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Copies 'Needed
The Daily Tar Heel needs
copies of Sunday's edition for
its files. Anyone having copies
may leave them in the Dili of
fice or at the GM information
desk. Any coed bringing copies
may receive a kiss from tie
business manager.
75 Years o Editorial Freedom
Voume 75, Number 31
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA,. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1967
Founded February 23, 1893
Residence HmMsz 'Wkeeh Bf ' Change Grind Si
t
By STEVE KNOWLTON
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Changes are in store for Carolina's
residence colleges, but they may be a
While in the coming, University ad
ministrators said Tuesday.
Partly because of the growing feeling
of need for change and partially due to
the Regional Conference on Residence
Colleges held in Durham last weekend,
University administrators said they will
be working toward a more relevant type
of education through the concept of
residence colleges.
Assistant Dean of Women Mrs.
Dershie McDevitt said he office "feels
that coed residence colleges are the
answer to many of our goals.
"If this is among the recom
mendations of the Chancellor's Advisory
Committee on Residence Colleges, we (of
the Dean of Women's office) will work
toward mis."
She said Dean of Women Katherine'
Carmichael "is definitely not opposed to
the idea of men and women living in the
same building. She is opposed, however,
to allowing women to visit in men's in
dividual rooms," she said.
'In fact," Mrs. DcDevitt said, "back
in the 1950's when there was considerable
discussion about what to with Cobb, Miss
Carmichael advocated splitting it up into
half men and half women."
'.. Mrs. McDevitt added that, depending
upon the recommendations of fte
chancellor's advisory committee, "We
may have an experiment of this sort by
the fall of 1963."
She said it would be impossible to in
novate such a change before that time
because of the early date of room
reserervations for the spring semester.
Dean of Men James 0. Cansler said he
had no definite ideas of the specifics of
change now, "but hopefully we will have
many long-range developments on our
campus" as a result of the ideas ex
Pressed during the Durham conference.
"Just what forms the changes will be
or just how extensive they win be, I don't
know now, but I expect we will see some
results witMn a year," Cansler said.
Cansler said he hoped to see "a pilot
project and several kinds of experiments
to go into effect here as soon as possi
ble." Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey
was less convinced of the certainty of
change.
"I don't know if any great deal of
change is going to come here," he said.
We are not going to tear down any
residence hall we now have and try to
build in anything like the facilities they
have at Justin Morrill College (at
Michigan State University).
Justin Morrill has converted an old
pair of. dormitories into a residence col
lege in the last two years.
They have faculty offices on one floor
of the building and have made space for
'classrooms allowing nearly two-thirds of
the undergraduate classes to ge taught in
the college, JMC's Dean,' D. Gordon
Rohman, told the delgates to the Durham
conference last weekend.
"Our approach," said Dean Cathey,
"will have to be one of doing things we
can do."
He said he did not expect to see a
great deal of change in academic struc
ture of residence colleges.
Dean Cathey disagreed with WBHam
F. Field, dean of students at the
University of Massachusetts. When he
said residence colleges don't have to be
hinged upon coeds.
Class Office
Candidates
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Student Party nominated 14
persons as candidates in the
Nov. 14 freshman, sophomore,
and junior class officer elec
tion and appointed seven
persons to fill 1 e g i s 1 a t i v e
vacancies at its convention
Monday night.
Nominees for class presi
dent, are Dean Farmer,
freshman; Pete Powell,
sophomore; and Charley Fer
ris, junior.
Student Body president Bob
Travis, keynote speaker, told
the candidates that this year
they "have a greater burden
you must prove that there is
a job to be done and do it
well."
Other freshmen class officer
nominees are George Hearn,
vies president; Candy Myers,
secretary; Bamby Hebling,
treasurer; .and Jackie Cane,
social chairman.
Sophomore nominees are
Richard Girstein, vice presi
dent; and Bill Dolson, treasur
er; There were no candidates for
nomination for secretary; a
candidate will be selected to
day by the advisory board of
SP. Debbie Patterson, who was
not at the convention but who
was nominated for social
chairman, declined to run. The
advisory board will also fill
that vacancy.
Bob Eadie is SP nominee for
junior class vice president.
Mollie Nicholson; secretary,
Sally Cook, treasurer, and
Sarah Lynn Dorsey, social
chairman, were the other
choices of the convention for
nomninees.
The University Party will
nominate its candidates Mon
day. Surprise of the evening was
provided by University Party
legislator Harry Diffendal,
Ehringhaus, who ran for the
SP nomination for sophomore
class social chairman against
Debbie Patterson.
If elected, he said, he
(Continued on Pare 6)
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Penitsig(D)ni
.Rally
OK9!?
DTH Staff Photo by G2NS WAXO
Admissions Office Secretaries Say Goodbye
... moved to Battle-Vance-Pettigrew
J-
ByPAM HAWKINS
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Officials in Washington,
1 D.C., agreed Monday to permit
Pentagon parking lot. Some 40
students and faculty members
from here will attend the
rally.
The-permission for the rally
came early Tuesday evening
after day-long negotiations
between the - National Mob
ilization CXramittee to End the
Gciveirnment Services
Adniinistration, which controls
the Pentagon grounds.
There was still some
disagreement, though, about
whether persons could return
faden
(&(Q)M
to the parking lot after leaving
it. Final word was expected by
noon today.
Meanwhile, National Stop the
Draft Week of which the
Washington rally will be the
climax swung into a higher
and more violent gear across
the nation Tueday.
The onlv active Stop The
The university administration
had asked him to postpone the
visit, a dean said.
The Chapel Hill contingent to
the Washington rally,
meanwhile, was busily firming
up transportation and ac
comodation arrangements, and
getting instructions on what to
do, and what not to do when
Draft Week activity scheduled they get to Washington.
for Chapel Hill so far is the
setting up of a draft counseling
table next to an - armed
services recruiting table in Y
. Court Thursday.
A sitin planned at Duke
University in Durham fizzled
Monday when a Navy recruiter
didnt show up to be picketed.
A dim uss minis
- - By SIIARI WILLIS -
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
"We'll miss being in the
center of the activities around
South BuHding,'' said Mrs.
'Janet Earley, an Admissions
Office secretary and part-time
sign-jwriter.
"We loved the pep rallies
and combos on the South
Building steps, and the hap
penings last spring in Y court.
I guess we won't see any
more of that here."
The Admissions Office iust
. moved from 08 South Building
td new headquarters'in Vance
(formerly of BVP dorm.)
"You sure can tell this used
to be a boys' dorm," another
secretary said. "You ought to,
bee all the nasty sayings and
pictures on the bathroom
walls." "
...The. secretaries have Been
-visited by ; bees and flies in
.their new offices, since dere
aren't any screens on the wh
'dows. "Of course, we can
throw our empty moving boxes
out the windows, though," said
one of the women, v
s Moving was a necessary step
for the Admissions' Office.
Although the University enroll
toent has increased to 14,500
tthe 203 South Building office
'never changed size it just got
more crowded.
The office in Vance win give
tHjt Daily (Tar Qrrl
World News
BRIEFS
By United Press International
Rural Development Seeks
To Eliminate City ProMeim
Durham Body Opposes Project
DURHAM The local zoning commission Tuesday recom
mended against a proposed public housing project which sparked
Negro housing protests here last summer.
The city planning and zoning commission voted to recommend
to the city council that the Bacon Street property be rezoned to
allow only single family residential units. Should the city council
accept the recommendation, it would kill the Bacon Street public
housing Dlan.
Some Negro leaders organized opposition to the Bacon Street rid .?n setting up model
. ... ... . "Inmohla" wwnmimihoe in tan
proposal last summer because, they said, it would only enlarge
the Negro "ghetto." The Bacon Street property is in a Negro
area. They favored opening housing opportunities to Negroes in
white sections of the city.
By KAREN FREEMAN
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
The cities' problems will on
ly be solved by first checking
the mass migration from the
farm to the cities and then
reversing this trend, said the
director of the Southern Rural
Action Program.
"Our basic thesis is that Jhe
destiny of the nation is
dependent upon our ability to
develop the rural areas of the
country and make these areas
healthy communities, because
the cities cannot adjust to their
com pounding populations'
said Randolph Blackwell in an
interview.
Blackwell, anexecutive
assistant to Dr. Martin Luther
King for two years, has been
Division.
The Southern Rural Action
Program is a division of the
privately-funded Citizens'
Crusade Against Poverty
founded by Dr. Martin Luther
King and Walter Reuther.
By developing poor com
munities into attractive, ones,
Blackwell is trying to show
private enterprise and the
government that it can be
done.
Hopefully, they will then
back tiie program and carry it
out on a much wider scale,
program his organization is
trying will eventually elimi
nate it
As head of a three-man
team, Blackwell first contacts
a community leader when
entering a county where begin
ning one of his projects:
Then with the help of this
community leader they try to
organize the residents and ob
tain financial backinff for set
ting up a cooperative industry 'Wednesday Peace
a. iii -m TivnT '
uuu wm pruviutr tympiuy
ment. Seven such co-ops are now
1L
the stafT:thespaie it .'needs.
KNow I don't see how we pack
ed so much into that old of
fice," a blonde said.
The secretaries have been
busily unpacking, but they still
can't find things. Several desks
'have been lost somewhere
'along ttie line.
Lighting was installed Tues
day, but there are still no
phones, "Don't call us, well
cal you" seems to be the
(message around the office.
Moving has temporarily
lhalted most of the business of
the Admissions Office. Ap
plications have piled up, so
mail is now being held until the
office is somewhat settled. The
Secretaries had to cancel all
out-of-state interviews, "but
people are coming anyway."
In spite of all their gripes,
the secretaries agreed that
they were satisfied with the
prospect of working in their
new location.
"We'll get to watch the
sights at Harry's, and the
perhaps expanding it into the operating five garment f ac-
rural North.
Australia To Increase Troops
CANBERRA, Australia Prime Minister Harold Holt told a
parliament stunned into silence Tuesday that he is sending more
troops to Vietnam. New Zealand announced it was increasing its
military commitment, too.
The move by Australia, a calculated political risk for Holt,
will increase its troops from 6,800 to 8,000 by Dec. 31. Prime
Minister Keith Holyoake of New Zealand said in Wellington that
his government will send 170 more men, increasing its strength to
a total of 546 troops. .
Holt faces a mid-term senate election on Nov. 25, and govern
ment sources said his decision to send more troops was a
calculated gamble to win electoral support.
Mindszenty May Leave Hungary
BUDAPEST Franz Carinal Koenig of Austria arrived in
Budapest Tuesday amid mounting indication that Joszef Cardinal
Mindszenty of Hungary was about to leave his refuge in the U.S.
Embassy and fly to Rome.
Cardinal Koenig flew here earlier Tuesday from Rome and
paid his second surprise call in 12 days on Cardinal Mindszenty in
'liveable" communities in ten
of the poorer counties in the
South for the past year..
His discussion with com
munity action leaders of North
Caroina Monday afternoon and
his open address in the
Morehead Planetarium' that
night was part of the "Poverty
and Affluence: Two Americas"
symposium sponsored by the
Multi-Purpose training Center
of the University Extension
of
Agriculture came along a few
years ago and told people that
the samll farm was ' im
practical, but they didn't pro
vide an interim between the
farm and the big city.
"The fifty million Johnson is
getting ready to spend on
employment in the cities will
compound . the problem,
because as soon as the word
gets out crowds will begin
pouring into the cities again."
- Through such indirect ap
proaches the War on Poverty
is actually perpetuating pover
ty, Blackwell said, while the
(Continued on Pare )
now.
But one secretary
remembered all the students
she saw at South Building.
"Tell the kids to wave when
they go by Vance," she said.
Among the things not to do,
according to a mimeographed
sheet passed out at a Monday
night meeting of Students for a
Democratic Society, was to
carry either vauables,- weap
ons or drugs.
"If you are carrying any
medicine, have it in prescrip
tion bottles and not little brown
envelopes," said Jerry Carr, a
sociology grad student and
local coordinator for the
mobilization.
..The sheet also warned the
participants to carry iden
tification and at least $15
cash or check to avoid en
tanglement with vagrancy
laws.
The group received in
struction on defensive pro
tection" in case of attack by
either police or anti-peace
mobs from Buddy Tieger, a
first year law student at Duke
who is active in the Liberal
Action Committee of SSOC
there.
He demonstrated curling into
a fetal position with his hands
protecting his face as the most
advantageous position to
assume while under attack.
Tieger advised that women
not to wear pierced earrings
and men not to wear ties
because, "you are only given
them an extra way to hurt
you."
''Things are getting rough
around the country,'' Carr
said. "Everything as tightening
up."
Carr said that' although the
group was not going to
Washington looking for
Vigil mayhem, "we cannot help but
anticipate it after the, tone of
approaching violence has been
set in Washington by the press
and the threat of civil disobe
dience has roused anti-peace
march feelings."
"We do not want to attack
the police or retaliate in any
way to the mobs protesting
us," Carr said.
"Nothing can be gained by
this. We can only hurt
oursleves."
The Mobilization Committee
is asking that those
participating in the weekend
demonstrations arrive Friday
at the Justice Department to
indicate support of the "ap
proximately 1,000 men across
the country who are returning
their draft cards this week."
This action will be com
plimented by "a large group of
prominent Atnerican writers,
poets, and artists who are
making open declarations of
their support of these men."
The activity is in defiance of
a Federal law forbidding sup
port of or advice to draft
resistors.
(Continued on Page 5)
Israe
li
Officai
To Talk
A spokesman for the Israeli
government will speak tonight
at BUlel Foundation on "The
Aftermath of the Six Day
War."
Abraham Tooch, director of
the Israel Aliyah Center in
Atlanta, will talk about the re
cent Arab-Israeli war, in the
lounge of Hfflel at 8:15 pjn.
The speech will follow the
Erev Succot services at 7:30
celebrating the Feast of
Tabernacles.
Born in South Africa, Tooch
went to Palestine in 1945. In
1947, he joined the Hagannah
underground movement and
served actively until the
establishment of the state of
Israel.
Since then, he has helped
guide settlement of Israel
through Aliyah centers.
Homecoming Queen Voting Friday
Germans Club Plans
Three Big Weekends
. The Germans Club will
sponsor three weekends this
year, the first one scheduled
for Oct. 27.
This will ba the first time in
almost five years that the club
has been financially able to
sponsor mre than two concerts
per school year, German's
the U.S. Embassy where the Hungarian Catholic Primate took 5av c " adm
tyium on iiov. i, j.jo.
The 75-year-old Cardinal Mindszenty took refuge in the
Embassy to escape arrest after the Hungarian anti-Communist
revolt was crushed. He has been living there since.
Informed sources indicated the final plan for Cardinal
Mindszenty's departure has not yet been worked out between the
parties involved.
The formal Fall Germans
Weekend will f2ature Little
Anthony and the Imperials and
Barbara Lewis in an 8-10 p.m.
concert at Memorial Hall.
Bids will be distributed to
the 12 member fraternities for
$6 with pledges' bids selling for
$14 including a German's in
itiation fee.
About 20 extra bids will be
given to each of these
fraternities for general sale.
Winter Germans Weekend
has been set for Dec. 9 but ar
rangements have not been
completed for performers. The
spring wTeekend will be held in
late April or early May.
Cancelation of the Sam and
Dave concert last year pro
viced the Germans Club with
the . add itional money
necessary for their expanded
program this year Wilson
said.
s
y.
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The eight finalists for
the title of Homecoming
Queen were chosen Mon
day night and wDl be
presented at the pep rally
Thursday.
The finalists were
'chosen from 6 7 con
testants by a panel of four
"judges. The judges were
"Mrs. Bill Dooley, Dr. R.E.
'Jamerson, head of the
Physical Education
"Department; Richard
Baddour, assistant Dean
"of Men; Danny TalboU,
former Tar Heel
quarterback.
The finalists .were
chosen on the basis of
looks, poise, personality
and answers to questions
posed by the judges.
The candidates and their
"sponsors are: Patricia
Diaz, Lambda Chi Alpha;
Ann Martin, Delta Kappa
"Epsilon; Sherry Severson,
"Alpha Delta Pi; Charlotte
Jessup, Kappa Delta,
Susan Alexander, Sigma
Nu; Jan Kimball, , Beta
Theta Pi; Ramona
Taylor, Kappa Alpha ;
Cheryl Lesh, Alpha Tau
Omega; Patsy Brinkley,
Pi Beta Phi.
The Homecoming Queen
will be chosen by the stu
xlent body. Polls will be
open from 9-5 Friday at
GM, Y court, the Scuttle
butt, Chase and Lenoir
Hining halls.
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DTH Staff Phcto by GZTI2 YTAXG
it
HOMECOMING QUEEN candidates are: (1 to
r) Patricia Diaz, Ann Martin, Sherry
Severson, Charlotte Jessup, Susan Alexander,
Jan Kimball, Ramona
Patsey Brinkley.
Taylor, Cneryl Lesh,$: