Tar Babies The Tar Babies battle the Duke Blue Imps for the Big Four freshman basketball title tonight at 7:30 in Woollen Gym. Admittance will be by ID card for students and faculty and SI for everyone else. Weather Who knows? Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1965 Volume 72, Number 99 (PC Late News Briefs iuLe m TUT V 7-' ' --i I j I I - I E ! t I i 1 I ' - If . ? V. ;Wpl!.! rl ' I f V i J ! 1 f - X- MiMMMMtMtoniiiiiiii mini ,i -.il...ir.w.. ,ir. ..v....,. T f-YApiy ' THESE MAVERICK BOYS are so hard at work on the "old well" that they don't even notice Maverick Maid Patti Fields- The scale model "old well" will be pushed to Durham today for the Heart Fund. Photo by Jock.Lauterer. Heart F und 'Push 9 Uses Well Replica Maverick House residents will pull a. six-foot high model of the Old Well to Durham tomor row, collecting money for the Heart Fund on the way. ' Maverick President A. D. Frazier said the return to Chapel "Hill may be delayed until Saturday, "depending on how late it is when we ge? there." 2nd Forum Rally For Today The Free Speech Forum will hold its second open-air discus sion today at 1 p.m. in front of Davie Poplar, according to Forum spokesman James Gard ner. The Forum's first meeting was held last week in Y-Court. A discussion about civil rights, fraternity and sorority discrimi natory clauses and the Speaker Ban was marked by demonstra tions, heckling and firecracker explosions. Today's discussion will be centered around the name, nature and methods of proce dure for the Free Speech Forum, Gardner said. ' "We will give anyone the op portunity to speak about his views of this movement and to ask questions about its spon sors," he said. The Viet Nam situation will also be discussed. "Discussion of the Viet Nam situation seems pertinent be cause students will be involved if war breaks out there," Gard er said. It is also less emo tional than the topics we dis cussed last week." Gardner said he hopes speak ers to present both sides of the Viet . Nam conflict will , take the rostrum. "The Forum will continue only if students are interested in it,M he said. "We expect good healthy heckling, but I hope the distinction' will be made be tween this and much of the be havior we experienced last week." The well will be pulled through downtown Durham to receive donations, then taken to the East Campus at Duke. "The Pan Hellenic Council at Duke has promised to provide a girl for every boy we send from here to man road-block collection centers near the cam pus,'.' he said. . ... . UNC sororities Phi Mu and Pi Beta Phi will follow the pullers, providing refreshments and seeing that no one falls by the wayside. Some of the girls have offered to help pull the -vpeU - themselves. .Frazier said:,: The well will leave "Chapel Hill about 1 p.m. and the pullers will be relieved by new ' crews about every hour, he said. There will probably be about 15 pul lers working in each crew. The original plan, Frazier said, was just to help man the road-blocks in Durham, but a Maverick resident suggested the pulling stunt which has been endorsed by the North Carolina Heart Association. Other students will be in volved in Chapel Hill's Heart Drive this afternoon. Delta Delta Delta Sorority and Alpha , Tau Omega frater nity pledges and new members will help solicit funds from motorists at several locations downtown. Free balloons will be given to all those attending an hour- and-a-half , cartoon show at the Varsity Theater at 10 a.m. Sat urday. Admission is 25 cents for the Heart Fund benefit show- Boys of the Chapel Hill Hi-Y will sell balloons and heart tags on downtown streets Saturday afternoon. (From DTH Associated Press Wires) FOR THE SECOND day in a row, President Johnson publicly dumped cold water Thursday on recurrent talk about negotiating with the Communists on Viet Nam. And on the military side, Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara defended on Capitol Hill the broadened American combat role in the Southeast Asia conflict. McNamara said after testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee that the new U. S. jet bombings in South Viet Nam are a change of tactics and equipment, not policy. He noted the House and Senate' had voted virtually unanimously last August for the Southeast - Asia resolution giving Johnson broad backing for the use of armed force. FROM SAIGON, news dispatches said bombs rained, by the ton on widely separated Communist Viet Cong positions from U. S. Air Force jets, rounding out a week of active warfare.. One account said U. S. crewmen were exhultant after blasting target areas in the Mekong Delta,' a coastal jungle and' the central highlands. . - - , " ' However, the Saigon account said also - thr.t the . Red. Guer rillas seemed undeterred in a campaign to: slash across central Viet Nam from the sea to the Cambodian frontier. - . -"::, ' l . . - EAST GERMAN President Walter Ulbrecht plunged into talks Thursday with President Gamal Abdel. Nasser after a well-cheered visit to a textile plant during which he promised" increased economic aid to this country. ; . , . " . V "You are marching boldly toward ' industrialization," the 72-year-old Red leader, told a .cheering : throng at the factory. "We have given you a helping" hand-already, ''but there is' room for more cooperation between our : two countries and we plan bigger and better Contributions (Dryour seconct five-year -ptanv" During his controversial' sixay'isit ere-which has-pre-cpitated a crisis in relations between"' the pnited Arab Republic and West Germany,' Urorechtrlixpected tpr:initfal a $78 million loan io ixasser. , . THE FEDERAL government renewed its long legal battle with the U. S. Communist 'Party Thursday. ' A gran dieted the party again for failing "".to register as a Communist action group. : . . .. ,"- :. ' '' . -."'"-;: This time, however, the Justice Department took pains to avoid the loopholes that brought, about! an appeals court reversal of a 1962 conviction on the same charge. - p The party's spokesman, Gus Hall, told a New York neyis conference the indictment is a move to silence ; opposition to U. S. military involvement in South' Viet Nam. "Red smog, mixed with Texas, dust," he called it. - . ; Hall said the party "will fight the indictment in the courts, and added: "This, new indictment of the Communist Party is to create an atmosphere of hysteria and emergency for: the purpose of ilencing, all opposition tor the etraduetof ah; unpopular.-Mncfe. clared and, therefore, unconstitutional and unjust war of aggres sion in South Viet Nam."' ' V ' ' J v T The 12-count indictment returned , by a federal grand jury, have specified that the party not only failed to register, but did so in the full knowledge that a volunteer was available and willing to register on behalf of the party. THE TOUGH felony indictment in Mississippi's case of the three murdered civil rights workers was dismissed Thursday leaving 17 men facing a misdemeanor 'charge. U. S. Dist. Judge Harold Cox, in granting a defense plea, said no federal law was embraced by the federal indictment and therefore his court had no jurisdiction. In Washington, a Justice Department spokesman said the ruling will be studied before it is decided to file an appeal. There was no further comment. A copy of the ruling was sent immediately to the Depart ment, which recently clashed with Judge Cox in blocking some perjury indictments he wanted against civil rights workers. The charge thrown out by Judge Cox carried a maximum punishment of 10 years in prison and a $5,000 fine. The second federal indictment pending against the men has a maximum punishment . of one year in jail and a $1,000 fine. The defense wanted it dismissed, too, but the judge did not mention it. It alleges conspracy, involving law officers, to illegally punish the three men. No charges have been filed by the siate; the federal gov ernment cannot file murder charges in the case. .Bill Affaiii rm i 1 1 i cuay .:-::-:.-:-:-:-:::-:::: I i 1 f luf tJ i ' " tiV r t':(jl i i j - 1 V " " '- - LOOKS LIKE BEETLE BAILEY as "Chancel lor Blunt" Arthur Beaumont reviews his troops (I-r) John Semanche, David Lapkin Sue. Ross, ; George Daniel, and Walter Spearman who will all appear as the "Unholy Five" in tonight's - Sophomore Talent Show. Photo by Lauterer. Mns Comedy Bh Tap At Talent Show The stage of Memorial Hall auditorium will rock tonight at 8 when some of the best talent that Chapel Hill has to offer comes together for the second annual Sophomore Talent Show. Special guest star Lee Shaf fer, former UNC All-American basketball player and profes sional star with the Syracuse Nationals, will make an appear ance for a chat with Master of Ceremonies Chancellor Robert B. House about the 1957 na tional championship Tar Heel cagers. Tickets for the show are on sale at Y-Court, Graham Memo rial, and Kemp's. Cost per ticket is 75 cents or $1.25 for a stu dent and date ticket. Sophomore class "members will sell tickets in residence; halls, fraternities and sororities. Any sophomore wishing to sell tickets .and compete for the case of Budweiser going to the top salesman should contact one of. the class officers. Among the top acts in the. Editors? Students interested in run ning for ; editor of the Daily Tar Heel should contact Pub lications Board Chairman Hugh Blackwell before Monday. Can didates must receive endorse ment of the board, or submit a petition with 145 signatures to Bill Schmidt before Tuesday for their names to appear on the ballot. System Discussed At Meeting Like Residence Colle ge Pepper Elected MRC President Sonny Pepper and Bob Payton were elected president and vice president respectively of the Men's Residence Council Wed nesday. Both ran unopposed. Howard Crocker, also running unoDDOsed. was elected treas urer.- In closely contested races Paul Russell defeated Neil Wcoderik for secretary and Bobby Hunter was chosen court chairman over Jerry Droze and Wayne Cannody. Cannody was subsequently elected vice-chair man of. the court, defeating Andy Holland. f This year's officers will con Inue to serve until after an nentation period for the new xecutives has been completed. By ERNIE McCRARY DTII Managing Editor UNC coeds apparently favor the residence college program, and they would like to get in on it. Results of a conference of 40 coeds held last Saturday indicate most of them favor a mixed male and female residence college rather than a segregated one. They gave a unanimous "no" to an all-woman residence co'lege. The conference was sponsored by the Valky-, ries. President Sara Anne Trott, in disclosing a just-completed report on the meeting, said the invited coeds were chosen to represent a cross section of the campus. The women listened to Dean of "Men WTilliam G. Long, Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael and Dean of Student Af fairs C. O. Cathey in a general meeting and then divided into four groups to discuss the problems of dormitory living, with special refer ence to the residence college. The released report is a compilation of the opinions expressed in the individual discussion groups, each led by a Valyrie. The women agreed that there is "some need" for a residence college system and "it will continue to grow as the number of students increases." They said it should provide a "closer relationship between students in larger dorms' and give an alternative between "sorority and fraternity so cial groups on the one hand and the impersonal ness of dormitory life on the other." The subject of housing men and women in the same residence hall was discussed, but most groups favored a coeducational residence college to a coed dormitory. All agreed that there would be problems in "presenting such a propos al to the trustees and conservative parents' who might not understand what was involved." A few women at the conference registered disapproval of the residence college concept as now proposed. They said it would cause "too much men-women segregation" and would "dis courage the fraternity-sorority system." The majority, which favored a coed residence college said it would "improve relations between men and women on campus," making the " re lations more "informal and cooperative than social and formal." They said a coed system would help the men and women "work together on campus and academic activities without an emphasis on dating.' " All expressed an interest in facilities where men and women can eat together, whether connected with a coed dormitory or residence college. They emphasized that there should be no restrictions requiring students to eat at these facilities, however. Some girls expressed disapproval of a coed residence college on the grounds that they would be "under pressure to dress up or look nice at all times." They said there might be "fewer opportunities to meet a wide variety of students if the campus is divided into colleges." It might be difficult to adapt present buildings to a - coed residence college ; system, they said, and there might be some trouble with repre- , sentatibn in Student Legislature, student judicial matters and an appropriate intramural program. The question of women representation to cam-, pus organizations through integrated colleges was discussed, and the groups concluded that no un solvable problems exist. There was one pro posal that some offices be held jointly by men and women. It is likely that a new women's residence hall will be built in the Craig-Ehringhaus area. Many of the discussion participants said the distance of this location from the rest of the campus will offer no problem "girls are used to walking." The only disadvantage, they said, is "the problem of safety walking to and from the area." They suggested lighting of walks and "a bus or other transportation" for protection. The discussion groups produced seven items which they think should be included in the resi dence college program: Non-restrictive, common eating facilities, library facilities, recreational facilities, "something between a library and a snack bar for quiet talking and study breaks," faculty or graduate supervisors to advise and organize activities, opportunities for joint wor ship services and attempts to ' "unite ' students with common interests but not arrange them according to academic disciplines." Their suggestions for improving present dorm itory conditions were "better matching of room mates," including notification in the summer of who will be rooming with whom in the fall, re organization of mixers to make them more sue- . cessfur and "more personal, attractive social rooms as places to take dates." show O'Toole listed football player Charlie Davis who will sing "Maria" and "Tonight." Professional hypnotist James Dixon will be on nand to hypno tize some campus personality. A skit by the Ehringhaus "Studs" should provide plenty of laugh ter. The "Spencer Spinters" kickline will open the show after intermission. Coed Dotty Walters will pro vide a hula dance, while escape artist Dave Mayo will show how to escape from a padlocked bag with handcuffs on. Folk singer Doug Hams will sing some of his specialties, while Leland Schwantess sings "Two Different Worlds" and Dave Jones provides the ragtime. coed Anne seacock nas a medley of love songs, and the Chaotics of Craige will make things swing with a beat. "We Three Folk," a folksinging group composed of Rik Whitfield, Mary Elser, ad Jim Uptown will entetrain with voice and guitar A highlight of the comic sec tion of the show will be a facul- ty skit entitled "The Unholy Five" featuring Dr. George Daniel, Dr. John Semonche, Dr Dave Lapkin, Mr. Walter Spear man, Miss Sue Ross, Police Chief Arthur Beaumont, and coed Maggie Hunt. The skit gives the student audience a peephole look into the Faculty-Administration Re view Committee On Everything (FARCE), at which Beaumont plays the chancellor presidinf over the meeting. Among the topics of discus sion are the suppression of the Carolina coed and the Dean of Women's special committee on SOS (Stamp Out Sex). Sophomore class president Jim Brame said that proceed? of the show will be used to fi nance the second annual sopho more Spring Weekend. Pep Rally m J- n I WTanna' scream, yell and stomp your feet? It'll be just like football season lonight in Woollen Gyra when the cheerleaders lead a pep rally after the UNC-Duke freshman bas ketball game. The Tar Heels will meet Duke to morrow in Woollen in an important ACC game. Snag: When To Make It 4lh Branch? RALEIGH (AP) Legislation to make Charlotte College the fourth campus of the Consoli dated University ran into an other roadblock Thursday, this time over when it would become effective. The House deferred action on the proposal until today. The measure already has been approved by the Senate, where it bogged down bricfly earlier in the week on the ques tion of whether adequate funds had been provided to run tlio school as a university. The same question came up in the House Thursday, but the main discussion was over the effective date of making it a part of the Consolidated Univer sity. Defer Action The House voted to defer ac tion on the bill at the sugges tion of Rep. A. A. Zollicoffcr Jr. of Vance, chairman of the House Appropriations Commit tee. Zollicoffcr reminded legis lators that the Joint Appropria tions Committee was scheduled during the afternoon and that further discussion of the bill might interfere with the com mittee session. Veteran Rep. George Uzzcll of Rowan raised the main ques tions about making Charlotte College a branch of the univer sity before the school is accred ited. : IJzzell asked r "What effect will the creation of" a univer sity campus that will be able to give a diploma 'have on the high standing the University of North Carolina has around the world?" He said Charlotte College can not be accredited by the South ern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools until it has graduated its third cias in 1967. Later, Rep. R. D. McMillan of Robeson said "I have it from reliable sources the school can be accredited after it graduates two classes in 10C6." Since accrcdition wouldn't come until later, Uzzcl! said "what effect would that have on students who graduate with a degree from the University of North Carolina?" Suggests Delay He suggested the effective date of the bill could be delay ed until the school is accredit ed. "If give it the status, do we intend for the student who grad uates from Charlotte College next year to receive a degree from the University of North Carolina?," he asked. Uzzell, who endorsed the bill when it was introduced, sug gested it might be best to send the measure to the Appropria tions Committee since there arc no additional funds allocated in the proposed 1965-67 budget for a fourth campus. He said it would take "a lot of money" above what the budget sets up for the school. Rep. James Vogler of Meck lenburg said $2.6 million is al located for the school in the "A" budget and $600,000 in the "B" budget. Uzzell said he would vote for the bill regardless because "I am very much interested in Charlotte College, very much interested in a branch being established in Charlotte to serve the children of that area." Sal isbury, Uzzell's hometown, is 50 miles' north of Charlotte. Two Reasons Rep. Ernest Hicks of Meck lenburg listed two reasons for making Charlotte College a branch of the university now: (1) A large industry in the lower Piedmont area has agreed to set up a $1.2 million endow ment for the school: and (2) the college needs the super vision of the Consolidated Uni versity board in "building the type of college North Carolina will be proud of." Rep. I. C. Crawford of Bun combe urged support of the bill. He quoted a report from State Treasurer Edwin Gill which said "North Carolina is in excellent financial condition" and able to finance any portion of the mon ey needed for the school.

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