Library I Bos: C70 Cfeapal smt n c. Pumpkin .. . Reports late last night failed to confirm just where the Great pumpkin will visit tonight. Hordes of students were said seeking a "sincere" pumpkin patch to await the arrival. 3q Bulldogs The Tar Heels travel to Athens today to play trick or treat on the University of Georgia Bull dogs. See story on page 4 for a preview of what the Carolina gridders can expect. ?2H!l5Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINASATORDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service rr t mm Decision Goes To By JOHN GREENBACKER DTII Staff Writer The student body will de ' cide whether UNC will remain affiliated with "the National Student Association in a refer endum vote Nov. 10. Student Legislature passed a resolution Thursday night which will make results of the ciding factor in the affiliation controversy. Passage of this resolution will throw into high gear the campaigns of pro- and anti- MQA nnnn,nt: The National Student Asso- cently on a state and national level as a worthless and left ist organization. Student Government is cur rently spending $1,471 annually for NSA expenses. The decision by SL to throw the issue into the hands of the Student Body was made after Student Party Floor Leader Arthur Hays introduced the resolution to the body as the successor to an earlier one. "This bill avoids confusion, hard feelings, and any stigma which might otherwise be at tached to the legislature," Hays told the body. Hugh Blackwell (SP) asked nays if tne resolution would truly bind the legislature on future decisions concerning the NSA. "It would be legally possible for the body to overrule this," Hays .said, "but not probable. "If this body was to over rule the decision of the cam pus soon . after the . results of the referendum are known, then we would all be out of office shortly," he added. Bill Hit Bob Wilson (SP) was the first legislator to condemn Hays resolution. ' "A dangerous precedent will be set with the passage of this bill," Wilson warned. "It weak ens the position of this body. "The only reason I am ob jecting to this bill," he said, "is that I have confidence in this body and confidence in the backing of my constituents." Charging the legislature with "passing the buck," Wil son said he would be morally bound to the. results of the referendum, and he didn't feel the body needed to put its obli gation on paper. Speaker Pro Tem Charles Neely (SP) rose to remind his peers that "Student Legisla ture is a representative body. "What we are doing in this bill is returning to our consti tuents the power we have de rived from them," he said. "This bill doesn't weaken the legislature," he said. "It mere ly serves to prove that there is not legislative tyranny." Neely cited the use of refer endums on a state and national level to illustrate his point. John Froneberger (SP) also attacked the measure. "We have authority delegat ed to us. It is not in our author ity to delegate this power back to the student body." Hays spoke again on his bill, Americans, Beware Former By MIKE YOPP DTII Managing Editor R.O.T. -That's what America has been duped into, Dr. Richard F. Staar told an audience Thursday night in Carroll Hall. R.O.T. isn't moral decay or spoiled bananas. It stands for "relaxation of tension" tension of the Cold War. Staar called those who believe Russia is seeking peaceful co existance with the West are vic tims of "the greatest seduction of our time." To Russia "co existanc is the pursuit of war by other means." The professor of political sci ence at Emory University- and former CIA agent spoke on "World Objectives of the USSR." His address, sponsored by Caro lina Conservative Club, was part of National Issues Week program. Staar outlined four points Americans should follow; (1) They must realize "the main adversary of the United States is the Soviet Union," not the U. S. education system." Of UNC - Students saying the student body had passed a similar binding reso lution on NSA in the past. He said it was his belief that the Constitutional Council had inferred the legislature's power of referral to the student body in a recent decision. Other Business Hays' resolution passed the legislature' by. a voice vote. In other business, a bill to appropriate money to the Communications Committee of Student Government was re committed to the Finance Committee after it was at tacked by Committee Chairman Hugh Blackwell (SP) as not being justified to the commit tee's satisfaction. A constitutional amendment written by Hays which would have candidates for the stu dent body presidency and vice presidency from the same party be elected into office in a single vote similar to na tional elections was recommit Sharp Tells Faculty To Honor, Respect Students "Honor students and respect them and their dignity," Chancel lor Paul F. Sharp told the Uni versity faculty last night. In his. first major address to the faculty since he became Chancellor, Sharp predicted that "rediscovery of the student" is a coming trend in American high er education. "On many campuses the stu dent is treated as a surplus com modity and tolerated because it is customary to have his kind around," he said. - Faculty members should have respect for a student's "poten tials as well as for his proven Coeds Asked To Register For Rooms Women students desiring dor mitory space for the spring semester are asked by Dean of Women Katherine K. Car michael to register in their dormitories between tomorrow and Nov. 8. Coeds should get housing sheets from hostesses or house presidents. The full rent pay ment of $120 is due on or be fore Jan." 10. Cancellations of rooms between Nov. 10 and Jan. 10 are subject to a charge of $25. Failure to sign up for a room in the designated period may prevent students from living in the dormitory or room of her choice, Dean Carmichael said yesterday. Women students living in town should contact the Dean of Women's office to reserve a dormitory room. ISSUES WEEK SPEAKER CIA Agent Warns (2) "The first principle of our foreign policy must be freedom. First priority must be given to the security of the nation." (3) They . must make "peace secondary" to freedom and na tional security. (4) It is "wishful thinking to assume changes in the Soviet eco nomic program . . . and cultural exchanges will favor the West." He said the "cardinal aim of the Soviet Union has been to re place the nation state system with a Communist state." . The cim has not changed. Russia, for her own advantage, may desire peaceful coexistance for a short while, he added. This would provide Russia "time to eliminate weaknesses in the econ omy." Also Russia could over take the United States technolo gically by "leap-frogging in a few areas." He called statements of peace by Soviet leaders "a fig leaf of respectability." "What has happened to the art of assassination?" he asked, pre facing the remark by telling the audience he hoped he "was not NSA Tie In Vote. ted to committee for further study. Legislature passed two bills calling for Investigations which would study possibilities of constructing more tennis courts on campus and installing more telephones in women's resi dence halls. S u z y Sterling (SP) an nounced her resignation from legislature to work for Presi dent Johnson's War on Pover ty, Bills were introduced to committee asking for a coed orientation program, an inves tigation of orientation, and a campus referendum on Student Government plans for a cam pus humor magazine and a campus private radio network. University Party legislators absent from Thursday's session were John Harmon, Jim Hub bard, Lee January, Frank Wil lingham, Clark Crampton, and Britt Gordon. Student Party legislators ab sent were Frank Hodges, Mark Lindsey, and Sonny Pepper. , performances," Sharp said, "Our problem is greater than size or statistics. Its cure does not lie in restricting enrollments. It rests, in adjusting to their realities." ; The Chancellor urged that a certain amount of "attention to .individual differences" be given to each student. Encouraging students of potential must be giv- " en as much emphasis as is test ing their current achievement, . Sharp said. ' He said that ; the University "must unswervingly hold to na tional goals and measure our selves against the most rigorous national standards of perform ance." Sharp said this was' the way to fulfill the obligations of UNC to the individual students. "We must outgrow the idea, so long among us, that education is only for the young," Sharp said, concerning the development of adult education programs at the University. He urged that every department of the. University, both graduate and undergradu ate, must be expanded and im proved. The faculty was counseled to be ready for these changes. "Uni versities must not live in the golden eras of their past if they are to serve the present," he said. "This University's role is to lead in higher education, not to follow. Its role is to assert command over the forces of change rather than be their re luctant victim. "In trying to achieve high pro fessional and graduate-school ex cellence, equal attention must be given to undergraduate areas," Sharp said. "It is increaingly difficult to have excellence in either without strength in both." Sharp said that "institutional unity is possible only if we re gard the development of the in tellect as the primary function" of the University. ROT quoted in your newspaper." He aimed the remark at a pair of Communist agitators in Brit ish Guiana. If England drops control over Guiana, he said, these two might lead the country into Communism. Staar said the dual Soviet lead ership of Premier Aleksei Kosy gin and Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev would soon end, plac ing a dark horse, Aleksander Shel epin, in the dual role formerly held by Nikita Khrushchev. Shelepin is the former head of KBG (secret police) and Kom somol (youth movement). Staar called him the "Russian Jack Armstrong who eats Wheaties every day." Staar said Shelepin has a great deal of power in his present post as Party State Control Chair man. Brezhnev "can't last" because he was picked as Khrushchev's successor and that means "the kiss of death." Suslov is doomed because he has no experience in the opera tion of party apparatus, he said. Of Ole Miss j Flares With i Riots Again OXFORD, Miss. Uft Five students were arrested Friday after a campus football prep ral ly flared into violent turmoil at the University of Mississippi. The uproar combined a panty raid, police stoning and car roll ing. The unoccupied car belonged to Burns Tatum, campus police chief. It was rolled down . a hill where it smashed into a fire plug. No details on the arrests were disclosed immediately. "I'm not going to give their names to the papers," Sheriff Boyce Bratton said, "we might have some more arrests. We're still investigating." . - ; Pat Smith, a university spokes man, said school authorities were on campus taking names during the ruckus. All those reported will have to face disciplinary ac tion before the student council, he said. The raid began in a good hu mored vein, but turned bitter as the night wore on. Students pep pered police with bricks and bot tles. A brick opened a gash on cne officer's head. African Girls Don't Go West NAIROBI, Kenya W The mod ern African girl who has chang ed her loin cloth for stretch pants and high heels is under fire in Kenya for aping the modes and morals of the West An African student recently re turned here from Europe spark ed the battle of the sexes with an indignant letter to the press. He accused the girls of being "mere ly gimmicks of Western civiliza tion" and charged they were more interested in money than happy marriage. Negroes Hold Mock Election JACKSON, Miss. (AP) The Mississippi Freedom Democra tic Party opened four days of balloting Friday in a mock elec tion designed to show Negroes want a political voice in this Deep South state. An estimated 75 out-of-state college volunteers and a staff of 200 civil rights workers launched the protest vote. It marked the second such vote in a year. The first saw 80,000 Negroes cast ballots in a "free dom vote" last fall prior to the general election for gover nor. Before the June primaries the FDP organized through precinct, county and state con ventions to select delegates to the Democratic National Con vention. The party, not legally recognized by Mississippi, maintained conventions and mock elections showed Negroes want to take part in politics. The FDP claims Negroes are blocked by systematic denials and double-standard voter tests for whits and Negroes. Barbershops, cleaners, cafes and churches serve as polling places in the mock election. A final tabulation will be an nounced Monday on the eve of the presidential election. The freedom ballot lists President Johnson and Hubert Humphrey twice, as the "Free dom Party" candidates and also th e Democratic candidates. Goldwater and Miller are under the GOP heading. Four Negroes, who were turned down as independent candidates- by the State Elec tion Commission, oppose Mis sissippi congressional candi dates for the FDP. COED ACQUITTED A coed was . excused for being: one hour and 45 minutes late by the Women's Council Thursday night. She pleaded indefinite to the Campus Code violation. The council felt she should be excused because of the cir cumstances involved and be cause she called her residence to report the lateness. Mississippi .Re IT'S NOT THE GREAT PUMPKIN but Maverick House President A. D. Frazier doesn't seem to mind. The pretty goblin with him is Patty Fields. Maverick House and other residences around Lying And Road Sign Theft Bring Suspensions For Two Two students were suspended for stealing and lying and anoth er was given two semesters pro bation for lying in Men's Council trials Thursday. The council put two other men on one-semester probation for a Campus Code offense and found another innocent of a Campus Code charge, during the six-hour trials. - . - In the suspension . case, two men were charged with . stealing a road sign, then lying to . the Chapel Hill police, the Dean of Men and the Attorney General's Staff about the theft. . They had . maintained that someone put the sign in their car as a joke. During the in vestigation they changed their minds and told the Attorney Gen the sign. . eral's staff that they had stolen They pleaded guilty and were Debaters End Conference The second annual North Carolina High School Debate Conference, with about 200 students and advisors partici pating, ends here today. The topic for debate has been "How Can World Disar mament Best Be Achieved." The conference, which start ed yesterday, has been directed by Dr. Donald Springen, UNC debate team counselor. Three sororities and 10 fra ternities have provided hous ing for part of the high school students.. They are: Alpha Del ta PI, Chi Omega, Delta Delta Delta and Delta Upsilon, Chi Psi, Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Al pha, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gam ma Delta, Phi Kappa Phi, Sig ma Nu, Tau Epsilon Phi, Zeta Beta Tau. Lanny Shuff and Faryl Sims, co chairmen of the Campus Affairs Committee and com mittee member Tom Manley helped plan the. two-day pro gram. Lyric Tenor Sets Program Sunday Graham Memorial's "Petite Musicale" series will present lyr ic tenor Raymond McGuire, in a program of classical music Sun at.8 p.m. in the GM Lounge. McGuire, professor of music at Georgetown University, appear ed in the Chape! Hill area pre viously, as the tenor lead in Brit ton's "Saint Nicholas." His recital will include repre sentative pieces from the works of Purcell, Duparc, Tauie, Mass anet, Ginastera, and Chaniec. Michael Cardobcna will accom pany on the piano. Cam arcHlle suspended for one semester. A third student involved. in the case told the same story. He had not assisted in stealing the sign. He pleaded guilty to lying, was convicted and placed on two se mesters probation. In the first Campus Code case, two seniors pleaded guilty to having climbed on the roof of a sorority house twice in one night after hours.. They had brought beer and potato chips with them, saying they meant to talk to certain girls and have a beer. The girls in the house called the police who chased the pair League Sponsoring Election Pamphlet Choosing the President is the most important business before the American public next week. And "Choosing the President" is the title of a new 96-page pamph let published by the League of Women Voters of the United States. . This significant pamphlet on American government is valuable not only now, before November 3, but also afterwards. A factual explanation of the process of nominating and electing the Presi dent of the United States is giv en. This ready reference is divid ed into two sections. Part l of "Choosing the President" de scribes the steps in the selecting of the President. Part 2 gives facts and figures illustrating this process.. 0 Football Horrorscope 3 g b c s: a c 3 u 2 G L SS 1 U tn Duke-Georgia Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech Clemson-Virginia Clemson Clemson Clemson Clemson Virginia Clemson State-South Carolina State Slate State USC State State Wake Forest-Memphis St. ... MSU 3ISU MSU MSU MSU MSU Maryland-Penn Slate State State Stale State Stale State Florida-Auburn Fla. I la. Auburn Auburn Fla. Fla. Pittsburgh-Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Syracuse Notre Dame-Navy ND ND ND ND ND Ohio State-Iowa OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU Mich. State-Wisconsin MSU . Wis. MSU MSU MSU MSU Illinois-Purdue . Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois MU-Texas .. Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas UCLA-California Calif. Calif. UCLA Calif. Calif. UCLA Minnesota-Indiana Minn. Ind. Minn. Ind. Minn. Minn. Yale-Dartmouth Dart, Dart. Dart. Yale Dart. Dart. inter CM M campus have proliferated the area with jack-o-lanterns lending a real Halloween atmosphere. Photo by Jock Lauterer from the roof. One was caught and eventually told police who his companion was at the urging of a friend who bailed him out. Both students were drinking at the time, but were not excessive ly intoxicated, testimony showed. They were convicted and given a one-semester probation. In the last case of the evening, a sophomore was accused of us ing profanity and threats to an elderly gentleman in the rest room of a Durham restaurant. The evidence as to what was said was largely contradictory and there were no witnesses other than the parties involved. Because of conflicting testi mony and because the council felt that the offense was relative ly insignificant, the defendant was acquitted. The council explained to him that he should have been a good deal more mature in handling the situation, but that they could find nothing in it serious enough to merit a conviction. NEA Official Speaks Tuesday Dr. Ole Sand, director of the National Education Association's Center for the Study of Instruc tion, will address a conference Oi public school supervisors here Tuesday. School supervisors from all over the state will attend the all-day conference on how to im prove the curriculum in the pub he schools. V IN Shortage Gf Housing Only Restriction By ERNIE MeCRARY DTII Staff Writer UNC is opening its doors to freshmen women, but not quite all the way. Old requirements allowed only girls whose homes were in Chap el Hill to enter the University before their junior year, unless they were majoring in fine arts, medical technology, pharmacy, physical therapy, nursing, or dental hygiene. Chancellor Paul Sharp announ ced yesterday that a new admis sion policy has been adopted by the University. Beginning next June the only restriction on freshman coed en rollment will be housing. All girls must live on campus. "The number of girls we can accept will be limited only by available housing. Otherwise, after we break this bottleneck, I see no restrictions on the enroll ment," Sharp said. He does not think the increase in coed population here will low er enrollment at UNC-G because "I estimate that within the next three years we will be able to admit only 800 more girls than are here new." Enrollment at UNC-G is 4.249 this year according to Consoli dated University office figures. "We don't know what effect the new residence hall for wom en graduate' students will have. It may release some space for undergraduates on campus," he said. The new residence hall will be built on West Franklin Street at the site . of Chapel Hill High School by a private firm. Work is already under way on the nine story building which will house 500 students. Although standards are the same for male and female appli cants, Sharp says "We will be able to make a better selection among the women. We will have a higher degree of selectivity just by the nature of the appli cation." According to the Office of Ad missions there are 240 freshman coeds here now, with room for a total of 3H5 next year. Women are now housed in eight resi dence halls and will take over Winston Hall from the men next year. The first woman at UNC was admitted as a graduate student in the summer of 1897. Spencer Hall, the tirst coed residence hall, was built in 1923 over the protests of the student body, the Daily Tar Heel and the faculty. Today there are 2.532 cirls reg istered here almost a fourth of the student body. ABSENTEE EALLOTS Students may obtain ballots for the Nov. 10 campus election by applying at Graham Memorial in formation desk before 5 p.m. November 10.