SaturdayAprH 13, -1964 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pa pre 3 Jin nn , "v xaIm r Continued From Page 1) disagree with thfeir position." irMCA Director Claude Shotts be did not object to the GtfMwater bar.ner on the build ing and added, "You can put any Sisvii up as far as I'm concern- $h& controversy erupted early ffciday morning . when Rick Ed 5rards, VAICA President, and Hiki Nicholson went to the room 0$ th second floor of the Y building which is being used as jj " ' -- - 1 j. . wfcrf,,, Wv,- J . S-a i s. 4 , i - w vi., . ii, v4vu0 "lf" " "' ''""'"'i 'fti'i "it i') rivi i" i'ifi''i'"i'ii i i 1 1 ' i i i;.,;-! Yi irf i Viiir . i ij ''i ; Exam Schedule Hie time of an examination may not be changed after it has been fixed in the schedule. Quizzes are not to be given in this semester 3n or after Wednesday, May 30. Prior to taking examination to remove a grade of "Exc. Abs." or "Cond." a permit must be secured by the student from the Office of Records and Registration. All 8 a.m. classes on MWF Wed., May 20 8:30 a.m. All 11 a.m. classes on TThS Wed., May 202:00 a.m. All Fren., Germ., Span., & Russ., courses No'd 1, 2, 3, 3x & 4 Thur., May 218:30 a.m. All 10 a.m. classes on MWF Thur., May 21 2:00 p.m. All 11 a.m. classes on MWF Fri., May 228:30 a.m. All 1 & 1:30 p.m. classes on . MWF & Pol. Sci. 41, Fri., May 222:00 p.m. All 10 a.m. classes on TThS Sat., May 238:30 a.m. All 2 p.m. classes on TThS, Phar 30, BA 71 & 72 Sat., May 232:00 p.m. All 3 p.m. classes, all classes not otherwise provided for in this schedule Phys 25 & Astr. 31 Mon., May 258:30 a.m. All 8 a.m. classes on TThS Mon., May 252:00 p.m. All 12 noon classes on MWF Tues., May 26 8:30 a.m. All 2 p.m. classes on MWF? Econ 61 & 70. .Tues., May 262:00 p.m. All 9 a.m. classes on TThS . Wed., May 278:30 a.m. All 12 noon classes on TThS, All Naval Sci ence and Air Science Wed., May 272:00 p.m. All 9 a.m. classes on MWF Thur., May 288:30 a.m. All 1 & 1:30 p.m. classes on TThS, BA 150 Thur., May 282:00 p.m. Instructors teaching classes scheduled for common examinations shall request the students in these classes to report to them any con flict with any other examination not later than April 22. In case of a conflict, the regularly scheduled exam will take precedence over the common exam. (Common exams are indicated by an asterisk.) Otelia (Continued from Page 1) aiend 15 minutes of sit-up exercises every day to strengthen the 5ack muscles." Otelia said she has had a couple of embarassing events dur ing her good manners crusade. "One day, a nun put her tray on my table. Automatically, I corrected her. It just popped out. When I see something wrong, I just have to correct it." Otelia has become quite an integral part of campus life here. She was asked and eventually joined a campus political party. She has her name listed on the official student roster. She has audited several courses. The only thing she hasn't been able to Secure is a students' pass book. "If I'm going to write about these things," she said, "I ought la be able to get in them free of charge. I'm still working on that.- Otelia said that since she began her good manners crusade, several years ago, she has had to be doubly careful about her own manners. 'I feel like I'm in a glass cage all the time," she said. "I know that people are watching me and trying to catch me doing something wrong. They want to get something on me because I'm always getting something on them. "Don't get me wrong," she declared. "I'm not trying to criti cise everybody. Far from it. I'm trying to get the students to go out of the University as good ambassadors. People expect college students to go out into the world with good manners. "I think the students realize this, too, and I also believe that most of them realize that I'm only trying to help therru" Mississippi Jury Deadlocked Again In By AL KUETTNER JACKSON, MISS. (UPI) A Circuit Court jury deadlocked at i to 4 for acquittal Friday and a Qiistrial was declared for the second time in the case of By un De La Beckwith, charged 'ith the ambush slaying of Ne gro leader Medgar Evers. "No sir," the jurors one by 3ne told Circuit Judge Leon Hendrick when he asked them individually if they felt they ould come to a unanimous de cision. Hendrick promptly declared the mistrial, the same action he took in February when another iJl - white jury deadlocked 6-6 No! :Yes! mof.&es! No! .... -Battle Over Banner- Gold water headquarters for the convention, and told a student working there that the banner must come down. Edwards said, "It has been the policy of the Y in the past not to display poli tical banners, rod I think we should attempt to remain non partisan." Friday afternoon, Supervisor of Operations John Bennett sent a University employee , to the Y building to ' take the " banner xiown. After a call to Dean Long Trial Of in its deliberation of the case. Hendrick said later Beckwith's case would be continued until the May term of court. This is automatic in the case of crim inal cases. Within 30 minutes of the deci sion, bond for the 43-year-old white . fertilizer salesman was set at $10,000. Defense attorney i Hardy Lott said he did not know when the bond would be posted with the Hinds County sberriff. , ' District " "Attorney William Waller said he would not oppose the release of Beckwith, who has been jailed since his arrest last June. The 12 white men had delib erated 10 hours since receiving hoto by Jim Wallace by a Goldwater partisan, the employee left without disturb , ing the Goldwater sign. ' Bennett said he did not know that the banner was being used in connecicn with the Mock Poli tical Convention which is an auth orized University function. How ever, both Dean Long and Ben nett stipulated that the sign must come down after the convention is over Saturday night. And so, the Arizona Senator's banner, at last report, still hangs from the Y building. Student Shot (Continued from Page 1) student in question." Rauchfuss lived in Ru'fin Hall first semester. He moved into the Phi Gam House second se mester. One of his best friends there was John Hughes. "I thought he was somewhere in Florida looking for a job. Are you sure this happened at Myrtle Beach?" Hughes asked. Police Move To New Quarters The 24-member Chapel Hill po lice force has moved out of its congested three-room quarters into greatly expanded and re modeled offices on four leves of the Chapel Hill Town Hall. The newly completed, bond financed $40,000 project for re modeling the Town Hall gave the police force almost all of the area formerly occupied ; by the fire station. Through a com plete rebuilding of the area the department was able to expand into much-needed quarters. Police Chief W. D. Blake took the Chapel Hill aldermen on a formal tour of the new facilities following their Monday night meeting. He said a public open house is planned in the near future to show off the station. On the main floor of the Town Hall is the chief's office, which now occupies almost all of the area taken up by the depart ment previously. Adjoining is the traffic clerk's office and public reception room. Walled off in one corner is a radio operator's room. The jail area in the basement was re modeled to provide for a book ng room, so that prisoners would not have to be brought through through the main area of the building. In the former engine room of the fire station offices have been built for Capt. C. E. Durham, Detective Sgt.. Howard Pender graph, the Orange County sher iff's deputies assigned to Chapel Hill, parking meter patrolman E. B. Cozart, a public waiting room, storage room, police photo darkroom, and an arms vault. Above, on a newly created floor level, is an assembly room, locker room, interrogation room (featuring one-way glass so that suspects can be viewed (unde tected by witnesses), and an of fice for each of the three shifts on the force. Beckwith the case Thursday. In Beck with's first trial the jury stayed out eleven hours and one min ute. " There is nothing in Mississip pi law to prevent the 43-year-old Beckwith mernher of an old-line Southern family, from being tried a third time on. the same charges, but there was speculation prior to the verdict that if another mistrial was de clared the entire case might be dropped in the inactive file. The verdict was returned at 11:35 a.m. CST and two hours later Beckwith was set free and was rushed from the jail in a car driven by Sheriff Fred Picketf .Hold The political spectrum will stai maintain a top spot over the weekend as two Democratic gubernatorial hopefuls host ycuth rallies in Raleigh. Youthful political forces will stage separate rallies for two of the major Democratic gub ernatorial candidates. Dan K. Mocre and L. Richardson Preyer will appear at the respective rallies which are being sponsor ed by various youth groups backing each candidate. Bus loads of supporters will leave the campus early this afternoon Preyer's at 12:30 p.m. from the Morehead Plane tarium and Moore's at 1 p.m. ftrcm Woollen Gym. Tonight, the political factions will join forces for the annual Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner, which is expected to attract hundreds of North Carolina Dem ocrats to Memorial Hall. Officials estimate that 1,400 Democrats would pay $50 per plate to ' hear Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La.) the evening's principal speaker. On Tuesday of next week, L. Richardson Preyer will address a joint meeting of the Orange County YDC and the UNC Dem- Banquet Opens International Student Week The International Students' Board, the Cosmopolitan Club, the YWCA, and the Men's Resi dence Council have combined to make this week "International Student Emphasis Week." The purpose of the week's ac tivities are to make more stu dents aware of the cosmopolitan nature of the UNC campus. The ISE Week formally begins to night at six o'clock with the "International Night Banquet," sponsored by the Cosmopolitan Club. This dinner annually at tracts hundreds of. students, both foreign and American. On Tuesday, April 21, a folk group, The Echoes, will perform at the Hillel Foundation at 8:00 pjn. These performers are well known artists from Israel, spon sored by the United States Na tional Students Association. Wednesday, April 22, the In ternational Students Board will be selling cookies in the lobby of the "Y" in order to raise funds to support the Chilean il literacy campaign. A daily forum will be conducted in the DTH by foreign students in at tendance at UNC. Jim Fulwood and the Men's Residence Council have scheduled meetings with foreign students and the dormi tory residents. Kellis Parker, chairman of the the International Students' Board said that "UNC . has failed to make foreign students feel that they are a real and significant part of the University commun ity. Our great injustice, to the students is that we are ignoring them. This situation is irritated by the fact that the University is expanding in area and num bers. Concomitantly, the number of foreign students at the Uni versity is increasing by leaps and bounds. The International Student Emphasis Week is de signed to make students aware of their responsibility to integrate foreign students into normal cam pus life." Car Wash They're at it again. Yes, friends, the Stray Greeks will sponsor another car wash today from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m. at Barclay's Texaco Station, beside the Carolina Theater. Last week's car wash was such a success that Susan Zehmer talked the rest of the girls into doing it again. But it's all for a worthy cause the Chile Litera cy League. KELSO Man's $35.00 lady's 35.00 (Two-Tone J For 8 Lovely styles of the finest quality. tthrfe4 to dw tleta& " faces include FcdcRlT T. J. KEMP JEWELERS 135 E. Franklin St. fluff of ik I 4 Rail ocrats to be held at 8 p.m. in Carroll Hall. Bill Carfrey of Greensboro, district coordinator of the Prey er campaign, said the public is invited both to the speech, and to an hiforrr.al reception in Gra ham Memorial following' the ad- State Drama Festival Ends Today The final three sessions of the Carolina Dramatic Association's 41st annual state drama festival will be held today and tonight in the Playmakers Theatre. At 10:30 a.m., three one-acts "The Lesson," "The Friend" and "The. Accident" will be present ed "Christ in the Concrete City," "The Workhouse Ward," 'This Property is Condemned" and "Suppressed Desires" will begin at 2:30 p.m. "Swan Song," "Gloria Mundi" and "The Potboiler" will close the day starting at 7:30. Tickets for the performances, at 50c per session, will be on sale at the Playmakers box of fice one hour prior to each ses sion. Presentation of awards will follow the final performance. Republican Candidate Opposes Ban GREENSBORO (UPD State Rep. Donald Badgley, one of three Rpublican candidates for governor, proposed Thursday that North Carolina's Communist speaker-ban law be revised to meet the state's immediate needs. "A true conservative will take the good out of the past, build on it and then progress," said Badgley, from Guilford County. "I think the present law could be gotten rid of and the 1941 speaker-ban amended to meet our contemporary needs." The present law, passed by the 1963 General Assembly, pro-v hibits' known Communists or' Communist sympathizers from speaking on the campuses of state-supported colleges and uni versities. The 1941 law banned speakers who advocate the vio lent overthrow of the federal or state governments . ACROSS 1. Forward 5. Cuckoos 9. Serious 10. Real estate returns 12. Pert, to sheep 13. Iron or steel 14. West .Indies: aibr. 15. Holy Land city 17. Plexus 18. Conclude 20. Slope 22. Regret 23. Profound 25. Ball of medicine 27. A coastal recess 29. French coin 30. Become entangled, as ropes: ' riant. S3. Japanese ; shrubs 36. Perform 37. Call for j help by ' code 29. Epoch 40. Peruse 42. Shooting marble 44. City train. 45. Hiawatha's boat 47.Big 49. A journal . GO. Farewea 4 61. Dotted wia 52. University officer DOWN 1. Pert, to a cot 2. Geisha girl's sash 3. Furnish temporarily 4. Fear 5. Fortify 6. Never: poet. 7. Short humorous play 8. Sculptured likeness 9. Planted, as seed 11. Driving ice and rain 16. Pinch Calendar . TODAY j Westminster Fellowship 2 p.m., j Presbyterian Student Center, ' ,wcrk party on church grounds, i .The Undergraduate Library and Newspaper Room will be open until 12 p.m. tonight and next Saturday. Students are en couraged to make use of this space. CU Student Council 4:30 p.m Elliott Hall, Greensboro, will cpnsider WC's CU Day. . Keys Combo 8-12 p.m., GIL Cosmopolitan Club International Night 6 p.m., Presbyterian Student Center. LOST AND FOUND Found Walter E. Williams High School ring, contact John Walker, 315 Teague. Lo t lady's gold Hamiljcn watch between Gym and New ', East, contact Marie Forbes; 111 Whitehead, 968-9066.' ..'. Found pair of men's black horn-rimmed glasses,' ask . for them at Spencer '' reception desk. Lost air of black rimmed glass es, contact Wayne Cole at 209 Graham, 968-9159. Found lady's wrist watch at Symposium, claim at GM in formation desk. SUNDAY Canterbury 5:30 p.m., evening prayer, 6 p.m., suDper to be followed bv a talk by Dr. Claiborne Jones, "Science and . Christianity." Annual Wesley Lectures 8 p.m., Gerrard Hall, James M. ' Dabbs. "Plight of the Southern Christian." Petite Musicale 8 p.m., GM Lounge, Herbert Albis, 1st violinist,- Augusta String Quartet. Westminster Fellowship 5 p.m., Presbyterian Student Center, cars leave for program at Duke. APO Brothers & Pledges 1:30 p.m., Smith basement, bring student directories and pens. Slides of past trips of Caving Clim;bing Club 1. p.m.,. up stairs Lenoir, also slides of Virgin Islands, Panama, Puer to Rico, public is invited. CLASSIFIED ADS (52) J LOST: MAN'S CLASS RING, reading "Columbia College, 1957," in library during spring vacation. If found, please notify W. H. Gal lier, 153 Mineral St., Keyser,' W. Va.f to receive $5 reward... FOR SALE: 1958 CORVETTE, new 301 ci engine, solid lifters, 4.11 positraction rear, S-speed, two tops, radio, ww's. 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