, U.?!.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 370 Chapsl Hill, N.c. Enthusiasm See Edits, Page Two Weather Considerable cloudiness with a chance of snow or rain. Temperature mid 30's. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1963 UPI Wire Servicf 1 I I IM I I L, L Chancellor Aycock Predicts Minroiiment 1 ft- 5 i 13,000 By TO f.., it 5 ? . . 'i ,..... -yCi-iri'iii(ii i 5, CHANCELLOR AYCOCK chats informally following his address Monday night of the future of education at U.N.C. Aycock discussed both plans for the expansion of the University at Chapel Hill, and problems confronting the other branches of the Consolidated University. ' Photo by Jim Wallace Asian Flu Not Yet Epidemic; About 40 Cases In Infirmary By MARY REGAN A spokesman for the UNC In firmary said yesterday the ex pected Asian flu epidemic is not explosive so far." He added that the number of flu cases entering the infirmary slacked off yester day afternoon. If the flu reaches epidemic pro portions, the spokesman said stu dents will remain in the dorm and bfrf.ated,ihere;,"reVr' h,e Clark, George LaMonte, James T 1, CeU1 "ie sls"dli Lindley, Scott wnen me ume comes. Of the 45 students in the infirm ary' yesterday, approximately 90 per cent were suffering from Asian flu. Students in the infirmary yes- Interviews for the executive po sitions will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Monday through. Wednesday next week in the Y. terday included: Allison Allen, Patricia St. John, Roberta Phillips, Ann Morrow, Su san Kenerly, Linda Goldberg, Di ane Hile, Linda Stephens, Betty Whitley, Sally Duren, Wilbur Johnston, Richard Johnson, Mar tin Brennaman, Ralph Reed, Neil Silliman, Harry Lindley, James Poole, Joseph Jones, Wade Taylor, Andrew Har old, Joseph Gibbs, Frank Silver, William Andrews, John Eudy, Charles Deyton, Sena pratt Viswanathan, William Hicks, Larry Moore, Harry Broome, Linda Sitton, David Loftin, Samuel Thompson, Thomas Mimms, John Madsen, Terance Yen, Neil Wood cock, Walter Gunster, Thomas Moore, W'illiam Cassidy, Robert Karlsen, Harry Ball, and Joseph Crews. By CHUCK NEELY In an hour-long talk to a Ger rard Hall audience Monday night, Chancellor William B. Aycock pre dicted a UNC enrollment of 12,000 to 13,000 students by 1970. Sponsored by the Student and University Parties and the State Affairs Committee, Chancellor Ay cock spoke on plans for expansion for the University zX Chapel Hill and the problems confronting the three branches of the consolidated University. Chancellor Aycock noted that the purpose of student government was an important one in that it was up to student government "to de velop leadership in the realistic laboratory of campus life." To at tain that end, the Chancellor said a new student union was "essen tial." He noted that the facilities of Graham Memorial and its floor space are greatly lacking when the needs of the different organs of student government are examin ed. He said that the proposed stu dent union would provide 100,000 square feet of floor space devoted entirely to student activities, with another 25,000 square feet for a book store and other needed fa cilities. Graham Memorial pro vides only 25,000 square feet to meet the needs of UNC students. , In addition to a new student Un io, Aycock said that plans for a new dormitory and an undergrad uate library are being pushed . in the General Assembly. He stated that the University was virtually as-' sured of the construction of a new auditorium-basketball court in the near future. Plans for this building are now before the legislature, and stand a ' good chance for passage, accord ing to Chancellor Aycock. If the ' plans are passed, construction will begin in time to have the new court open for the 1964-1965 seas on. At present, some 6600 perma nent seats are envisaged, with pro vision made for the erection of 2300 seats in bleacher form, thus . bringing the total seating capacity to 9400. . ' While the auditorium-basketball court would be entirely state fi nanced, it is probable that the University will have to look else where for at least part of the- funds -necessary to build the undergrad-. uate library, the student union, and the new dormitory. It is hoped that the state will provide at least half the needed funds for these pro posed buildings. If the funds fail to materialize, the University will seek help from private sources, in creased dorm rent, and the Fed eral government. However, the Advisory Budget Commission has already given its approval for the construction of an undergraduate library which will help ensure its legislative passage. The proposed buildings would be located as follows: the undergrad uate library would be built on the east side of Louis Round Wilson Li brary, as an addition to that build ing; the student union would be constructed on Emerson Field; and the new auditorium would be built beside Woollen Gym extending ov er a portion of the Intramural Field. Chancellor Aycock's discussion was not confined to the University in Chapel Hill alone. He referred to the proposed name change and clarified the issues involved. He stated . that under the three-point system which has been devised by the Pearsall Committee, the three main campuses of the Consolidated University would be expanded, that Charlotte and Wilmington Colleges would become four-year institu tions with Asheville-Biltmore join ing their ranks in time; and that a system of community colleges, cr two-year colleges, would be evolved. Whether or not the new four-year eoreaes would become an integral part of the University of North Carolina will be decided by the Board of Trustees in the future. Aycocok noted that more em phasis would be given to an ex pansion of the Graduate School and the schools of graduate study at the University in Chapel Hill, to provide an opportunity for the in creased number of college gradu ates produced by the new four year colleges. Under the plan advocated by the committee, WC will accept under graduate men not earlier than 1964, with State forming a pro gram of Liberal Arts, and with Carolina registering a slight in crease in the number of freshman women admitted. These women will be admitted to study Art, Mu sic, or Dramatic Arts in the fall of 1963. On the whole, Aycock said he felt that the proposed University and college system for North Caro olina was a good noe and one that must be carried out if the youth of the state are to be properly educated. H eels O vercome tate Lead, 68-63 1 Campus Briefs Y OFFICERS INTERVIEW Interviews for major YWCA executive offices will be held next week, Donna Bailey, president of the YWCA, announced today. "It is not necessary that these officers have a great deal of pre vious experience, she said. "The important thing is that they should be interested in the work of the Y and be willing to work.." The offices involved are presi dent, vice president, secretary, treasurer, membership chairman, and worship chairman. There will be a meeting for all girls interested in Y work Thurs day at 5 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. The officers duties will be explained at the meeting. A.P.O. RUSH I the retreat will ' be a discussion Alpha Phi Omega, National Ser- of "mendacity". Further informa- vice Fraternity, will have Spring Rush at 7:00 p.m. February 18 ml the TV room of Graham Memorial, and February 19 in Roland Parker Lounge in Graham Memorial. All who are interested in service to the University are invited. AFS The American Field Service will meet upstairs in Lenoir Hall at 6:00 Thursday night. WESTMINISTER FELLOWSHIP The Wrestminister Fellowship has scheduled a retreat for Saturday and Sunday, February 16 and 17 Cars will leave at one and two o'clock Saturday. The topic for Students Urged To Reserve Dorm Rooms For Fall, Summer UNC Director of Housing James Wadsworth yesterday urged all stu dents who want to make sure they have a place to live next year or who want to reserve the same room they have noow to pay their deposits by Apr. 1. This date also holds for summer school reser vations, Wadsworth added. "The student takes a real chance when he doesn't pay his deposit on time. Every year we hav people coming to us complaining because they were placed in a dorm where they didn't want to be. And every time it's because they didn't pay their deposit by April 1." Wadsworth said that the Hous ing Department couldn't designate roooms for incoming Freshmen un til April 2. "At that time students on campus who haven't paid their room deposit stand a very good chance of losing their rooms for the next year," he said. Summer school rent is $20 for a double room, $30 for a single room and $40 for married couples This rent is due with the Summer School Application. tion and reservations are avail able at 942-3753 CROSSROADS AFRICA A film, "Crossroads Africa," about the pilot peace corps project in Africa, will be shown tonight at 7:30 in Carroll Hall. Jim McCorkle, a graduate in structor here, will introduce the 54-minute film. He participated in the "Crossroads" project in 1961. THE MARINES HAVE LANDED A U.S. Marine Corps officer se lection team will be on campus on the 13th, 14th and 15th of Febru ary 1963 to talk with students in terested in becoming Marine Corps officers. All interested students should contact the selection team at "Y" Court through the 15th. By HARRY LLOYD (Special to the DTII) RALEIGH Billy Cunningham's clutch rebounding in the closing minutes was worth more than his 23 points last night as North Caro lina came from behind to defeat the State .College , Wolfpack,. 68-63. The Tar Heels Won their seventh AOC game of the season and their second over the tough Wolfpack. In a freshman game, UNC's Tar Babies sustained their second loss in 13 games, 83-55. The win for the Wolflets gave them a 6-7 mark. Some 11,400 fans in Reynolds Coliseum saw State take a lead CIRCULO HISPANICO Circulo Hispanico will meet Fri day at 7:30 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge in Dey Hall, 4th floor. The program will consist of Spanish songs with guitar accompaniment by Maria Elena Bravo and Miriam Almaguer. Refreshments will be served. All are invited. cwc The Carolina Women's Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. today in the Grail Room at G.M. All dorm women interested in playing in the CWC's bridge tourna ment should sign up now with their dorm social chairman. Dorm Spotlight Is On Cobb Girls The only time the men see Cobb these days is when they meet their dates. The girls have taken over. The redecoration of the dorm was completed last summer and it is now perhaps the most attractive on campus. The girls love it. Juniors predominate in West Cobb, and an active group has re sulted. Residents hold positions on the Women's Resident Council and the WAA. A volleyball team col laborated with a fraternity to win the Co-Rec tournament. The House Council, composed of three representatives from each floor, is led by Dorm president Kay Stinson. The group was responsible for the acquisition of three extra telephones for the dorm. Study hours are observed well, and there are several rooms on each floor set aside for this pur pose. Other officers are vice-president Ormand Deane, secretary Shelby Purser and treasurer Carol Moore. Next in the series: Ehringhaus. with 5:06 to play on Jim Whit field's three-point play, and then push the advantage to three on Ken Rohlolf's jumper. , But then Yogi Poteet, Ray Res pess, and Cunningham hit consecu tively for UNC, and Coach Dean Smith's charges were never head er-again. -W. Vv ' -: After substitute Don Greiner hit for State, Larry Brown hit two free throws with 1:28 left to give UNC a 62-59 lead. State then missed on two straight foul shots, and Cunning ham was there both times to make the save for Carolina. Cunningham's turn shot with 30 seconds left sewed the game up for UNC. Shaffer, Cooke Out Poteet trailed Cunningham in scoring with 17, and Ray Respess had 13. Neither Charlie Shaffer, with an injured elbow, or Mike Cooke, with the flu, saw action in the game. Pete Auksel led State with 15, John Key had 12, and Rolhloff 10. Auskel hit a jump shot at the end of the first half to give State a 29-27 lead at intermission. The opening period was close all the way, with no more than six points separating the teams. Cunningham's first basket on a layup gave UNC its first lead at 8-6. Billy then canned a free throw, and the Tar Heels had what turned out to be their biggest lead of the period, three points. After the score was tied at 14-14, State scored three times in a row on baskets by Key, Sinnock, and Auksel to give the Wolfpack its widest margin. State's halftime lead came from the fact that it had a perfect seven from the foul line. Cunningham, three for three from the line, was the only UNC player to hit a first half foul shot. Billy had 13 in the first half to lead both teams in scoring. S - . P - -) !' .;.-.- - i V t ' i " . ' '' ( X S. 1 -5 X J if " s s i - Ak 'I i : I i i j F ran oin d d By MICKEY BLACKWELL And GARRY B LAN CHARD The body of French graduate student Richard Lee Brand, a .22 Body Found Yesterday Afternoon ity of Victory Village on the 5th, but the mail had not been picked up until the following day. The body is at W'alker Funeral Home in Chapel Hill. Orange Coun- RICHARD LEE BRAND The Pelt's Poison. But Manners Are The Motive eiia -I .9 No CD, 1 emdoiiym By ALAN K. WHITE LEATHER Otelia Connor writes such sting ing comments on the social man ers of our times that she has been suspected of being the pseudonym of a crotchety editor whose pen has an acute case of .acid hemophilia. Over a goodly number of years the exact number is better left unsaid Mrs. Connor has been nipping the group conscience of the Durham-Chapel Hill area. Currently, she operates as The Gadfly of Chapel Hill, particularly raising welts on the. bides of Uni versity of North Carolina students. At any time of day or night, she will be on hand to pick off. the wanderer from good manners. Only the lone transgressor will be aware of her attack until the arrival of the first newspaper she can find space in. Mrs. Connor, better known just as Otelia, is an inveterate letters-to-the-editor writ er. Otelia doesn't confine herself solelv to manners. Her forays into nose-picking, door-holding and telephone-monopolizing have come pri marily since her migration to nap el Hill about six years ago. Otelia says she writes about "anything that hits my head." De vout readers of the letters-to-the- editor columns will confirm that everything gives Otelia a pretty hard knock. Otelia's flypaper is the social in justice, the underdog, the over-inflated fathead who needs pricking, the plain, old common decencies. Her interests may touch on an ill deserved parking ticket or under paid teachers. Otelia's accent is on people that renowned "human factor" in any situation or. circumstance. And among people, it is the" indi vidual that is important to her. Otelia is a product of the plan tation South. In fact, she was edu cated in her home, spending only three years in public schools. She hankers after and prac tices the social code of yester year,, a system that soundly pre served a woman's femininity. But she has just enough brashness to make her genuinely exciting. Otelia's lament is that she has to remind today's youth she is a lady. (She doesn't think only of herself here, but of all women.) As a result, she finds herself do ing what "their parents should have done." Take "the following exam ple from her writings: "One day I was going out of a double door at Lenoir (UNC cam pus dining hall) and had pushed the right door out, when a swarm of students came marching through. "I said, 'Look here. Don't ycu see a lady trying to get through?' " The students snickered, but Otelia got through, the students having been stopped "dead in their tracks." Otelia's "sometimes blunt broad sides have built up the Otelia Con nor myth. (One newspaper even found it necessary to reasure its readers ' that there really is an Otelia Connor.) -In actuality, Otelia was a house wife and mother of two children. "All those 9,000 (students.) are my children, ' now. She is the widow of an American Tobacco Co. exec utive and lived all of her married life in Durham. - - "I lived in Forest Hills in Dur ham, and all I did was chauffeur the children. I never want to live in the suburbs again." Her children grown, she looked around for a place to light. She stuck to Chapel Hill. "It's a won derful place to hang your hat . . . and you can get around without a car." Otelia just chuckles when she is called the unofficial guardian of the public manners. "I always tell people I'm one ambassador without portfolio. They don't know what that means. . . I guess I really don't either, but it usually starts a conversation that gives me something to write about." Many are" the people who have found she will present credentials at the drop of a social courtesy. And with her youthful spirit, she promises to be on the job for years to come. Tour Program Data Available Dr. Robert E. Cralle, Execu tive Director of the University Study Tour to Hawaii, announced recently that bulletins and appli cation forms for the 1963 Univer sity Study . Tour Program to the University of Hawaii Summer Session are now available. Special rates for Mainland stu dents and teachers for the 6 week (54 days via ship) Hawaii Summer Session Program begin as low as $555.00. Round trip jet transporta tion, Waikiki Beach Hotel accom modations, plus a full schedule of 22 planned activities are included in the price. Off-campus activities include dinner dances, island sight seeing trips, beach parties, cruises and field trips. caliber pistol still in his hand, was Uy Coroner Allen Walker Jr. hat found at 4:45 p.m.. yesterday, jled "probable suicide." Brand had been shot once in the Pendergraph said a picture of head. ; . . . ... Brand and descriptive information ' The body was- found- in a wood- has been ' sent to "authorities ia ed area about 30 yards from the jtoth these towns. "We haven't intersection Pittsboro Street and heard a thing from them yet," he Chase Avenue by Dr. Phillips Rus- said. sell, out walking his dog at the Brancrs pen Mn Mrs. tune- (Leo W. Scott, were in Chapel mil Police said they believe the gun seVeraI days trying to provide in to be the same one reported miss- formation on Brand's disappear ing Monday from the home of a ance. girl classmate of Brand s, where a j note was found last week indicat-i ing Brand had been despondent for some time. Police are still not releasing the content of the note. Police declined to release the exact content of the note. Police declined to release the name or address of the classmate. Brand's mother and stepfather had left only hours before Brand's body was found to return to their home in Oklahoma City. Police revealed that while they were in Chapel Hill they received a tele phone call from their daughter, still in Oklahoma City, during which she said she had received a letter from Brand postmarked Feb. 6th. Brand was last seen on Feb. 5th, walking in the general direction in which his body was found. Police said Brand probably mailed the letter from the vicin- Before they left yesterday to return to their home in Oklahoma City, Mrs. Scott said she had heard nothing about her son. She said she felt her son "may come walking back in here." Mrs. Brand doesn't believe her sen was bent on suicide. "I don't think he'd ever take his own life. I think , he's just plain tired End wanted to go off for awhile." A note written by Brand indi cated he was in a depressed mood, according to local police. Some officials agree with (Mrs. Scott that Brand might have decided to "get away from it all" without telling anyone. However, his car is still here and there is no indication he packed any clothing. Chapel Hill police and Univer sity officials organized a mass volunteer search last Thursday, but no clues or further evidence turned up. Bids Being Taken For Ne ZBT House Near Golf jLi Construction bids are now being prepared on the new ZBT Fra ternity House on Finley Golf Course Road, accordinj to Larry Fine, ZBT President. The bids wiii be received in Chapel Hill in late February by the fraternity's building commit tee and architect. April 1st is set as the proposed date for the begin ning -of construction. According to ZBI President Fine, "We are extremely pleased that we will be able to begin con struction in the early Spring so that the new house will be ready r-ixt fall. The new house is a symbol of ZBT's progress and bright future at UNC. Zeta Beta Tau Fraternity was chartered at U.N.C. in 1927 and is presently housed in its own building at 121 W. Rosemary Street. The new quarter-million dollar fraternity house will be located in the new. fraternity court in the southern-most IVi acre. " With ' sleeping . accomrnociaUons for 44 men in the beginnin:?, the two-story, completely functional fraternity bouse features light., airy Uo-man rooms with dining and recreational faculties for over 100. All resident: living and study areas are on the second floor with ibedroorns open ing not only to the interior areas Artists Concept of New House but also onto an enclosed balcony. The first floor contains the diriing and kitchen areas as well as lounges, recreation, guest and utility" areas. A complete house mother's apartment with private bedroom, living room bath, and kitchen is also on the first level. Rooms on the first floor open, through sliding glass doors, to a ! walled courtyard on both j the houie. J Architect for U.N.C.'s 'fraternity hce is Mr. Jcr Cooper of Atlanta, Ga. 1 hcube is being financed local chapter's Alpha Pi tion with the assistance chapter's alumni and Xatio tcrnity. tl'-lCS cf he r.e .v by the the sal Fra-