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CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 3, 1963
United Press International Service
hp
By
outh Carolina
eels
Strip
.Edge
92
Christmas Parade Starts
Holiday Season At UNC
The Merchants Association's
Christmas Parade will open the
Christmas shopping season in
: Chapel Hill and Carrboro this
afternoon. The parade will
start at 5:30 at the corner of
Greensboro and Main Streets in
Carrboro, and will proceed down
Main Street and Franklin Street
in Chapel Hill, ending at the
Morehead Planetarium.
The parade will be without
some units which had originally
planned to participate. A Defense
Department communique last
week ordered all armed forces
units not to participate in any
public displays or parades "not
in the immediate interests of the
defense of the nation" during the
official 30-day period of mourn-
Arndt Takes
Poetry Prize
The Bollingen Prize for the
best translation of poetry into
English has been awarded to
Dr. Walter Arndt, associate pro
fessor of Russian at the Univer
sity
Previously awarded to such
noted poets as Ezra Pound, Con-
DR. WALTER ARNDT
rad Aiken, Marianne Moore and
W. H. Auden, the 1963 award
of $2,500 will be divided between
Dr. Arndt and Richard P. Wilbur
of Wesleyan University.
Dr. Arndt was honored for his
translation of Pushkin's "Eugene
Onegin," a narrative in poetry,
published this year by E. P. Dut
ton & Co., Inc., New York. Mr.
Wilbur received the award for
his translations from French of
Moliere's "Tartuffe" and "Le
Misanthrope," published this
year and in 1955, respectively,
by Harcourt, Brace & World.
' T ? "jt" " Iv t
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BIG KEN WELLARD, Carolina's All-Conference fullback, is
brought down by unidentified Dook linebacker after picking op
live yards and a first down in the annual clash Thursday. Willard
ing for the late President John
F. Kennedy.
As a result, University Air
Force and Naval ROTC units will
not take part in the parade as
they have in the past. The two
ROTC units would have contribut
ed their color guard, drill team,
and drum and bugle corps.
But three other bands and
various floats and other units
will take part.
The theme of the parade will
be Christmas in nursery rhymes.
The nursery rhyme atmosphere
will be created by Frank Cain's
Attractions, a group of about 40
giant caricature heads of nursery
rhyme characters, with costumes
to match, which will' be brought
to Chapel Hill by Mr. Cain and
filled by members of the Chapel
Hill Y-Teens. Mr. Cain's character-heads
and costumes have been
used in many nationally famous
parades such as the Mummers
Parade in Philadelphia, Mardi
Gras in New Orleans, and Macy's
Christmas Parade in New York.
Other units to take part in the
parade include the Lincoln High
School Band, bands from South
ern and Northern High Schools
in Durham, Anita Wilkinson's
Strutters from Durham, the Dunn
Clowns from Dunn, a Brownie
unit from the First Baptist
Church, a horse and buggy by
Chapel Hill dressmaker Nancy
Riley, Elves entered by the Junior
Service League, the Chapel Hill
Recreation Department Baton
Corps, two Chapel Hill Fire De
partment engines (one very old,
one very new), two Civil Air Pa
trol vehicles, and floats spon
sored by Beta Sigma Phi Sorori
ty, Long Meadow Dairy, and
Croft Business College of Dur
ham. The Merchants Association will
sponsor the Santa Claus float,
and Miss Orange County, Ann
Clayton of Hillsboro, will ride in
a convertible.
NEGRO PROTEST DISCUSSED
Dr. Thomas F. Pettigrew of
Harvard University will speak
; on "The Psychological Meaning
of Negro American Protest" at
a meeting of the North Carolina
Psychological Association here
on Dec. 7.
Other participants in the meet
t ing will be John Wheeler, presi
dent of Mechanics and Farmers
Bank, Durham, and Gen. Capus
f Waynick, the Governor's Special
Representative for Civil Rights
' Affairs.
, Dr. Roy Sommerfield, assoc
' iate professor of education at
UNC and program chairman for
the N. C. Psychological Associa
tion, will moderate the program.
Exodus To Gator
Indicated By Sales
By TOMMY BAYSDEN and
LADDY BAUCOM
If gale warnings are out be
tween North Carolina and Flor
ida on Dec. 27 and 28, it prob
bably won't be a hurricane
that causes them.
Chances are that the gusts
will come from a gigantic tail
wind, created by thousands of
North Carolinians and UNC
UNC Student
Is Stabbed
A University student has been
committed for psychiatric exam
ination in connection with the
allegedly pre-meditated stabbing
of a fellow student Nov. 25.
The victim, Joseph D. Renfro,
told Chapel Hill Police that he
kept an appointment to meet the
other student beneath the Univer
sity Bell Tower about 6:30 p.m.
Almost immediately, the other
boy, whose name is being with
held pending the examination,
asked him what he knew about
astronomy, told him to look up
at the Milky Way and then stab
bed him with a pocket knife.
Police Chief William Blake re
ported that the student involved
voluntarily came to the Chapel
Hill Police station later the same
night and admitted his acts.
Renfro, a 23 year old student
from Mountain Home, said that
he became acquainted with his
assailant at supper in Lenior Din
ing Hall Sunday night. They be
gan a discussion which they
agreed to meet and continue the
following night.
Renfro said that the student
drew a knife, he saw what was
happening in time to move so
that the stab did not hit him
directly.
He jumped a hedge surrounding
the Bell Tower and ran from his
attacker. He was treated for his
wound at Memorial Hospital and
was released the next day.
The police chief said that the
assailant told police he had no
rpecial explanation for his attack,
but that he had purchased the
knife because he "had the desire
to kill somebody."
WEINSTEIN LECTURES
The Rosa B. Weinstein Memo
rial Lectures will be delivered
this year by Rabbi B.. Boro
witz, professor of education at
the New York School of Hebrew
Union College Jewish Insti
tute of Religion.
"Faith and Reason" is the
theme of the talks which will be
delivered Sunday and Monday,
Dec. 15 and 16, at 8 p.m. in
Howell Hall Auditorium.
picked up 68 yards rushing to lead
Cole Kortner (79) and Jerry Cabe
students en route to the Gator
Bowl in Jacksonville.
Preparations for the expect
ed mass exodus have been
underway since Thanksgiving
Day, wfien the Tar Heels de
feated Duke, 16-14, and accepted
their first bowl bid since 1950.
Tickets for the game went on
sale . Monday morning, and a
substantial line had formed at
the ticket office before the
window opened. By 10:30 hun
dreds had already been sold,
many students buying several
at a time.
"I wouldn't miss this one for
a million dollars," said one
Carolina student. "It would be
a great trip even without the
game."
"My whole fraternity is plan
ning to go," said Rex Sauls, a
senior from Garner. "We might
even charter a bus or some
thing. Everybody's really up in
the air about this one."
Joe Mummaw , senior from
Lancaster, Pa. said, "I'm driv
ing 2,000 miles to see Carolina
win again."
Many students will undoubt
edly make the trip in automo
biles and several trains are ex
pected to be chartered in var
ious parts of the state. "Gator
Bowl Specials," to leave from
Rocky Mount and Wilmington,
have alread y been chartered.
Reservations are filling up
rapidly.
Carolina has never won a
bowl game and the possibilities
offered at Jacksonville leave
the whole state buzzing. Tele
phones ring constantly in the
football office, as coaches and
secretaries scurry to and fro in
an effort to answer all the
questions.
"The team itself will derive
much spirit, morale, and drive
from this type of student en
thusiasm," said Asst. Coach
Emmett Cheek. "Student sup
port affects the way the boys
play. We've had real good sup
port all year long."
GATOR BOWL TICKETS
Tickets to the Gator Bowl, to
be played between UNC and a
yet-to-be-named opponent in
Jacksonville, Fla., on Saturday,
Dec. 28, are now on sale at the
Woollen Gym ticket office.
These tickets sell for $6 each.
They are available to students,
employees, alumni and the gen
eral public.
About 12,000 tickets have been
made available. All orders must
be by Dec. 14, but those interest
ed should purchase tickets im
mediately as a sell-out is fore
seeable. Mail orders should be address
ed: UNC Athletic Association,
Box 930. No telephone orders
will be accepted.
both squads in the aerial battle,
(68) lead the blocking.
Photo by Bill Sparrow
I
1
Where's He Going?
(See Story Page 4)
eview
To Be
By HUGH STEVENS
And JOHN GREENBACKER
A series of debates concerning
the abolition of the Student-Faculty
Review Board by the Faculty
Committee on Student Discipline
will begin tonight in University
living quarters.
Members of the UNC debating
team will visit residence halls,
fraternities, and sororities to
hold discussions on the action, in
order that the student body might
be better informed on the contro
versial situation.
The debates were arranged
through the cooperation of the
debate team with faculty, admin
istration, and student government
officials. Members of the team
will use material given them by
faculty and student government,
forming negative and affirmative
teams to present ihe discussions.
Haywood Clayton, president of
the debate team, said that this
will mark the first occasion that
the team, which is under the
direct jurisdiction of student
government, has been used in a
campus activity of this sort.
"The function of the debate
team," he said, "will be to pre
sent the facts. We shall discuss
the issues as fairly as possible."
UNC Symphony
Plays Tonight
The University Symphony Or
chestra will present its annual
fall concert tonight at 8 o'clock
in Hill Music Hail. Now in its
18th season under conductor Earl
Slocum, the 80-piece orchestra is
made up of students, faculty, and
townspeople.
Featured work of the program
will be Gustav Hoist's orchestral
suite "The Planets." Each of the
planets' mythological connections
is musically illustrated in separ
ate movements, concluding wit'i
"Neptune, the Mystic" whose
music calls for an off-stage wo
men's choir which sings with the
orchestra. A 33-voice choir, un
der the direction of Wayne Zarr,
will be heard in toaights per
formance. As a tribute to the late Walter
Golde of New York and Chapel
Hill, the orchestra will perform
Golde's setting of "Psalm XXIII"
with Joel Carter as baritone so
loist. Wagner's Prelude to "Tristan
and Isolde" and Massenet's Over
ture, to "Phedre" will complete
the program.
v The University Symphony is be
ing sponsored by the Tuesday
Evening Series of the UNC De
partment of Music. Admission
to all Series concerts is free.
11
uecisioii
Debated
Mike Lawler, student body
president, initiated the idea for
the debate series because "stu
dents have indicated their con
cern in this situation and we
felt that they should be better in
formed as to the facts surround
ing the decision."
Lawler cited the numerous let
ters to the DTI I, the passage of
a resolution by student legisla
ture, and the introduction of bills
which would have abolished the
student judiciary system as ex
amples of student reaction to the
committee's decision.
"These debates," Lawler said,
"are a means to convey factual
information to the student body
so that they mignt share the con
cern of student leaders."
"I am extremely concerned
about this unilaterial action on
the part of the Faculty ommmit
tee and I believe that student
government is committed to take
necessary steps to reaffirm the
principles which deline the Faculty-Administration-Student
rela
tionship," he said.
Bob Spearman, student body
vice-president, said "I hope the
debates will be an elective med
ium to present the issues that are
at stake to the student body and
to stimulate further discussion of
the faculty's abolition of the Student-Faculty
Review Board. I
would urge all those who can to
attend the debate when it is pre
sented in their place cf resi
dence." Louis M. Bourne, Editor of The
Carolina Quarterly, announced
yesterday the business staff is
offering a 15 per cent commission
cn all subscriptions sold to any
one who is interested in selling
the Quarterly for the coming
year.
"We need the job done quick
ly," Bourne said. "The Winter is
sue is corning out Monday and we
have to liave a larger cash base
tc work with. Since the Student
Legislature has granted us finan
cial support in order to pay the
15 commission we hope a lot of
salesmen will show up. It's a good
way to make a fast buck. It only
takes about tw o hours a night and
you can cover a lot of dorms . if
you don't stop to palaver with
triends."
All applicants are requested to
come by the Quarterly office be
tween 2:00 and 4:30 pjn. and
speak with Anne Greene, Business
Manager, or call her at S6S-S304.
Billy Scores 25
In Season Opener
By CURRY KIRKPATRICK
The .scare was for real here last night, for UNC had
to run shaky in the last five minutes of an opening 92
87 ACC victory over South Carolina.
A packed Woollen Gym house watched and then had
to yell as the scrappy Gamecocks turned what was be
coming a rout into a breathless finish before finally
succumbing to a Tar Heel team which was not itself for
much of the final period.
About 5,000 appeared for the 1963-G1 opener, and
they got their thrill's worth, due largely to UNC's er
rors late in the second half. Close to nine minutes re
mained when two slick plays and subsequent baskets
by Mike Cooke gave Carolina an 81-62 lead its largest
of the evening.
But here South Carolina began
to cash in on hustling second ef
forts it had been displaying all
night. The Gamecocks, with
Coach Chuck Noe signalling from
the bench and directing their de
liberate play, outscored UNC, 18
3. in the next six minutes to
Lewis Hits 51
For Record
InFroshWin
By JOHN MONTAGUE
Hot-shooting Bobby Lewis set
an all-time school record of 51
points Monday night as he led
the Tar Babies to a 111-65 rout
of the Elon Jayvees.
The Washington, D. C. pistol
received a thunderous ovation
from the partisan Woollen Gym
crowd when he left the game
with 1:05 left in the contest which
was no contest.
The UNC frosh got off to a
. slow stottand irailed.the, visitors
from Burlington, ' 11-7, with 16
minutes left in the first period.
But the Tar Babies caught fire
then. They tied the score at 11-11
with 15:23 left.
Moments later Tom Gauntlett
drove in for a lay-up and con
nected on a free throw to com
plete the three point play. This
put Ken Roseman's men in front
14-11 and from then on it was
all UNC.
Billy Freuler and Lewis hit
back-to-back shots to stretch the
advantage to 18-11. With 4:20
left, Lewis, who hit on 17 of 29
from the floor and 17 cf 21 from
he line, dunked a tap-in as the
T-B3bies doubled the E!on count,
43-21.
The sparkling fresh worked the
ball well all night, but it was
rheir red-hot attack on the nets
which most pleased the opening
game spectators.
Freuler, a product of Tar
boro, was the No. 2 man in the
point column with 21 points
Gauntlett finished the night
with 17, and Ian Morrison, who
like Lewis was a high school
All-America, came in with 10.
The latter's ebility as a play
maker brightens UNC's ' back
court future.
The 51-point production hv
Lewis broke the UNC mark of
47, set by Lennie Rosenbiuth in
a 1957 varsity skirmish with
Furman.
Lewis was also the Tar Babies
big man under the boards,
Crabbing 22 rebounds. The 6-3
jackrabbit was called three
times on goal-tending.
The Tar Babies, who led the
Doug Moe-coached Eloners at
the half, 54-28, surpassed the
century mark when "little bro
ther" Donnie Moo hit on a field
goal with two minutes left.
Mayor. Smith
To Address
Cosmo Club
Chapel IL1I Mayor Sandy Mc
Clamroch and County Ccrnmis
sioner Carl Smith will tell of ex
periences on their recent "people-to-people"
trip to Russia and
other Iron Curtain countries in
a public meeting tonight.
The program at 8 p.m. in How
ell Hall will be sponsored by the
Cosmopolitan Club, bmith ano i
McCIamroch participated in the
20-iay trip sponsored by the N.C.
Association of County Commis
sioners. Both took part in the "People-
to-People Goodwill Tour" by 33
North Carolina public officials
to several cities in Europe. The
tour was led by Alex McMahon
of Chapel Hill. Those who went
paid their own way about $1,500
for the whole trip.
pull within four points and send
lot of gay hearts jumping.
Big center John Gorsage hit a
free throw, Ronnb Collins ackled
two of his own and Jimmy Col
lins converted a fast break for a
five-point string. Billy Cunning
ham momentarily halted the ral
ly with a foul shot, but USC came
back with seven straight cn a
jump by Ronnie Collins and five
straight points by the other of
the Collins.
It was 82-74 and When UNC's
Ray Respess hit a jumper, the
margin was ten. But Gorsage,
Ronnie Collins, then Jimmy Col
lins, again on a steal and fast
break pared the lead to four at
84-80, and there were three min
utes plus left.
Tar Heel Coach Dean Smith
called time and decided to look
the situation over. Cunningham,
whose first effort this year pro
duced 25 points, was called n
to control the ball once more. He
did, bringing the ball down, then
going inside to take feeds and
then pass off to the free man.
UNC
FG
15-11
13-3
20-9
0- 0
5- 4
1- 1
6- 4
0-0
0-0
60-37
FG
24-7
4-2
FT Iteb TP
9-3 - 17 25
4 Cunningham
Cooke
Respess
Galantai
Shaffer
McSweeney
Bennett
Brown
R. Hassell
TotasI
4-4
4-4
0- 0
1- 1
1- 1
4-3
2- 2
0-0
2
11
2
3
0
8
0
0
20
22
0
9
3
11
2
0
92
18
USC
It. Collins
Schroeder
Fox
Lucansky
Yarborough
J. Collins
Gorsage
Totals
FT Krb TP
4- 3
3- 2
2-1
1-1
5- 3
4- 3
4-2
o
2
3
4
10
2
1
27
17
6
5
3
10
20
8
87
5-2
5- 1
13-3
22-13
6- 3
79-36 23-13
Score at half: UNC 49. USC 41
This resulted in Cooke's long
jumper ( 86-80 1, ani when Jimmy
Collins charged sub guard Bill
Brown, the latter's two free shots
finally broke the Chickens' backs
(88-80).
USC's Bill Yarborcugh re
bunded a goal, but Cunningham
netted a patented twisting jump
er with 1:45 remaining. Ray Res
pess, on a feed from Billy Galan
tai, scored the Heels' final bas
ket 92-82), and South Carolina's
last five points were just panic
measures.
Cunningham, he exciting one,
didn't waste much of the new
season in showing why UNC is
supposed to be a contender for
the conference tilc. But he's "ty
ing to need the he! he got kTst
night (from Cooke and Kckik'ss)
through the whole season if the
Tar Heels are going to make a
threatening gesture.
The kid, with 10 'early points
got the Tar Heels off to a quick
seven-point lead after fjvo min
utes were gone. bt:t ball-handlin
errors and unjustified .shots pre
vented them from holdin" it
From 16-9. South Carolina
scored eight straight o;1 jumpers
r-y John Shroeder, Bill Yarbor
ough and Ronnie Collins 2)
sround two free 4hrows hv Yar
borouch. Collins' second hit gave
the Gamecock. the lead at 17-16
Cunningham's short jumr-r
roucht UNC back and when
S-a for took a fast break frnm
Cooke, n was 20-17 But bis Jim
Fox scored on a Iavun and Col
bns canned a free shot for the
The teams wrnt like that f:'l
out throo minutes were left in
the period. Leading 36-35. Caro
lina cot four straight baskets
from Bennett. Shaffer, Repress
and Cooke, all on short jnrms
"rt nice feeds, to go into a 44
35 lead.
Jimmy CrKins and Yar
borough cut it to five, but Res
press layup matched Collins'
jumper, and Eennett tank a
free throw and then a long
jumper from the rebound of
his missed second free throw to
give UNC its 48-41 halftime margin.