Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 16, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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TttlC Library Ssrials Dpt. Box C70 ChpsL Hill, IU C. in NLJy J ' ' JliiiAifi,. The Campus Chest u p Increasing cloudiness to ll day with temperatures in l the 60's. n Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom (BdD T nT)TTT) A Wr Offices In Graham Memorial fvmiimrr ,u , f : - - ' ' i ' y 4 , - ' : : ' I .. Nw i - , , wTiTrtiMrii ftiiiiifrinii RIDES Four members of the Campus Chest, including carnival co-chairman Gail Woodward, auction co-chairman Sam Blumberg, and Campus Chest -co-chairman Page Bragham try out the tilt-a-whirl, one of five rides that will be fea Carnival Today Completes Campus Chest Solicitations The Campus Chest Carnival, promising everything from bird cage casino to a case of beer, will begin today at 1:30 p.m. on the Intramural Field. Booths and rides will highlight the affair. Nearly 50 booths, spon sored by various campus organiza tions, will offer such, things as Playmakers Hold Auditions Monday Auditions for the Carolina Playmakers 200th bill of. new one-act plays will be held at the Playmakers Theatre Mon., March 18, at 4:00 p.m. The bill of three plays will be present ed March 28, 29 and April 6. "Pity Has a Human Face," by Scott Byrd, is the first play. The comedy will be directed by Larry Warner. Of special inter est in this play are roles for a 90-year-old invalid woman, a Ne gro boy and a Negro woman. "Folly," by Wesley Van Tas sel, lias several roles for men and women, including a saxa phone player. The drama will be directed by Ralph Swanson. "Clown for a Day," a chil drens' play by. Reginald Spauld ing, will be directed by Patricia Lynch. Several children are needed for the comedy. Those Interested may obtain further information from the Depart ment of Dramatic Art. '3rf ' J f?? 7 L If I GLOBE-CIRCLING FOLKSINGER Josh White will appear JVIarch 23 in Memorial Hall in a concert sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha, nation al music fraternity. Admission is $1.60 and tickets may be obtained from any Phi Mu Alpha member. White has played to sellout crowds in England, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. His United States appear ances include several performances at the White House and the Li brary of Congress. Proceeds from the concert will go to the James Michael Barham Scholarship Fund. Tickets will also be on sale at GM and Kemp's. sponge throws, greased-pig races and penny tosses. Five trophies from T. L. Kemp's will be award ed to the best booths, and points for the highest percentage of pledge-participation will be given to individual fraternities -for . this Greek Week competition. The swing, tilt-a-whirl, ferris wheel, paratrooper and octupus rides will begin operating as soon as people get on the field. Among the many attractions will be the gift certificates given by Town and Campus for the lucky number on the back of the Campus Chest buttons, and the concession stands offerings of popcorn, pea nuts, candy, cokes, ice cream and cotton candy. All proceeds will go to the Cam EXAMS SCHEDULE Ctfiss Rachel Nunley, Secretary, North Carolina Examining Com mittee of Physical Therapists has announced the licensing examina tion will be given, March 29th, in Chanel Hill. Anv ioerson Qualified to apply for licensure should make application to Miss Nunley, Section of Physi cal Therapy, at the UNC School of Medicine. APPLICATIONS DUE Saturday, March 16, is the dead line for returning ' applications tor the Experiment in International Living Ambassador Program. Ap plications must be turned in at the Y. J MMtMl ni 4s tured at this afternoon's carnival. Other rides that will go into action today at 1:30 include a roll-a-coaster, ferris wheel, the bullet, and an octopus. Photo by Jim Wallace pus Chest. So far the Campus Chest fund has collected $2,008 in solicitations. $1,100 of which was handed in Fri day, according to Mac Boxley. so licitations . chairman. The auction netted $650 and the shoeshine $100" Jorden Talks To Democrats Tuesday Night State Senator John R. Jordan, Jr., Democratic Senator from Wake County, will - address the UNC Young Democrats Club Tuesday evening, March 19 at 7:30 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Jordan will speak on "The Role of the Democratic Party in N. C." Jordan, an announced candidate for the position of lieutenant gover nor in the 1964 state Democratic primary, is expected to discuss some of the issues on which he will base his 1964 campaign. Senator Jordan, a native of Win ston, is a 1942 graduate of UNC and a 1948 graduate of the Law School here. He was a member of the N. C. Attorney General's staff for two years, until 1951, and has since been a practicing attorney in Raleigh. Currently in his third term as State Senator, Jordan has held numerous postions in the state government and the Democratic Party. "Senator Jordan's speech could mark the beginning of open dis cussions of the issues which are of importance now and will continue to be so through the 1964 cam paign, UNC-YDC president George Korndigay said yesterday. PAINTINGS ACCEPTED Fifteen UNC art students have had paintings accepted in the Fifth Carolinas' College Art Annual ex hibit at the Columbia Museum of Art in Columbia, South Carolina. The show which has 31 paintings of various media is sponsored jointly by the Art Department of the University of South Carolina and the Columbia iluscuin of Art. The purpose behind this annual ex hibit is to afford student artists the experience of open show competi tion under professional standards. Three UXC students: Harold H. Bass. Charel Hill; Harold Man- dell. Hendersonville; and Mariorie Weiss Schiffmon, Washington, D. C, received Honor Awards. Others in the UNC representa tion were Marsarct Crosier, Union, West Virginia; Florence Evans, Jov Randall, and Helga Saunders, Durham; Marlene Ginsburg, Wor- chester, Glass.; Thomas Grant, Cfdarhurst. N. Y.: Dwayne Low- dcr, Albemarle; Timothy Murray and Kay Travis, Winston-Salem; Martha Parham, Oxford; Robert Poc, Greensboro and Sarah Switz er, Kingsport, Tenn. Joseph Dodge, Director of the Cummer Gallery of Art, Jackson ville, Florida served as a one-man selection and awards jury. The show will continue through March 31. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH NOTICE TO CANDIDATES AH nominations for office in the Spring elections must be made in writing and presented to the Elec tions Board, Information Office, GM not later than Tuesday, March 19 at 6:00. All candidates endorsed by the Parties shall have their nominations signed by the chair man of the Party. All candidates endorsed by an established selec tions board shall have their nom inations signed by the chairman of said board. Any other student of the University may become a candidate for an olfice provided he submit to the Elections Board a petition signed by twenty-five (25) constituents of the office he seeks and by himself. The compulsory candidates meet ing will be held Wednesday, March 20 at 9:00 in Howell Hall. There will be no excused absences with out the consent of the Chairman of the Elections Board, Polly Has tings. Dormitory Spotlight: Grimes i 1 1 After a slow first semester Grimes dormitory has begun to participate in campus activities. Under the leadership of Presi dent Fred Harwell and Intramural Manager Jerry Rutledge, Grimes is entering soccer and softball teams in the all-campus competition. The dorm is also planning a se ries of faculty discussions and sev eral parties. Since no adequate provisions were made by the IDC for adequate leadership in. this all-freshman dorm, residents had little aware ness.,, what the dormitory. vpro, gram could be like. It was not un til December that the residents (in the first all-dorm effort) deposed their first "caretaker" president and elected a full slate of officers. Dormitory leaders and advisers say the major problem with a fresh man dorm is the lack of continuity and attachment to the University community. Freshmen take too many of the same courses and are at similar stages of intellectual de velopment with the result that the richness and diversity of University life remains abstract. The isolation of the first semester appears to be aggravated by dormitory segrega tion. i V s f i DEAN LONG . . . Let me entertain you at the faculty variety show. GARDNER AWARD The winner of the 15th annual Oliver Max Gardner Award will be announced at a dinner here Friday night, March 22, at 6:30 p.m. in Lenoir Hall. The recipient, whose identity is never revealed until the award dinner, is chosen as "that member of the faculty of the Consolidated university of North Carolina, who. during the current scholastic year, has made the greatest contribution to the welfare of the human race . . The award carries a cash grant from the income of. the original $25,000 bequest left by the late Gov. Gardner. Fred M. Hechinger, education ed itor of the New York Times, will be the speaker for the occasion. Last year the award went to poet Randall Jarrell of Woman's Col lege, Greensboro. HONOR COUNCIL ENDORSEMENTS The nine students endorsed by the Honor Council Commission for the coming elections are: Stuart Kagel, Perry McCarty, Terry Reeves, Ted Steinberg, Walter Gra ham, Alex Shaw, Gerry Hancock, Alice Schmidt, and Marion Mc-Adoo. fe-iiiin-niiirtf-ih-ii-iiiiriiirii'--i;rri-iaiiftiia fti enate lour Year Draft Extension ic Kennedy Through PALM BEACH. Fla (TFPl) President Kennedy, bound for an important meeting of Central American presidents in Costa Rica, Friday ordered the Selective Serv ice deferment, of all fathers ex cept doctors, dentists and veterin arians. Draft-ase registrants with chil dren and previously classed as 1-A will, under an executive order signed by the President, be placed in class 3jA. Ihus the President provided for the deferment, but not the exemption of fathers. Few fathers have been drafted in re cent years, but many of them were eligible for classification in 1-A. The President's order Friday made formal what had been a gen eral practice with many Selective Service boards. The President signed the Selec tive Service order shortly before he took off from Washington at noon Friday. The chief executive stopped off . for two days of rest irt Palm Beach before continuing on to San ose, Costa Rica, early MnnHv whon lif will inin the aiVtlUUJ - pr4fieets of -i ive Central - Ameri can republics and Panama for talks about hemispheric economic improvement. Press Secretary Pierre taunger referred inquiries about the draft order to Selective Service head quarters in Washington. Salinger said, however, that generally it meant that chances of a father being drafted had been lessened considerably by the order. The President, who flies back to the United States Wednes day night and reports on his visit at a televised news conference the following afternoon, will be joined at San Jose by Secretary of State Dean Rusk and key Democrats and Republicans from the House and Senate Foreign Affairs committees.! Kennedy is expected to assure j the six small countries of strong CAMPUS INFORMATION The DTH will only accept items for the Campus Briefs Department which are written out and handed in at the DTH office on the second floor of GM by 5:30 p.m. on the day before the desired publication date. Briefs will no longer be taken on the phone. CHANGE OF LOCATION The IDC-Campus Chest dance will be held tonight beginning at eight o'clock in Graham Memor ial, instead of on the Cobb tennis courts as originally planned. Nat Jones and his combo will be fea tured. BEANBIRDS The Beanbirds will meet Sunday of "I -3ft r m in front of the ATO House and at. 8:30 p.m. Monday night in the back room of Spero's. JOSH WHITE CONCERT Phi Mu Alpha will present Josh UTiifo ;Vi-ir?3V vrniTIET. March 29 at eight o'clock in Memorial Hall. Tickets, at $1.60 each, are on saie at Kemps and GM or from any Phi Mu member. STATE AFFAIRS The State Affairs Committee will meet in Roland Parker 3 of GM Tuesday night at 7:30 pjn. Pin ETA SIGMA Anv sonhomore who did not qualify for Phi Eta Sigma the first semester of last year, but did have a 3.5-overall average for the school year ending in June 1962, is now eligible for member ship. Interested students should con tact Ernest "L. Mackie, Phi Et faculty adviser, at 3776 Fnillips HaH. FOUND I A pair of girl's black-rim 16, 1963 Unanimously ic r Defers Fathers Executive Order U.S. support for Central American economic integration. The "little summit" gathering will attempt to speed progress in coordinating the area's economic programs. It will mark Kennedy's third trip to Latin America. He went to Venezuela and Colombia on one SL Urges Germans For Full Campus Student Legislature Thursday nieht vntpH its snnrnvnl nf a rpsw-l lution which states that the Ger mans Club should transform itself into an all-campus organization. An amendment, commending all! those involved in efforts to adopt the Germans Club into an all campus entertainment agency, was also included in the resolution. Action on a bill to appropriate $723.50 to the International Stu- dentsUBoard , f or . the payment of expenses of a Panamanian student here, starting next fall, was post poned. A controversial amendment, stat ing that the Germans Club should transform itself into an all-campus group "when adequate facilities be come available," was defeated by a 20-17 vote. The resolution, as okayed by SL, says that Germans Club should act as a coordinating organization for "Big" weekends, concerts by nationally known performers and any other event which the group could effectively sponsor. It also states that conditions for member ship in the Germans Club "should not be based upon any socially se lective system but instead upon the ability to pay admission to the concerts. glasses was found Friday. Owner please contact Bennie McMinnis, 316 Craige. FOUND A Statesville High School girl's rin2. with the initials M.C.G. and Class of 1962 engraved on it, was found Friday. Owner please call Llewellyn Phillips at 963-8475. WOMEN'S DORM SPACE Women students requiring dorm itory space for a summer term or for the fall or spring semesters are asked to sign up in their dorm itories before Saturday, March 16. YOUNG PRESIDENTS' FORUM The Young Presidents Organiza tion will present a forum on the free enterprise system Tuesday, March 19 at 7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall. The, session is sponsored by business and pharmaceutical fra ternities and is designed to stress the opportunities that exist in bus iness today. LOST A black leather w-allct was lost recently in the vicinity of Winston Dormitory. Finder please call Ed McDonald, 216 Winston. CONCERT SERIES TICKETS Tickets for next year's "The Friends Of The College" concert Series in Raleigh, which will fea ture performances by The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, The Hun garian Symphony and Van Cliburn, are now available. Students interested in obtaining tickets for the seven-concert se ries should contact either Anne Queen, at the YWCA office, or Harry Day, at 102 Joyner immed iately. Ticket sales will end soon and post-campaign memberships will not be available. The cost is S7 for the series. BRIEFS Ar iz & trip last year and made another journey to Mexico. Both involved U.S. interest in the Alliance for Progress program. Mrs. Kennedy, who made such a hit on the trips to Venezuela, Colombia and Mexico, will not go to Costa Rica. The following representatives were absent from Thursday's ses sion: Bill tBowerman (UP, TM 4); Roy Kirk (UP, TM 3); Fred Ka- din (SP, DM 3); Bill Waumetl (SP, TM 4); Harry DeLung (UP TM 4); David Henry (UP, TM 3) and Gordon Shapiro (UP, TM 3) Friday Performs iive Role In Faculty Varieties President William C. Friday will fall asleep while sitting be for the fireplace, watching tele vision. His "dreams" on the TV screen will be presented in a comedv va riety show by the Junior Class Thursday, March 21 at 8 D.m. in Memorial Hall. Flashing on the video screen will be well-known TV-show char acters, such as Paladin. Marshall Matt Dillon, Drs. Kildare and Ben Casey, and a host of others. Student script writers will nic- ture the TV personalities as prom inent faculty members and ad ministrators in the University. Among faculty appearing m the show are Chancellor William B. Aycock, former Chancellor Rob ert B. House, Prof. Charles Hen derson, dean of student affairs; Dean of Women Katherine Car michael. Prof. J. Penrose Har land, Dean of Men William Long and others. SP Endorses 40 For Race In Legislature CORRECTION: The Student Par ty has endorsed the following 40 candidates for student legislature seats: Bob Smith, Clark Brewer and George Rosental, in Dorm Men's I; Phil Baddour, Jack Harrell and Lanny Shuff, in Dorm Men's II; Charles Lefler, Gordon Appell, Fred Kadin and Doug Freeman, in Dorm Men's HI; Arthur Hayes and Hugo Spechar, in Dorm Men's IV; Neal Jackson, and John At kins, in Dorm Men's V; Bill Straughn, Martin Lancaster and Harvey Kline, in Dorm Men's VI; and Hugh Blackwell, Frank Hall, Dennis Mayers and Chuck Down town, in Dorm Men's VII. From the women's dorm dis tricts are: Judy Anapol and Eve lyn Morris, in Dorm Women's I; Mary Gray Teague and Linda Cog dill, in Dorm Women's II; Judy lyson ana carol ivia&nburn, in Dorm Yv omens III; and Bambi Ainsley and Juddy Merritt, in Dorm Women's IV. In the town districts: Hugh Stev ens, Paul Chused and Bill Mitten dorf, in Town Men's III; Bill Bow erman, Danny Edwards, Rufus Edminsten, Johnny Getsinger and George Newsome, m Town Men's IV; and Linda Colvard, Beth Walk er and Barbara Mansfield, the Town Women's district. No candidates have been en dorsed yet for Town Men's Districts One and Two. UPI Wire Servic Vote Volunteers Held Not Sufficient For Top Strength WASHINGTON (UPI) The Sen ate approved by voice vote Friday tour-year extension of the mili tary draft law, the first major bill of the present session to be sent to the White House. The Senate action followed a brief speech by Sen. Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., influential chair man of the Senate Armed Services Committee, who said continuation of the law was of "vital necessity to our defense posture." Russell said the Defense Depart ment cannot rely on voluntary en- lstments to keep the armed forces up to strength and no one has pro posed a "fair and satisfactory" sub stitute for the draft. The bill, which ran into minor opposition in the House by some who favored a two-year extension rather than four years was passed almost routinely by the Senate in contrast to the early days of the program when it was a matter of major debate. The measure would extend the draft to July 1, 1967. It makes qualified males between the ages of 18 and 26 years liable to two years of military service. The Army expects to draft about 76,000 men this year. The law is also- considered a stimulus to en listments in the army and the other services. The bill also would: Suspend for another four years the ceilings on the size of the armed services. The restrictions have been dropped regularly since 1950, the year the Korean War be gan. -Extend for four years the gov ernment's authority to draft physi cians and dentists. The Pentagon expects to call 1,300 doctors in the fiscal year beginning July 1, but may reduce this quota if enough physicians volunteer. Extend authority for special pay for the doctors and dentists. Extend authority to increase the quarters allowances of enlisted men with dependents in the lower pay grades who allot a portion of their own pay. The only opposition to the bill came after its passage from Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore. Morse, en route to Costa Rica with the President, got Sen. Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., to offer a state ment asserting that Morse would have voted with "real regret" against the four year extension be cause there was no opportunity to vote on a two-year bill. Wesley Players Give Dennis Play t Duke Tonight The Wesley Players are present ing Nigel Dennis' "Cards of Iden tity" at the Duke Methodist Stu dent Center in Durham this week. The play is a bitter laugh-filled account of members of the Iden tity Club an organization devoted to the principle that none of us knows who he is. Dennis has received less atten tion in this country than the angry young John Osborne and the angry young Kingsley Amis. Like many of the now-not-so-young "angries," Dermis spent some time in the United States before returning to England to continue his work. "Cards of Identity" was first published as a novel and received enthusiastic praise from W. H. Auden and other noted critics. The author's dramatic adaptation achieved a remarkable reproduc tion of his irreverent, meaningful book. A large and exceptionally talented cast has been assembled under the direction of Richard Dozier, featur ing Lola Powers Kramer and Caro lina Playmaker Bob Ma lone, who just appeared in the Rhinoceros. Remaining performances are scheduled for this afternoon at five o'clock and tonight at eight o'clock. Tickets are one dollar each and may be obtained at the door. The Methodist Student Center is located on Oregon Ave., off Myrtle Dr. in Durham,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 16, 1963, edition 1
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