.titi.iUC- Library Stan? ff flfr S et'SorUU Bspt Vote I 03Bo:t 070 Weather Continued fair and ceo I. vm Edition The South's Largest College Newspaper CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TDEsD'Ay. MARCH 23. Iflfis Founded Feb. 23. 1893 Volume 72, Number 120 Open A For Wide H .ecltii Mis 10 Camping- t!t it -A- is 'A rr I ' ' '."';", J " " - Mi' " ' ; v " ' .... - ' ' 5 - ' -'it, , - :,'-; -,' 4,. i 1 - ' ' S4 , ' f . ,' ' " ? , ; -f ' ' 4 ' fr y.' ' I IIIIIIMI I 'llllllm..! BRIT GORDON V. P. Candidate Gives Platf orm , (Ed. Note Student body vice-presidential nomi nees Brit Gordon (UP) asked to submit statements 4uaiuivaiiuiu auu piatiuiius. TV XdllCU lO BUDtnll his. Gordon s is printed below.) Brit Gordon The significance of the office of vice-president of the stu-: dent . body is often overlooked An 'J important . function of the vice-president, provided for by our student constitution, is that he act as speaker of 'student legislature. To do this job one must have a working knowledge of the purpose and ; functions of the legislative body. This past summer L worked in . Washington as" a congres sional intern for the present minority "leader of the House, Arnold R. Ford of Michigan. Through this experience I gained a deeper understanding of the legislating process which I was able to put into effect as a member of the student legis lature when I returned to the campus this fall.' This ; experience along with serving as a delegate to the state student legislature in Ra leigh in my opinion qualifies me to be speaker of the student legislature. Also my experience in working with the Spearman administration has taught me that most of the vice-president's time - is - spent in aiding the president in carrying out the responsibilities of the execu tive branch- As a matter of fact, when the president is absent or incapaci tated, the . vice-president must perform his duties. Therefore the vice-president must have a thorough working knowledge of all branches of student govern ment. - My experience in the Men's Attorney General staff, the Men's, Council and the Const! tutional Council further helps me to have , a mature and per ceptive awareness of. the prob lems which . we must solve through the legislature. ' .It is my sincere belief that I can deal skillfully with people and maintain the , respect of my fellow students, faculty and administration. Above all, I, like everyone else on the Spearman adminis tration have been taught that teamwork is the essence of ef ficient government. When I am elected, you can count on me as' your vice-president to ad dress myself to integrity and holding on to that which has proved its worth and replacing that which is unjust and outdat ed with the new. As an ex ample at the request of Bob Spearman I have almost com pleted a massive executive branch reorganization ' bill which will replace the existing riimhprsnniR committee struc ture with a departmental sys tem based on our state and na tional executive branch struc tures, which will more nearly assure the efficiency of com munication and broaden student participation particularly .among women students. For these" and many more reasons it is my sincere hope that you will help me to the Carson team today. t- . "FIRST 100" "The. First One Hundred," documentary film on last sum mer's" North Carolina Volun teers, will be shown in Swain Hall at 7 tonight; The 28-min ute film is directed under the auspices f the North Carolina Fund by UNC graduate studeni Dick Schoener. i; r 4 'Af i ,--Y-iOvyi'J -M-ri-Yriiiyrrrr-Y-riW'tf DON WILSON and Don Wilson (SP) were to the DTH concerning their Selma March Said 'Worse Than HelT SELMA, Ala. UPI Three hun dred marchers stepped up ' the pace of their 50-mile right-to-1 vote trek to Alabama's capital Monday : and crossed into Lgwndes County; described once by a Negro leader as "worse than hell." Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. led his weary civil rights pil grims doggedly along U. S. 80 which narrowed to two lanes at the Dallas-Lowndes County line King said he had' sent tele grams to all Alabama colleges and universities seeking par ticipants for the march into Montgomery Thursday. His wife,; Coretta, joined the Negro leader in the early after noon. She wore a two-piece, light green dress and black low-heel shoes and a black lace shawl. They walked arm-inarm.- Leroy Collins, director of the federal community relations service, joined the marchers also. "I like to walk. I , usually walk about two miles a day," Col lins told newsmen. He wore a dark blue. suit. The campsite for the second night of the march was a pas ture about one mile from Big Swamp Creek, still ahead of the marchers. The site is about 25 miles east of Selma. Federalized national guards men in battle fatigues and snappy army military police es corted the - march. The , chop chop helicopters, and the drone of army reconnaisance planes accompanied the procession. The soldiers alternately blocked right and left lanes of traffic after the procession moved into the two-lane stretch which winds 22 miles. As pro vided In the court's order al lowing the march, they walked two abreast and kept to the shoulders of the roadway where possible. Candidates For The office' of student body treasurer is important because of the large responsibility it in volves $203,000 worth of re sponsibility for next year. In selecting a person to fill this office, therefore, prime consid eration should be given to first hand , experience in Student Government finance. Last Friday, Jim Light, Stu dent Body Treasurer, pointed out that "Preparation of the an nual budget and administration of the current one are the treasurer's ' two main duties." As treasurer of the debate team, I have helped draw up the de bate team budget and have ap peared before both the Budget and Finance Committees to present and defend this budget, thereby gaining a first-hand Soph A utopsy Ordered Robert Ward Williams, a 20-year-old sophomore from Morehead City, was pronounced dead on arrival at Memorial Hospital yesterday at 1:15 p.m. after suf fering an apparent heart attack, according to campus police chief Arthur Beaumont. c Williams was stricken at 12:40 p.m. at the library, and immediately received mouth-to-mouth resuscita tion from another student, David A. Williams (no rela tion). ; Police and ambulance units arrived at 12:42 and adminis tered oxygen to the stricken student, but hospital officials said he did not respond to treatment. ,The dead youth's roommate, freshman Chris Warner, told police Williams had not been feeling well recently, and com plained, of having the flu Warner said Williams suf fered from a heart ailment as a boy. Orange County medical exam iner Dr. Hubert Patterson has ordered an autopsy to determine cause of death. runerai arrangements are being handled by Dill funeral home in Morehead City. ROBERT WILLIAMS Quartet Sets Free Concert In Hill Hall The North Carolina String Quartet will give its second per formance of the season at 8 to night in Hill Hall as a part of the Tuesday Evening Series, sponsored by the Department of Music. The concert is open to the public free of charge. ... Charles Griffith, a graduate of Oberlin and the Conserva tory of Music in Geneva is cel list with the group. Another member of the group, Earl Wolslagel, studied at the Julliard School of Music with Leopold Auer and Vera Fona roff. Edgar Alden and his wife Dorothy, violinists, have been with the quartet since its start 14 years ago. Alden is associate conductor of the UNC Sym phony and chairman of the strings . division of the Depart ment of Music. The concert will include the Mozart Quartet in B Flat, Dvorak's "American Quartet" and Beethoven's Opus 59, No. 2. Eric Van Loon (SP ) knowledge of how the budget and appropriation procedures of Student Government operate. In administering the Debate Team budget, one of the larg est and most detailed of ap propriations received by any Student Government organiza tion, I have gained a complete knowledge of all the required monthly reports and special ex penditure reports for travel, and have become familiarized with the workings of the Stu dent Activities Fund office. I have worked with Jim Light on various questions of Debate Team finance. I believe the of fice of treasurer of the student body is far too important a po sition for someone who has had no previous experience in Stu dent. Government finance. As omore Dies: Physics Student Named First UNC Churchill Winner Nathan W. Dean, a graduate students in physics has been named a Churchill Scholar to study at Cambridge University in England. He is the first UNC student to win this honor. Dean, a resident of Durham, is a 1963 Phi Beta Kappa grad uate of UNC, with a B.S. de gree m physics. He attended the University of Tennessee for two years prior to enrolling at UNC. Since graduating in 1963, Dean has been working on a doctorate in physics. His research area is field theory. He plans to con tinue his studies in physics at Cambridge. The Churchill College was opened m 1960 within the frame work of Cambridge University to lay special emphasis on the sciences. It bears the name of Sir Winston Churchill and is planned as a world center for advanced study m the natural sciences, engineering and math ematics.' A - group of Americans have since established the Unit ed States Churchill Foundation to further study and research in science and technology. Nine Churchill Scholars have been selected from the United States for 1965-66. In addition to Dean, two of the scholars are from Harvard and two from Rensselaer. The others come from Stanford, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Indiana and the University of Michigan. Each Churchill Scholar re ceives $3,000 designed to cover all necessary travel, living ex penses and fees for nine months of study. A married man re ceives an additional $1,000 for his wife and $500 for each de pendent child. Each year, a different group of universities is designated to nominate candidates for Church ill awards. Lane Named To Head CPU David Lane, a junior from Durham majoring in mathema tics and political science, was elected chairman of the Caro lina Political Union Sunday for the year 1965-66. Robert Powell was elected chairman, David Kiel, treasurer, and Miriam Lane, secretary. The CPU is a non-partisan discussion group which holds weekly meetings and sponsors monthly debates on topics of current political significance. Founded in 1936, the CPU was active on campus until 1954 and was reorganized last spring. Treasurer you cast your vote for treas urer, then, I would ask you above all to consider first-hand experience in Student Govern ment finances, a record -is bet ter than a promise! Not only, though, must a treasurer bring experience to the office, but also fresh new ideas for improving Student Government finance. First, I propose investing some of the funds which have accumulated in the general surplus over the past year, and using the inter est to continue a scholarship fund which is now paid out of student fees. At. the candidates' meeting at Nurses' Dorm, the student body was assured that about half of the General Sur plus could be used without (Continued from Page Jj r 1 I r .y. ::::-::.-:-::;-::: :-;-:-:;:-:::::;:-;:.-.::.-::-::::-;:: ...; t - ' - "w. i. ' - 4 V - v A v 5- ' " ' r, v, , - ..J.., ..v .. .... , WW. '' ..J an X ' o.ft"'-5:--:? - " " ::Dil mm r " , : - :. -, :- " . :v-' ' --..-r, ' - " - . . : : ! t,.- , ' .,-' ',. '" ' . i . . : . ' T " " ' - V " i , J--h ' , V t v -r ty I" . v 'r1 . " " , . X" eftWW .-"'-:'"' :-Xy-y- y. x y.-: :-.-.:::,... . . O. H. PARRISH .hits an overhead smash in yesterday's tennis match against Kalamazoo College., Parrish defeated little All American Dick Johnson 6-3, 6-4. UNC Netters won the match 7-2. See page "4 for coverage; Photo by Jock Lauterer. 2 -Man Suace Shot JL Waits On The weather looked good enough Monday to space offi cials that they tentatively de- "tiidejl . the two-man Gemini spacecraft, could go today, but a final decision was "reserved until a few hours before the 9 a.m. launch time. The two astronauts, the Titan rocket and Spacecraft were in excellent condition for the three-orbit, five hour dash into space. . - But the weather, alternately thinning and clouding over again, kept the projected flight of astronauts Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom and John W. Young in some doubt. The final decision on the weather would be made at 170 minutes before launch when valves are . opened to al low one of the propellants onto the engine plumbing: Flight director Christopher C. Krat , Jr. said "serious con sideration" had been given to not beginning the countdown. Countdown Begun But at an early afternoon meeting with the astronauts and weather officials the decision to begin the countdown was made. The fuel tanks of the titan rocket were to be loaded with the two propellants about 6:30 P.m. Dr. Charles Berry, chief phy cian for the ... astronauts, said they were "more than go." And officials in charge of the space craft and the booster rocket said they were the best ever de livered and in excellent condi tion. . The astronauts were due to board the spacecraft just 100 minutes before launch. As if part of the countdown, high altitude winds began to blow from the southwest to dis perse cloud cover that has hung over the launch area and Give Platf or: -Tom White (VP)- Two serious problems face next year's student body treas urer. The need for a more direct link between the treasurers of the organizations receiving funds from Student Govern ment and the SG treasurer him self can be solved by the es tablishment of a Treasurers Board. . Its membership would con sist of these treasurers who would meet at compulsory monthly sessions. - Atr each meeting tne SG treasurer could discuss and solve ' immediately any specific problems that these groups had incurred during the past mdnth The second problem involves the training of the new treas urers. A treasurers handbook Weather dampened flight plans with cold and ' sporadic, showers.. Even the outlook for sea "Weather . improved. Expected conditions in the " prime and secondary landing areas an "the Atlantic were well within the limits of cloud ceiling, visibility, wind and wave levels. Eye on Weather With one- eye ; on the weather, the astronauts re viewed the status of the giant titan rocket that will carry them into space, and the ex periments they will perform during the three-orbit journey. Then in the afternoon, air force Maj. Virgil I. (Gus) Gris som, the Gemini Command Pilot, and Navy. Lt. Cmdr. John W. Young, co-pilot, reviewed with' experts the entire weather picture. . . Earlier,- ships of the prime recovery force and their sup porting aircraft went through a dress rehearsal of the sea m a n s h i p and coordination necessary to locate and retrieve the spacecraft and astronauts at the end of the flight. .:;:.:;:;:.v::: Help Wanted m m m I I m g? There will be a lot of ballots to be counted to- night, and students wish- ing to take part in the If tallying should report to II M . Graham Memorial lounge K? af 7 nm Flop! irnc UnarH p chairman Bill Schmidt p saia au neip win oe wei if come. - i i i in i i ' would specifically outline and define their duties and respon sibilities, so that each one would benefit directly from the experience of the man who had preceded him in office. The Student Government needs a full time and exper ienced treasurer. My practical financial exper ience comes from my work as an assistant cashier in a Dur ham bank; my SG administra tive experience from my re sponsibilities with the Sym posium and Elections Board. The SG treasurer should con cern himself with the continued improvement of - the efficient handling of SG. funds, not with unnecessary- involvement with legislature or any other poli tical activity. Student Body. Posts Up For Grubs Toduy The long weeks of campaigning draw to a close today as students go to the polls to elect officers, for the coming year. Polls open at 10 a.m. and close at 5:30 p.m. Election of the Big Four student body officers and editor of the Daily Tar Heel highlight the election. Student Party nominee Paul Dickson and University Party nominee Don Carson seek the top spot student body president. Dickson will make his second bid for the presidency. He was defeated last spring by Bob Spearman. Carson will try for his second Big Four office.' Last spring he was elected vice-president. Junior Brit Gordon is Carson's running-mate. Sophomore Don Wilson will seek the vice-presidential post on the Student Party ticket. University Party's Tom White will seek the treasurer's spot against Student Party nominee Eric Van Loon. The race for secretary will pit Student Party's Sherry O'Donnell against University Party's Camilla Walters. The Daily Tar Heel won't have a co-editor next year. McCrary, managing editor of the DTH, will carry endorse ments of Publications Board, Student Party and University Party into the race. McCrary has worked on staffs of The Charlotte Observer, Hickory Daily Record and Chapel Hill Weekly. Pratt formerly worked on the staff of the Brooklyn Graphic and Carolina Quarterly. Other candidates are: Senior class officers (UP) John Harmon, president; Armis tead Maupin, vice president; Carol Payne, secretary; Kathy Cannon, treasurer; Beverly Bailey, social chairman. (SP) Bob Payton, president; Jim Bischoff, vice president; Lois Black, secretary; Semantha Townsend, social chairman. Carolina Athletic Association president (UP) Joe Church ill; (SP) Robert Newlin; (running independently) Rick Kramer. Women's Athletic Association president Peg Ormsby, Win bourne Shaffer. Women's Residence Council Chairman Greylin Reeves, Penny Scovil. Carolina Women's Council Nancy Mayer, Jerri Moser. NSA (4) (UP)' Sandra "Burden; Mike Chanin, George In gram, Teddy O'Toole; (SP) Jeff Davis, Wright Doyle, Bob Powell, John Shelburne; (running Independently) Roger Davis. Seeking seats in student legislature are: Men's District I (5) (UP) Cliff Baggett, Julian Busby, Lloyd Coley, Jerry Rutledge, Gerald Shaw; (SP) Hugh HalselL Zeke Sossoman, Jack Tate, Jerry Wagner, Bill Whichard. Men's District II (4) (UP) Marshall Karro, Phil Kirstein, Lanny -Snuff, Mike Tonry, Craig Wardlaw; (SP) Hugh Black well, Jim Brame, Steve Hockfield. Men's District III (4) (UP) Clark Crampton. William rot ter, Bill Scott, Leon Solomon; (SP) Jim Bischoff, Jay Brilliant. Men's District IV (2) (UP) George M. Ingram, Dave Rowe; (SP) Nick Greenwood. Men's District V (2) (UP) Jim Smith, Buddy Wester; (SP) Joe Chandler. Men's District VI (2) (UP) Armistead Maupin, Jim Rob inson; (SP) Steve Jolly, Baxter Linney. Men's District VII (3) (UP) Don McPhaul, George Teague; (SP) Dwight Allen, Miles Davis, Mel Wright. Special Seat (1) (SP) Bob Wilson. Men's District VIII (2) (UP) John C. Strickland; (SP) Sandy Hobgood, Bill Quick. Special Seat (1) (UP) Miles Foy; (SP) Frank Longest. Men's District IX (3) (UP) Pete Hellebush, Alan Klein maier, Sterling Phillips; (SP) Dellaven Cleaver, Jim Little, Gery Sandling Men's District X (3) (UP) Bill Purdy, Norman Shearin, Robert Winton; (SP) Tony Ivins, Bill Long, Rich Thayer. Spe cial Seat (D (UP) Marshall Pittman; (SP) Byron McCoy. Men's District XI (3) (UP) Morrison Farish, Teddy O'Toole. Randy Worth; (SP) Tom Benton, Jim Evans, Allen Webster. (Running independently) Roger Davis, A. D. Frazier, Jerry Hodges. Special Seat (1) (UP) Walter Hussman; (SP) Don Johnson; (running independently) Tom Thurston. Women's District I (4) (UP) Kathy Cauble, Carole South erland, Joyce Watt, Louisa Wilson; (SP) Louise Fuller, Barbara McKenzie. Women's District II (2) (SP) Elaine Carlson, Janice New ton. Women's District III (2) (UP) Ellen Allen; (SP) Sharon Rose. Women's District IV (2) (UP) Susan Barber, Suzanne Roboson; (SP) Anne Belcher, Cheri Kessler. Women's District V (2) (UP) Margie Gregory, Charlotte Milstead; (SP) Miriam Dorsey, Carol Perry. Special Seat (1) (UP) Margaret Groome; (SP) Jean Carolyn Jones. Seeking seats on the Men's Honor Council are: Men's District II (1) Fred Atkins, Richard Roskind, John Mundy. Men's District HI (1) Jay Hanan. Men's District IV (1) Harold Berry, Randy Fenninger, Dick Mitchell. Men's District VIII (1) Richard Holderness. Men's District IX (1) Tom Jenrette, Bill Miller. Men's District X (1) Tom Manley. Men's District XI (1) Will Bryan Pittman, John Wall. i Seeking seats on the Women's Honor Council are: Women's District I (1) Mary Gray Teague. Women's District II (1) Madeline Gray. Women's District III (1) Ann Jamieson, special seat write-in (1). Women's District IV (1) Bee Forester, Linda Harrison. Women's District V (2) Bobbie Bailey, Valerie Gwyrxne, Belly Sweaney.

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