on problems concerning the stu dent community. The party will also fill a legislative vacancy in Men's District IX Avery, Parker and Teague. CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1966 2 A Happened: DTH student load. You can see the difference in water pressure on those days." The college has had water problems continously since be fore it became a university branch on July 1, 1965. College officials say the only perman ent solution is to connect the '-"-""'""" Old East 'Just Like Buckingham Living in Old East might have been like living in any other residence hall until it was named a national shrine. Then resident Martin Lan caster from Goldsboro decid ed Old East was as good as the Buckingham palace. "You sort of feel like Queen Elizabeth," Lancaster said. And dorm President Norm Wood, a senior from Raleigh, decided it was "quite a dis tinction to live in a dorm nearly 180 years old. The 173-year-old will be ded icated as a national shrine Wednesday, as the oldest state university building. Its cornerstone was laid Oct. 12, 1793. "When you bring a date on campus it's impressive to tell her you live in the oldest dor mitory on a state supported campus," senior Dave McFad den of Asheboro said. But age's distinction is not the only advantage of Old East, according to its more than 100 residents. Men touted the dorm for its proximity to class buildings, saying they can catch many it i Photo By ERNEST ROBL campus with the Charlotte city system, some five miles away. They said the cot would run into the millions. They plan to ask the 1967 Legislature fo funds to dig new wells and build new campus storage tanks. more last minutes of sleep before early morning classes. Others pf aised it for spa cious rooms, and quietness for studying. While residents were con sidering the numerous and important reasons why Old East is the best as well as oldest dorm, its janitor Wil liam Rufus Thomas consid ered the dorm from an his torical perspective. "I often wonder how the students went about getting their water way back in the old days," he mused. "They had to hoist it from the well out there, he said, pointing across the lawn to the Old Well. Today Old Well is replaced by a mechanical water foun tain. "And I bet it was quite a chore for them to gather up all that wood for the fire place and bring it in Old East," he said. It probably was hard for them, but it's only the good things about Old East that they'll be thinking of Wednesday. 4 .Notre To Be H urricane For Texas BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) Hurricane Inez, leaving 150 dead behind it, took an omin ous turn west northwest, pos sibly toward the Texas coast, Saturday. The weather bu reau reported. The Hurricane sent shrimp boat captains in the Gulf of Mexico scurrying for the safe ty of port. The Navy at Corpus Chris ti ordered its 108 multi-en-gined and jet planes evacu ated from three air stations in south Texas to west Texas. The Navy said winds higher than 50 m.p.h. were expect ed in about two days. Tides rose a half-foot above normal at Galveston, far up the coast to the northeast, and two feet above normal at Freeport, south of Houston. The Weather Bureau order ed that Padre Island, along sand spit along much of the Texas coast, be evacuated and that persons leave other low beach areas. However, the Coast Guard at Port Isabel, near Browns ville, said the Gulf tides there were normal and the water was relatively calm during the day. The hurricane swiped Mex ico's Yucatan Peninsula Thurs day and Friday, destroying 15 boats and collapsing 100 homes in the Port of Progreso. Interviews Set For State SL Interviews for delegation members for the State Student Legislature will be held Mon day, Tuesday and Thursday afternoons from 2 to 5 in the Grail Room of GM. The State Student Legisla ture, which meets this year in Raleigh March 1-4, represents opinions of college students from colleges throughout Nor th Carolina. UNC will send 14 delegates, seven alternates and 21 obser vers to the legislature. To be selected to represent UNC, a student should have a knowledge of parlimentary procedure and an interest and knowledge of current issues in North Carolina. The Legislature acquaints students with the procedures of the North Carolina General Assembly. Usually about 30 bills are in troduced.. Last year the Carol ina delegation introduced a resolution calling for a unicam eral legislative body in North Carolina. It was defeated. "3? ) O Dame Seen Here eads Coast Most of the destroyed craft were fishing boats. In Merida, Mexico, the sun came out Saturday, although several streets of the city of 175,000 were flooded and util ities disrupted. Inez was moving at about 12 miles an hour with winds near the center of 135 m.p.h. a major hurricane. Gales winds of only slightly less than hurricane force of 75 m.p.h. extend ed 200 miles from Inez 'cen ter. The unpredictable storm took an almost directly west erly course for three days, aiming at Mexico's heartland before the Weather Bureau reported Saturday that "pres ent indications are that Inez will turn to a more northwest erly course today, and to night" and the "threat to the Texas coast increases." The forecasting agency warned small craft along the Texas and Mexican coasts as far south as Veracruz Mexico, to stay in port. Earlier, the storm pounded portions of the West Indies, crossed Cuba twice, went north off the east Florida coast and then turned back ward to move between Flori da and Cuba and into the Gulf of Mexico. First Mexican city to suf fer from the battering winds was. ProgresOj population 15, " 000." Most of the city's' " resi dents left for the safety of higher ground. Inez battered villages on the peninsula, flooded streets and damaged utilities. High seas destroyed a dock in the vil lage of Telchac and the town was evacuated. The Navy sent an "early warning squadron" of 28 fliers and men to Corpus Christi to maintain a check on the storm. H Southern Theologian Will Speak On Black Power The Director of the Commit tee of Southern Churchmen will speak today at 4 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation on "Race and the Renewal of the Church: A Theological Critique of Black Power." Will Campbell, former ex ecutive secretary of the Na tional Council of Churches and chaplain at the University of Mississippi, has been director of the Committee for four yars. mm- z:i "T '-. ,!wt ft I i J - A mm JB i y Old East Residence Hall Money Matters There will be a meeting of the chairman and treasurers of all organizations which receive Student Government Funds at 7:30 p.m. in 205 Alumni on Monday. Attend ance is mandatory. Founded February 23. 1893 Game Closed TV Approved By SANDY T RE AD WELL DTH Sports Editor The North Carolina - Notre Dame football game will be presented live on closed cir cuit television Saturday in Carmichael Auditorium. Chuck Erickson, Carolina's Athletic Director, started to lay plans for the telecast fol lowing the Tar Heels' triumph over Michigan. He made the announcement Friday after receiving approv al for the telecast from the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The telecast will also be shown at the Greensboro and Charlotte Coliseums. In Chape 1 Hill, students and staff employees with I.D. cards will be admitted for $1. All other tickets will be sold for $2. The game will be seen on three movie - sized screens in Carmichael, each placed be fore the three main sections in the auditorium. "We're delighted that so many of our students and oth er fans now will be able to watch the game," Erickson said. "They should have a better view of the action than they'd have at the stadium in South Bend." It will mark the first time that a Carolina game has ben carried on closed cir cuit television. But it's not the first time students in Chapel Hill have joined together to follow the progress of their football team hundreds of " miles - away: : : ,v'..-: ' "About thirty years ago we used to get the play-by-play over the telegraph wires," Erickson said. "We set up a big board rep resenting a football field in Memorial Hall. We used lights to represent the movement of the players and the position of the ball. The students loved every minute of it. They cheered as though they were : at the actual game." Compos :d of Protestants and Catholics, the Committee "brings to bear the princi ples of Christian faith on cur rent Southern problems," Anne Queen, member and di rector of UNCs Y, said. She cited poverty and ra cial questions as issues the Committee deals with. Campbell holds a Doctor of Divinity degree from Yale University. V. Palace

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