U.tl.C. Library
Serials Pept.
Box 870
ctmpsi am, ii.c.
A Weather
Fair and cooler today with
increasing cloudiness. Some
chance of. showers, according
to the DTH weathergirl.
A
Kites
Got - 3 oar kite " yet? Better
harry. The DTI I Kite Contest
is tomorrow.
Founded Feb. 23, 1893
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1965
Volume 72, Number 117
Debate Starts At 7:30 p.m
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MADELINE GRAY (front row center) is the new president of the
PanheUenic Council. She is flanked by Elsie Ives (left), vice
president, and Beverly. Bally, treasurer. Back row (left to
right) are Julie Jordan, recording secretary; Virginia Blake
ney, projects chairman; Sarah Overton, cultural programs
chairman; and Carol Ann Shaffer, corresponding secretary. .
Soviet Cosmonaut
Steps Into Space
MOSCOW (AP) A Russian
cosmonaut squeezed out of his
tory's highest orbiting manned
satellite Thursday and took
man's first slowly somersault
ing, free - floating swim in
outer space.
Then he returned safely to.
the cabin of his two - man
spacecraft, the Vcskhod 2,; as
the Soviet Union .took another
giant stride in the race for the
moon. Millions watched the ex-
ploit on television while the of
ficial news agency Tass poured
out details.
Gov. Wallace
Moves To Halt
Court Order
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP)
Gov. George C. Wallace went
into federal appeals court
Thursday to block a highway
civil rights march planned by
Negro leaders to dramatize their
voter drive.
Attorneys for Wallace ap
pealed to the 5th U. S. Circuit
Court of Appeals to suspend a
Montgomery district court or
der allowing the march.
The petition was filed in the
New Orleans office of the ap
pellate court.' The order per
mitting the march was handed
down yesterday by U. S. Dist.
Judge Frank M.' Johnson Jr.
Wallace's appeal came short
ly before his scheduled speech
to the Alabama legislature
about the lower court's ruling.
Wallace was among officials
barred by the judge from in
terfering with the highway trek.
Negro leaders huddled here
to make final plans for the 50
mile Selma-M ontgomery
march A white citizens group
obtained a parade permit for
a march to the capitol..
Take To Streets
White segregationists took to
the streets here while a civil
rights demonstration was going
on. Police separated the groups
in front of the capitol during a
brief confrontation.
About 200 white marchers
bearing Confederate flags and
"designs saying "Who needs Nig
gers?" gathered in front of the
capitol. But between them and
the statehouse was a police bar
ricade and then about SO white
and Negro demonstrators.
The civil rights group walked
back and forth. They carried
signs: "One Man - One Vote."
Between them and the capitol
was a large force of state po
lice.
Several hundred white spec
tators watched and applauded
speeches by leaders of the seg
regationists.
In Washington
In Washington, action start
ed quickly on President John
son's voter - right bill. The
senate overrode southern pro
tests and instructed its judiciary
committee to act by April 9 on
the measure.
Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzen
bach told the house judiciary
committee that the courts have
been ineffective in guarantee
ing Negro voting rights. He
said the bill would cure this.
A top Soviet space official,
Vasily Seleznev, told a televi
sion news conference: "The tar
get before us now is the moon,
and we hope to reach it in no
distant future."
He said practice for this was
the most important reason that
Leonov left the ship. Others, he
Baid, were that "in the future
Cosmonauts will take part in
' assembling . spaceships : and
there may also arise the need
Cor repairing the craft:"
Selezney's remark about a
manned moonshot seemed to
restore this project to the pri
ority it held until the-then Pre
mier Khrushchev downgraded
it two years ago.
Second Team
It was the second Soviet
team flight in one space cap
sule, following a three - man,
.16 - orbit trip last October. It
came only 'five days before
America's first planned attempt
to orbit a spacecraft with more
than one man aboard.
At Cape Kennedy, astronauts
Virgil I. Grissom and John W.
Young began a lull dress re
hearsal for their three - orbit
flight Tuesday. The Russians
seemed to be just warming up
after the first half dozen orbits.
Alexei Leonov, 30, a chunky
Colonel and a' gifted artist, be
came the first man in history
to step into outer space.
More than half of his lO-min-ute,
slowly spinning maneuver
in space was seen on Soviet
television sets.
Both Well
Tass reported that Leonov
and the ship's commander, Col.
Pavel Belyayev, 39 were well
after they " had successfully
pulled off the dramatic-venture
into space. It came at the be
ginning of the second orbit.
Tass said the orbit ranged
from an altitude of 107.5 miles
to 307.5 miles the highest
ever for a manned spaceship.
The previous high was the 254
miles reached by the three cos
monauts in Voskhod 1.
Evaluation Booklet
Ever since we came to UNC some four (or
was it five?) years ago, we have heard rum
blings out of Student Government about some
thing called a "Course Evaluation Booklet."
It seems that just about all candidates for
president of the student body have promised
to come up with one.
Well, at long last, we have one. And it's a
dandy.
There is no doubt that the booklet was en
tirely written by students. Some of the re
views of courses would have turned over
South Building had they fallen into faculty
hands.
Seventy courses get the treatment in the
booklet, and most' articles are as favorable
as could be asked for. However, some courses,
especially the notorious, are spades called
spades and in a grave.
The booklet goes on sale today in the Book .
Exchange stores, including Y - Court, the
Scuttlebutt, the Book - Ex (where the price,
amazingly enough, is the same, as the other
places) and Lenoir Hall. It costs 25 cents ,$
and it's worth every penny of it.
Names In
Light Keeps Watch
On Students 9 Money;
By -JOHN GREENE ACKER
DTH Staff Writer
When election returns are all
in at the end of this month, and
the last vote tabulated, Jim
Light will finally be able to lean
back in his chair and dream
about his upcoming trip to Eu
rope. Until now, thoughts of that
ancient and green continent
haven't been able to blot out the
seemingly endless columns of
figures and stacks of reports
that pile his desk.
"I know this job sounds
stale," he said recently about
his duties as student body
treasurer, "but you do get to
meet a lot of people who can
make your experience rich."
No one can deny that. Any
man who has control over an
annual appropriation of nearly
$200,000 is bound to have a rich
and colorful existence. .
"I have no authorization to
finalize or actually appropriate
student government funds," he
. explained. "Student Legislature
does this.
Main Duties
"Preparation of the annual
. budget and administration of
the current one are the treas
urer's two main duties," he
said.
"The bulk of the organiza
tions receiving Student Govern-
; ment money are given their ap
propriation at the beginning of
the year in a lump sum.
"Each one of these groups
has been required to send me
a monthly report on their ex
penditures this year," Light
said. "If I find they are mis
using their funds, then I am
authorized to take over their
accounts.
"The rest of the organizations
in Student Government which
don't submit reports are the
ones that have all their finances
handled by me personally," he
JIM LIGHT
A Review
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said. "They can't truly estimate
or categorize their expendi
tures." Procedures Simplified
Light says the accounting
procedures of the treasurer's
job have been simplified this
year, but the work still seems
to be a large burden.
. It's a common sight in the
Student Government offices to
see his spare, six - foot - two
length hunched over a pile of;
paperwork, turning only to say j
a few quiet words to the sec
retaries. . ........
"My biggest problem is try
ing to establish more personal
contact with the treasurers and
business managers of Student
Government branches," he
said. ... ,
"It takes a lot of patience
and explanation to deal with
an inexperienced treasurer of
some SG committee."
Though he believes the stu
dent body treasurer should stay
out of politics, Light did have
a few comments on one cam
paign issue.
No Sense
"It doesn't make much sense
to make the plan of investing
SG general surplus funds in out
side interests a campaign is
sue," he said.
"The general surplus is the
total estimate of Student Gov
ernment funds left over from
this year's-budget and all those
in the past,", he said.
"We need this money free
for Student Government's use
before all our income from
student fees is paid before the
end of each semester.
"If the surplus were tied up
in an investment, Student Gov
ernment would go into the red
at the beginning of each se
mester." Lieht said his job would have
been a lot harder this year if
it hadn't been for the help of
his predecessor, Dick Akers,
Student Body Secretary Made
line Gray and Mrs. Sparrow
of the Activities Fund.
His only words of advice to
his successor are, "I hope the
new treasurer will be concerned
with imDroving finances, not
playing politics."
Foreign Student
Trip Is Saturday
Foreign students who accept
ed invitations to the Interna
tional Weekend in High Point
Saturday and Sunday should
meet in front of Bynum at 2
p.m. Saturday, where they will
board the special bus.
Dr. A. C. Howell, advisor to
foreign students, said this is
the second year that the Wes
ley Memorial Methodist Church
of High Point has played host
to the 75 to 100 foreign students
from colleges and universities
in the state.
- Get One
Generally, the writing is good, and the few
lapses can be chalked up to last minute scur
rying about in order to get the booklet out in
time for spring registration.
Sherry Stanley, co - chairman of the Aca
demic Affairs Committee, was the guiding
light behind the whole show, and her product
is as attractive as it is useful.
Bound in . heavy paper and utilizing an at
tractive design, the booklet is guaranteed to
withstand the rigors ; of many hours spent
thumbing through it in efforts not to fall into
the trap of a bad course.
The booklet started with the distribution of
some 3,500 questionnaires to students who had
previously taken the courses selected by the
Academic Affairs Committee.
Then a group of journalism students sat
down with the results, wrote them up in prop
er style, and off they went to the printers,
who also managed to do a good job.
The result? An interesting, lively and worth
while booklet which should be on every stu
dent's bookshelf. Fred Seely.
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DIONNE WARWICK
Td Bet
By FRED THOMAS
. DTH Staff Writer
"I'd bet my life on Moral
Re - Armament."
This was the attitude of Rich
ard "Rusty" Wailes when he
talked about an organization
described as "an idea which
will equip mankind to live in
the nuclear age."
In an interview yesterday the
Olympic Gold Medalist, leader
of a Moral Re - Armament
Task Force which presented a
program in Memorial Hall last
night, spoke on patriotism:
"We do not understand what
is . entailed in patriotism. That
is, to love our country as it is,
and to fight for it as it ought
to be."
The Seattle native was grad
uated from high school in Ed
monds, Washington in 1954 and
accepted a scholarship to Yale.
He received a degree in indus
trial administration in 1958.
After college he took a posi
tion with Boeing Aircraft as an
engineer in Seattle and helped
form a rowing club there.
This club took three gold
medals in the Pan American
trials in 1959 and the next year
traveled to the Olympics.
Wailes work with Moral Re
Armament began immediately
after his return from Olympic
competition. Since that time he
has traveled over a a quarter
of a million miles in 37 differ
ent countries working with
MRA.
He described his meeting with
Moral Re-Armament as "quite
accidental."
"I was picking up my wife
and daughter at the hospital in
Seattle just after my daughter's
birth. I happened to meet an
old friend on the street outside
who introduced me to two or
three people who were working
with MRA." .
One of them was from Fin
land. Wailes asked him why he was
in this country and what he was
doing.
To the second part of the
question he answered that he
was working with MRA.
In answering the first part of
the question, he stirred in
Wailes a great interest in MRA
and a grave concern over the
direction in which young Amer
ica is heading the world.
Go America's Way
"The whole world will go the
way America goes. If America
understands, lives and exports
Moral Re - Armament, my
country, Finland, will remain
free.
"If she doesn't, my country
will live in tyranny."
Wailes reflected, "What
struck me was that this guy
loved my country as much or
.more, than I did as an Ameri
can." i
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SINGS TONIGHT
My.. Life
.Wailes also showed concern
as he spoke of the many. Soviet
athletes he had met in compe
tition all over the world.
"I had met men my own age
who had a far greater passion
wan we do," he said.
"It was quite clear that anti
communism would not answer
ihe passion of these men.
"That's like trying to build a
shield around a volcano.
"What Js nee&ed is a real
revolution."
Revolution
According to Wailes, Moral
Re - Armament is a revolution.
"A revolution that includes ev
ery man on the face of the
earth."
"Man has developed himself
physically so that he can win
gold medals.
"He has developed his mind
technically so that he can trav
el into space. .
"Yet the whole world is con
trolled by the same hates, fears,
greeds and selfishness that has
been in control since man lived
in a cave.
"We need to modernize men."
This, he said, is the job of
young America. -
Wailes cited some examples
of weaknesses in our society
which are crippling progress in
this direction.
"We call ourselves the Unit
ed States. Yet, one of every
three marriages in our country
ends in divorce.
"How can we bring unity to
the United Nations if we can't
even live together." ,
He also pointed out strife be
tween labor and management,
class divisions, disagreement
between the older and young
er generations.
"Persons coming to Americ?
notice these things," he said
"We talk of the right . things
but we are not living the right
things."
w.
ailes
Kite Fly Rules Listed
Here are the rules for the second annual Daily Tar Heel
Kite Contest, scheduled for 1:30 p.m. Saturday on the new
baseball field next to Ehringhaus:
1. All kites must be homemade, and all must fly in order
to win.
. 2. Prizes will be given in . five categories smallest,
largest, prettiest, most unusual, and highest - flying.
3. Anyone in the Chapel Hill area, regardless of age, is
eligible. Small children should be accompanied by parents.
No entry fee will be charged.
4. Contestants in each category will be given 30 minutes
to get their kites aloft.
5. Decision of the judges will be final Duplicate prizes
will be awarded in the event of a tie.
6:' In the event of bad weather, notification of postpone
ment will be given by WCHL radio on Saturday morning,
and the contest will be held on March 28.
SI
By KERRY SIPE
DTH Staff Writer
. Student body presidential
candidates Paul Dickson and
Don Carson will clash ideas to
night in a public debate spon
sored by the Daily Tar Heel.
Both candidates accepted the
offer Monday to participate in
a formal debate and question
period tonight in Gerrard from
7:30 p.m. until about 8:45.
The debate will be the only
formal confrontation between
the candidates and the format
is designed to confine the dis
cussion to issues alone.
Each candidate will be given
seven minutes for an opening
statement and five minutes re
buttal period.
After the debating period, a
panel of DTH staff members
including-co - editor Hugh Stev
ens, managing editor Mike
Yopp and student government
reporter John Greenbacker will
question the pair on their
stands on various campus is
sues. '
There will also be a short
'Weekend'
Blasts Off
In Durham
Freshman Weekend starts
with a bang tonight with a show
and dance at the Durham Na
tional Guard Armory.
A second dance will be held
tomorrow night in Woollen
Gym.
Tickets for the two - night
festivities are on sale at Y -
Court and the Armory door for
$5 a couple, $3 stag. .
Feature Singer
Tonight's 8 to midnight dance
will feature Dionne Warwick
making her last U. S. appear
ance before leaving on an
European tour, The Tams, Dr,
Feelgood and the Interns, Gui
tar Kimber and the Untoucn-
ables.
WKIX disc jockey Jerry
Kearns as emcee.
The "Shadows" combo will
play here tomorrow.
Bus Rides
Round trip bus transportation
for the Durham show is avail
able at $1 per person.
Busses will leave the Rams
Head parking lot at 7 p.m. and
will return to Chapel Hill im
mediately after the dance.
Roberts Crowder, fourth floor
Ruff in, should be contacted for
reservations.
The National Guard Armory
is off Highway 501 on Stadium
Drive, about one mile from
Northgate Shopping Center.
Free parking will be provid
ed. Freshman class president Bill
Purdy said a big crowd is ex
pected for both nights.
He said that plenty of tickets
are still available.
Jim Bischoff
Replaces Parker
Jim Bischoff will replace Jeff
Parker as the Student Party
nominee for senior class vice
president in the spring elec
tions. Parker was declared ineligi
ble Wednesday by the Elections
Board, A- grade deficiency was
cited as the reason.
Class president nominee Bob
Payton said he did not think
the ticket would be hurt se
verly. Payton said both men are
members of the same fraterni
ty and that Parker's support
would fall to Bischoff.
period of questions from the
floor.
"We are hoping to attract
a good crowd for the debate,"
DTH co - editor Fred Seely said
in inviting the candidates to
meet. "Too often the residence
hall meetings are dominated by
party hacks trying to snipe at
the opposition.
'This sort of thing certainly
must take place in any cam
paign, but we feel there has
been too much of it this spring,"
he said.
"We will take every step pos
sible to make it a fair debate
in which each side has an
equal opportunity, and I would
urge everyone to attend."
Paul Dickson, student party
candidate, said, "I am willing
to debate Don Carson anywhere,
but I doubt that the Tar Heel
debate is going to be any bet
ter than a dorm meeting to
bring the issues to the student
6ody.
"I think the Tar Heel has
failed its responsibility to the
students by not bringing out the
issues of this campaign previ
ously. "This is not an issueless cam
paign," he said, "It appears to
be issueless because of such
poor coverage.
"1 see no reason why this
debate cannot be confined to a
few particular issues and not
just another discussion like
we've been having all week in
the dormitories. The only thing
formal about this debate is the
format."
Earlier Dickson accused his
opponent of "attempting to
ride Bob .Spearman's coattails
into office.
"Thus far we have heard lit
tle of Carson's personal qualifi
cations and even less o his pro
posals for the improvement of
the University community," he
said.
University Party candidate
Don Carson said, "I ' am de
lighted to have this opportunity
to debate my opponent. I hope
the campus will benefit from
this debate, and the format will
relieve the candidates from the
informality of regular residence
hall meetings."
DTH co - editor Hugh Stevens
said yesterday he hopes "that
the debates will force the can
didates to bring up the issues
hiding in the campaign. The
candidates have had ample op
portunity to release policy
statements to the Tar Heel and
have refused to doso.
"Perhaps the debate will
force the true issues out in the
open," he said.
Quartet
To Play
Tuesday
The North Carolina String
Quartet will give its second per
formance of the season for the
Tuesday Evening Scries this
Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Hill Hall.
Sponsored by the Department
of Music, this concert will be
open to the public free of
charge.
Charles Griffith, who joined
the UNC music faculty in the
fall, is cellist with the group.
He is a graduate of Oberlin,
and attended the Conservatory
of Music in Geneva, Switzer
land. Another member of the
group, Earl Wolslagel, studied
at the Juilliard School of Mus
ic with Leopold Auer and Vera
Funaroff. While in Madrid as an
Air Force lieutenant colonel, he
formed an "International Trio"
with a German pianist and a
Peruvian cellist.
Edgar Alden, first violinist,
and his wife, Dorothy, the viol
ist, have belonged to the quar
tet since its start 14 years ago.
Mr. Alden is associate conduct
or of the UNC Symphony,
chairman of the string division
of the Department of Music and
professor of music theory.
Opening the concert will be
the Mozart Quartet in B Flat.
This quartet, one of six dedi
cated to Haydn, is often re
ferred to as "The Hunt" be
cause its opening phrase re
sembles the call of a hunting
horn.
Other works will include
Dvorak's "American Quartet"
and Beethoven's Opus 59, No.
2.