Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 27, 1965, edition 1 / Page 3
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'ii Ifc T 0 -I -I n " 't -i o 3i o. O' n ii 9. -? ? -f 9 -C 9 -1 :t o o -t b -c Qt O. if -i U k j Satardayr February- 27rl965 Parham Selected L For NROTC Post William Parham, a senior from Lookout Mountain, Tenn., has been named Battalion Commander of the Naval ROTC unit for spring n. semester. , j! Parham, who succeeds Alan V. W- Monnette, has been recognized for - his military activity by being in o' ducted into Scabbard and Blade, -J an honorary inter-service society! Other batallion officers are T. f ; u Scott, executive officer; T. P Bell, operations officer; L. F. Curtis, adjutant; F. C. Thompson . supply officer; R. P. Rambo, drill ,j( team commander; R. J. Lambe, Drum and Bugle Corps command er er; K. P. Furr, "A" Company commander; W. P. Aycock; "B ti Company commander; and M. V. 4? Baiigess, "C" Company command er. -i : Band Concert i Is Set Sund ay The Central All-State High y. School Band Clinic being conduct 0J ed on campus this weekend will o ; culminate in a concert in Hill Hall -o Sunday at 3 p.m. .0 The band consists of 107 musi t? cians from 28 central Carolina or high schools. UNC Band director J John Yesulaitis will conduct the n- group. - Selections will include: "Die ? Fledermaus Overture" by Johann Strauss; "Suite of Old American Dances" by Robert Russell Ben nett; "The Gods Go A-Begging, a Ballet Suite" by G. F. Handel; "Fugue No. 5 in A Minor," by G. F., Handel; "Symphony No. 3 for Band," Vittorio Gionnini; Selec tions - from the TV production -I "Victory at Sea," by Richard Rod--ngersf; ;"Beguine for Band," by -1 Glenn Osser; "Celebration Over--r ture," by Paul Creston; and "Con b quest March from The Captain from Castile," by Alfred New- man. The public is invited. h ... - V YDC INSTALLATION -r .i The statewide Young Democrats o Clubjnstalaltion will be tonight ri at Durham Civic Center. A social hour - will begin at 7 p.m. and z- dinner at 8 p.m. Speaker will be Rep. John V. Tunney, D. Cal. Stu--t dents wishing rides should con--c tact Bill Whichard at the Law vi School. I SMsls VtoW OPEN in the United States and Mall coupon NOW! The BEST JOBS are taken early. 37 foreign countries Europe, Asia, ike Caribbean and South America. Some are high paying, some are ex citing,, all are worthwhile summer NATIONAL Ub for college students ... THE J EMPLOYMENT BJSKVJLUJUS KIND OF WORK YOU ENJOY. I STUDENT OPPORTUNITIES :NCLUDEi Resorts, 1750 PenngylvanJa Ave, N.W Washington, D.C. J dude ranches, park concessions, mo-1 Gtiemen: please rush GUIDE T3 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT I lfis, summer camps, governmem,i Endo6edi3$2 Cash Check M.O. , industry, international youth organ-1 Czations, exchange programs, etc. J BAutiDM and man ore listed Name (print) In Hi 1 965 EDITION of the GUIDE TO I Street SUMMEK EMPLOYMENT (now in its fourth year). For the best in summer City jobs, order yours todoyt . state. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS LFogand smoke haze 5. Botch 9. An over seas aid 10. Precious ctone ; 11. At one time 12. Singer: Home 13. Epochs 14. Showers rain and ice 16. Racing rowboat 17. Girl's name 18. Exclama, tion 19. Pert, to Gael 2L Occupied 23. Communist 24. An age 25. Mountain ofThessaly 27. Prepared, as a field for sowing? SO. Another ' exclama tion . 31. Bosom friend 32. Brazil macaw S3. Bicycle for two S3. Under water obstacle 87. Bearing S3. Head coverings S9. Vigor 40. S-shaped molding .41. Contradict 42. Marries DOWN 1. Dross of metal 2. Those In charge 3. Grampuses 4. Command to horse 5. Girl's nickname 6. Fencing sword 7. Rational ' -8. Old-fashioned school tablets 13. Urge (on) ' 9 it is 16 19 20 23 25 26 30 33 34 1 35 1- 'Pt'ItMATUTTLEN RED-HAIRED I G'RL 15 Sm I vvrcaTET i. .. ...... -. . f - , K. - ' . Z " ' - '' '- - , , '", f"-3 I' S ' - -x , - y0 '- ' . , f ' : I ' .1 x. ' ' ; 1 -; i; '''; '. ' ',. , .Y'. , , s ' 'j I. rk:'j,y:S;. ' K 'if - f "V-;; ' ' J , , if , i ' - ' t ' i(r- v v Photo by Jock , Lanterer YWCA Presidential Candidates . . Louis Fuller (left) -and Eunice Milton (right) Admissions Office By STEVE HOAR DTII Feature Writer "The tidal wave of students is hitting its crest," says UNC Di rector of Admissions Charles Bernard, and his office in South Building is feeling the pressure. With "post-war baby boom" students reaching college age, applications to the University have reached an all-time high. Bernard's staff ha? sent out al most 23,000 forms this year a 40 per cent increase over 1963 64. Freshman applications ' for next fall already exceed 10,000, with more yet to come in. Last year's total through first semes ter registration was 8,500. "We'll have no problem filling this class up," notes Bernard. There will be 2,095 spaces for 1965 freshmen, only about 200 EMPIajYMjswt OJiViaiUiM ..Sdbool. 14. Ameri can Indian 15. Fling, as a stone 17.A tool: naut. 20. Marshy rre kIL LJapse' O I L ED IG'L U Eifj A M)B LJELlLj i N E D fcglslTlolRlFb INiCil EIN gpiRINiE ITJRU SW Yesterday's Answer 29. Slash "meadow 21. Expression to frighten 22. Undesired 24. Letter 25. Grain 26. Disgraced 27. Knave of clubs in loo 28. Expunges 31.AU.S. cent 34. African river 35. College official 36. A spice , 38. In what manner WL 12 IS 21 22 27 31 32 36 1- I'D 61VB ANVTHIN5 IM THE OJORLD TO BE 5ITTIN6 THERE NEXT TO HER EATIN6 LUMCH. more than in 1964. The increase in applications will make it harder, to get into the University. Minimum legal requirements for state residents are still Scholastic Aptitude - Tgst scores of 800 and a pre dicted grade average (based on high school grades and other data) of 1.6. - ; But Bernard says that, in prac tice, few applicants with grades below 2.0 will be accepted for next fall. The University hasn't been able to - take all students meeting minimum standards since 1958. " V . A new policy admitting first- year women j in all majors has brought a flood of female appli cations nearly 1,600 for the 240 spaces so women's qualifica tions will be a good deal high er. The current cutoff is a 1,200 SAT score,- and it may : have to be raised. : -"If these girls produce accord ing to their records ' In high school," predicts Bernard "they'll . make the boys look sick." , - Frequent visitors add to the admission staff's burden in pro cessing applications more than 4,500 came through the office last year. Two of Bernard's three assistants also have to be away often visiting high schools across the state. And sometimes the director gets 30 or 40 long distance phone -calls per day. Many of the calls -and num erous letters -come from par ents, teachers and alumni who want to "put in a good word for an applicant. The pres sure per square inch," Bernard observes with a grin, "would blow up Nagasaki." Sometimes there is comic re lief. A New York student who wrote for application blanks said that the ."swinging courses at your hangout have sent me. . My thyroid glands thirst to play the jazz with your baltop pers (sic)." . More recently Bernard turned down an application request from an out-of-state . prospect whose test scores were too low to deserve consideration. "Well," the boy wrote back, "I'm not going to get down on my hands and knees and beg for one." Fortunately, the "tidal wave" won't last long. . Bernard ex pects the number of applications to reach a plateau in a year or two and stay there until about 1970. For the present, however, the admissions staff has its hands full. 'Business," .says the di- rector with a sigh, "is good." mm, NOW PLAYING THE DAILY f ll - From DTH Associated Press" Wires GOV. .DAN MOORE'S $300 million road bond issue sailed through, the Senate Friday, but his plan to make Charlotte College a branch of the Consolidated University remained bogged down in the House.: - : Without debate, the Senate passed 47-0, the road bond issue which goes to the House where it is expected to get the same quick approval. The Charlotte College bill, already passed by the Senate, was carried over to Tuesday's House calendar. It has run into oppo sition over when the school should become the fourth branch of UNC. The House did take fast action in approving a bill to make it, a felony to attempt to set fire to any state owned building. The measure now becomes law. The Senate acted in similar fashion Thursday and passed the bill which was prompted by the recent fires on the North Carolina State campus. Police say the fires were set by arsonists. The state attorney general's office found the previous law did not cover fully buildings at state-owned col leges. Atty. Gen. Wade Bruton says his office will offer a com plete revision of the state's arson laws later. JIESCUERS RECOVERED two bodies Friday and searched for three others after a light plane believed carrying a Richmond, Va., doctor and his family crashed into a lake. ' The plane, en route from Daytona Beach, Fla., to Richmond, was last heard from late Thursday night when it approached the Raleigh-Purham airport to land. The pilot radioed he was running out of fuel. Indications were the victims were Dr. James G. Rice, a senior resident physician in obstetrics and gynecology at the Medical College of Virginia, and his wife and three sons. The plane, a Cessna 182, plunged into a 55-acre lake in William B. Umstead State Park just east of the airport. Arthur McCall, 26, Negro laborer, of The Bronx, was indicted Friday by a New York County grand jury on one count of first degree murder and two of attempted first degree murder. The charges were in connection with the stabbing of three white per sons including former UNC student Larry Phelps, in the Harlem office of the Progressive Labor Movement Jan. 21. In the fracas Phelps, 23, was fatally injured, and his wife, Linda, 22, and a friend, Tara Forsythe, 22, were injured. Phelps, of i Burlington, was active in the Progressive Labor Movement at UNC. A MARKED LULL in Viet Cong activity suggests the massive raids by U.S. Air Force jets are getting results. The red guerril las staged fewer incidents Friday than in any other 24-hour period since the jets were unleashed last Thursday. No major ground engagements were reported. B57 Martin Can berra bombers pressed the Air attack. In 47 sorties from the flight line at Bien Hoa : Air Base they showered more than 150 tons of high explosives on suspected Viet Cong hideouts in the jungles by.Phuoc Tuy Province, on the South China Sea East of Saigon. j . At the same time, however, there was report that elements of a new Communist division trained and equipped in North Viet Nam. have shown up to reinforce the Viet Cong in the 1st array corps area fronting on the 17th parallel. Authoritative military sources at the Da Nang Air Base, 380 miles - Northeast of Saigon, said the newcomers moved via the Ho Chi .Minh trail through eastern Laos, which American war planes .have been, raiding for several weeks. THE FntST DntECT police linkup of the Black Muslims to the assassination of Malcolm X came Friday with the arrest of a husky Negro enforcer for the militant anti-white sect. Held wth out bail on a homicide charge he was the second man accused in the slaying. Since the 39-year-old Malcolm was shot down at a black sup remacy rally last Sunday, police have worked on the theory that his bitter 1963 break with Elijah Muhammad's Chicago-based Black Muslims lay behind the Thirtv-five hours after the assassination, the Black Muslim's Harlem Mosque 7 was wrecked parent revenge for Malcolm's killing. However, it was not until early Friday that police charged a direct role in the assassination rested Norman 3X Butler, 26, of karate He reportedly is a guard of disciplinary enforcers. Free in bond. Norman 3X was shot at another defector from the tim escaped with his life, however. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell, D.-N.Y., has hired a former Play boy Club bunny girl who can type 90 words a minute for the fTniis'Ff!iipnrinn and Labor Committee, which he heads. Mary Ellen Terziu, a blonde briefly for Sen. Joseph D. Tydings, D-Md., as a voiumeer in iu election campaign last fall, will join the committee staff Mon day as a $7,200-a-year typist.; u Miss Terziu. who lost her job in the Baltimore Playboy Club after loininff the Tvdines campaign team, has been working as a camera girl in a Cincinnati restaurant. Tydings had planned to keep her on his staff after he won his election, but dropped the idea when her former, employment ae a hiirmv trirl was nublicized. oftof tnlkirm shft was willing to take the iob been making because she is interested, in political ffaairs and wants to work in Washington. '' Miss Terziu will be one of about six girls working in a typing pool for the committee and its various subcommittees. m if n it it ir mi wmmTAKEs Tue tate OUT OF PEANCT BUTTER W VHREGJJtTED LOVEi TAR HEEE " , ll slaying. by an explosion and fire, in ap to a known Muslim. They ar a practitioner of the deadly art member of Muhammad s elite accused last month of taking a Black Muslim ranks. The vic from Laurel, Md., who worked in her - bv teleohone. He said at much less pay than she has ITS THE WiLD WEST AT fTS WACKIEST! - - - NOW PLAYING mm PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS 5 3 mm limMm Wills wm i u i m i lr 1 wUJ Benefit Concert Wednesday Arthur Kreutz and Joan Melton will present a Concert in Hill Hall at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The concert will be- a benefit performance for the Arthritis Foundation. Works of Mozart and Brahms wil be featured. Kreutz is an American compos er and violinist A native of La Crosse, Wisconsin, he studied at the University of Wisconsin, Col umbia University, and the Royal Conservatory in Ghent, Belgium. He has received numerous awards and honors, the most recent be ing by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia. Harry R. Wilson, of Columbia University and president of Sin fonia, announced the commission ing of a violin concerto by Kreutz with the premiere scheduled to be held in New York City. Kreutz is also a winner of "Prix de Rome" in composition. Kreutz has taught at the Uni versity of Texas, Columbia Uni versity, the University of Wiscon sin, Brooklyn College, and the University of Mississippi. He has served as guest conductor for the New York Philharmonic Symphony and Carnegie Pops. Miss Melton, a native of Albe marle holds bachelor and master's degrees from the University of Mississippi. She was Miss North Carolina in 1937. She studied piano under the late Hans Barth. She has been soloist with the North Carolina Symphony and Joined Kreutz in concerts all over the country. In addition to works of Mozart and Brahms, the Concert will fea ture "Three Characteristic Pieces" by Miss Melton and "Jazzonata" by Kreutz. . There is no admission charge for the concert. Those attending will be asked to make a contribu tion to the Arthritis Foundation for its work in North Carolina. 3-Day Institute Designed To Aid Mentally Retarded UNC will be host to an institute on recreation for the mentally re tarded Thursday and Friday at Camp Betsy-Jeff Penn near Reids ville. Dr. Douglas Sessoms, chairman of the recreation curriculum at UNC, is coordinator of the insti tute. He is a consultant to the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Foundation, which is financing the three-day meet. . Sessoms said the purpose of the institute is to "show how good recreation programs can improve the health, appearance, intern gence and job capabilities of the retarded." He said about 50 or 60 persons, from Virginia. Norht Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama, Tennes see and possibly West Virginia, will attend the sessions. Not Guilty (Continued prom Page 1) sity are only concerned if they rush at the request of a fra ternity. "The facts indicate that the scholarship discussed with Grosswald is a completely un conditional one nd no facts were presented to substantiate rumors that he had been offered $1,000 to pledge TEP. 4This is not . a question of buying a pledgeit is just a freshman applying for a schol arship." FOREIGN SERVICE William B. Kelly of the State Department will discuss oppor tunities in the U. S. Foreign Service at a group meeting in 200 Gardner at 2:30 p.m. Wed nesday. Interested students should sign up for the meeting at the Placement Service, 211 Gardner. -Today's BRIEFS Billiards Tournament beginning "March 8, sign up next week in billiards room. Interviews for Chairman of WRC will be held in Roland Parker I, Tuesday and Wed nesday from 3 to 5 p.m. In terested persons may sign up for interviews at GM Informa tion Desk. Guitar lessons sisn-np extended until March 8, $2.50 for 10 lessons. Sign up 'at GM In formation Desk. Tryouts for "No Exit." GM Drama Committee, will be held on Monday at 4 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. In 111 Murphey. Women students requiring dor mitory space for a summer term or for the fall semester are asked to sign up in their dormitories between Monday and March 8. Town students who wish dormitory space should sign up in the Dean of Women's office. LOST AND FOUND Lost Men's gold wedding band near Woollen Gym, J. R. Shimkus, 942-5991, reward. Lost Contact lens case with lens in Woollen Gym, Mark Graham, 314 Parker. Found Shetland wool scarf left in classroom basement of Swain, last semester. Contact I I 'A f 4 1. TUESDAY, MARCH 2 Memorial Hall 8:00 P.M. UNC students 50c Date or Spouse $1.00 Tickets on Sale at GM Information Desk. General Public Sales Begin Monday, March 1 $2 f j notfier of has come in! The Intimate Boobho; 119 East Franklin St, Chapel Hill SUPERIORITY COMPLEX NOW SELLING FOR .50 So you're not a football hero, a big Brain, Hot-rodder. You can still be top man In Department!... if you let SHORT CUT take control of your top! If II shape up the toughest crew cut, brush cut any cut; give it life, body, manageability. Give you the best-looking hair around and a feeling of natural superiority. So get with it! Get Old Spice SHORT CUT Hair Groom by Shulton. tube or jar,ojy .50 plus tax. innwi ; 1 ;r-., ; J Pa Calendfo Mrs. Bonney Miller in 202A, New Swain Hall. Found Green sweater on tennis courts last week. Claim at DTH office. Found Rain coat with name L. Watlmgton. May have been exchanged during rush. Contact Richard Urquhart, 106 Aycock. Forum- (Continued from rage 1) ed by Howard Hendrick, chair man of GM. A second spark was Ignited after the general agreement had been reached that there is a need for an open forum on which any person can voice his opinions at any time. John Greenbacker, president pro-tem of the Di-Phi Senate stepped into the circle and reminded the group that his organization ex ists for the purpose. "Next Tues day at 7:30 p.m. we will present a discussion of the Gag Law," he said. The FSF member pointed out that they want a more "inform al" program "in the open air." They then asked the Di-Phi president if he didn't think both organizations could exist. 'A u u IS St n u u H H u n n n u n XN rAl VC vj)k n H n H u ; r i n " I i A 1 "I nvu 1 Shipmen Open TCI 10 PJ,L or a hot the Girt j
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1965, edition 1
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