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Graduation
Every senior who expects to
gradaate in June must register
with the dean of his respective
school before April 1 or he will
not receive a diploma.
Weather
Fair and warm today with
probable showers in late after
noon and night.
The South's Largest College Newspaper
Founded Feb. 23. 1893
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINAjHURSDAY, MARCH 25, 1965
Volume 72, Number 122
Incomplete Returns Give Staden
y
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Party Majority In Legislature
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RIDING HOOD of new 1963 Buick Special are places on campus, including Y-Court and Le
publicity .chairman Mary Elizabeth Barker, noir Hall. The winner will be announced at the
The car will be given away to raise money Campus Chest Fashion Show - Auction April 7.
for five worthwhile charities on campus. Tick
ets for a drawing are' on sale for $1 at several Photo by Jock Laurterer
Literary Panel
To Highlight
Arts Festival
" The UNC spring Fine Arts
Festival, scheduled for March
30 to April 5, will be highlight
ed by a literary symposium
sponsored by Esquire Magazine.
The symposium, under the di
rection of Esquire's publisher,
Arnold Gingrich, will consist of
two panel discussions on "The
Novelist as Journalist" and will
be held , on - the concluding day
of the festival.
, ' Panelists will be playwright
and ' novelist Jack Richardson,
novelist Bruce Friedman, nov
elist Isaac Singer and Norman
"Podhoretz, editor of Commen
tary, a literary criticism maga
zine. The discussions will be held
in Memorial Hall. Gingrich will
, moderate the 4 p.m. panel and
Louis Rubin, visiting professor
in English, will moderate the
8 p.m. panel.
Richardson's plays include
one produced on Broadway,
"Lorenzo," and two off-Broad
way " productions. Friedman is
author of the current bestseller,
"A Mother's Kisses." Singer is
, a journalist and book reviewer
for the Jewish Daily Forward
in New York City. Podhoretz,
an outspoken commentator on
racial prejudice, was featured
in the' March issue of Playboy
magazine in an article concern
ing the country's "Leisure cris
is." This is the first time the
Fine Arts Festival has ever
been held at Chapel Hill. Ap
pearing also at the festival will
be Pulitzer Prize winners Karl
Shapiro and William Schuman,
sculptor " Seymour Lipton, - pian
ist Peter Nero, New York
Times movie critic Bosley
Crowther, historian Jacques
Barzun and Robert Chapman.
.Mary
In "Memorial Hall Saturday
"The sounds of "Maybelline"
and "You Beat Me To The
Punch" will ring in Memorial
Hall at 8 p.m. Saturday when
the annual spring Germans'
Concert presents Chuck Berry
and Mary Wells.
Berry, the son of a St. Louis
church choir bass and soprano,
has been presented several Gold
Records and has been featured
in four movies.
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MARY WELLS
VMM
Town May Refuse
Permit For Bell's
A building permit request for
the controversial Bell's Drive-In
will be turned down, Town Man
ager Robert Peck said yesterday-
,
Peck said the request would
be rejected because the plans
do not comply with town ordi
nances the roof overhangs
the sidewalk too much, the
Bell's sign hangs ; too low and
also overhangs the sidewalk too
much. - ,- "
, He said no formal action on
the request, submitted Monday
by the Hunt Construction Com
pany of Durham, has been tak--en
yet. The plans were drawn
up by architect Charles W. Con
nelly and Associates of Char
lotte.' The $40,000 short - order res
taurant is still planned for the
corner of Franklin -and Colum
bia Streets despite strong oppo
sition from Chapel Hill resi
dents and University officials.
According to the plans, it will
have about a 45 - foot frontage
on West Franklin Street, be
about 40 feet deep and have
about a 26 - foot frontage on
South Columbia Street. Parking
places for six cars are shown
on the plans.
A proposed local bill that
would give the town authority
to regulate the appearance of
buildings in Chapel Hill re
ceived strong support Tuesday
night from the Board of Alder
men. The bill would allow the Al
dermen to designate areas with
in the Town for special controls
and would establish a special
Appearance Commission. The
commission would review all ex
terior plans for proposed build
ings in these areas. Buildings
could not be . built without the
approval of the commission.
The aldermen withheld form
And Chuck Will Rock
Writer of much of his own
and other rock and roll artists'
music, he
first made the movie
screen in
"Rock, Rock, Rock,"
in which he
Catch Me,"
sang
one
Can't
own
"Mr.
of his
songs.
His second film was
Rock and Roll," in which he
sang "Oh Baby Doll." In his
third movie, "Go Johnny Go,"
he introduced "Johnny B.
Goode."
Other Berry Hits include
"School Days," "Brown-Eyed
Handsome Man" and "Sweet
Little Sixteen."
Miss Wells started with a
rock and roll review on nation
wide tour.
When she released "The One
Who Really Loves You," her
name went up in lights.
. Since then, she has had num
erous hit records. Among them
. are ' "Laughing Boy," "True
Lover," "You Beat Me To The
Punch," "You Lost the Sweet
est Boy," and "Bye Bye Ba
by." ; The Germans club is made
up of 13 fraternities.
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al action on the proposal until
Friday, but voiced their sup
port for the measure. After the
aldermen act on the proposal it
will be sent to Orange County
Representative Donald Stanford
for introduction in the General
Assembly. After approval there,
the aldermen will begin the rou
tine procedures for amending
the town's zoning ordinances.
Phil Green of the Institute of
Government presented; the - pro-;
posal to the-aldermen. "It's not
aimed specifically at the Bell's
walk - in," Mr. Green said, "It
would bar such buildings as
Hardee's ' on West Franklin
Street and others.
Medieval Lecture
Here On April 9
The Department of Germanic
Languages at the University, in
conjunction with the Coopera
tive Program in the Humani
ties, will sponsor a lecture by
Professor W. T. H. Jackson on
April 9.
Mr. Jackson, distinguished
medievalist of Columbia and
Duke Universities, will speak
on "The Changing Pace of Me
dieval Literature." A reception
for Mr. and Mrs. Jackson will
be held following the lecture.
The lecture will be given at 8
p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of
Dey Hall and is open to the
public.
BOUSCAREN TO SPEAK
Anthony T. Bouscaren, a well
known authority on Communism
and international relations, will
speak at 8:15 tonight in Carroll
Hall on "The Real Story on the
Battle for Southeast Asia."
The program is sponsored by
the Carolina Conservative Club.
Their yearly concerts bring in
diversified entertainment rang
ing from Louis Armstrong to
Henry Mancini.
Each of the member fratern
ities buys bids for its members
at $6 to $8 each. Bids are then
made available to members of
' fraternities not in the Germans'
Club, and remaining bids are
offered to the general student
body.
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CHUCK BERRY
Ranger 9 Slams Into Moon
Transmits 6,150 Close-Bps
PASADENA, Calif. (AP)
Ranger 9, televising live to
home viewers, slammed into
the moon Wednesday ; after
snapping 6,150 spectacular
close - ups of never - before
seen cracks and pocks on the
floor of a lunar crater.
The major first in space pro
vided a dramatic windup to the
once - troubled $280 million
Ranger series, designed to find
safe landing sites for astronauts
later in this decade.
"Our lunar exploration pro
gram is in good hands and off
to a good start," a U S. space
agency official told a news con
ference at Jet Propulsion Lab
oratory, which built and guided
Ranger spacecraft.
Scientists scheduled a - news
session for last night to disclose
results of a preliminary analy
sis of sample shots from all six
of Ranger 9's cameras. There
was no immediate comment on
whether the crater surface
might be safe for a moon land
ing.
More than 200 photographs
from two wide - angle cameras
flashed on television screens at
five - second intervals during
the . final 20 minutes of Ranger
9's plunge into the crater Al
phonsus, near the center of the
face of the. moon.
The first, from about 1,300
miles out, showed three large
craters in triangular pattern
with Ptolemaeus at the top, Al
phonsus at the lower left and
.Albategniua at lower right? -As
Ranger 9 plunged down
at 6,000 miles an hour, the oth
er two craters slid off the screen
and the cameras zoomed in on
the target point northeast of a
3,000 - foot peak inside Alphon
sus' walls. The impact at 10:08
a.m. was only four miles off
target, making it the most ac
curate shot in the series.
Final pictures taken a few
Cartoons
At Howell
An exhibit of 56 original car
toons by Robert Zschiesche,
cartoonist for the Greensboro
Daily News, will be on display
in the main floor of Howell
Hall through April 17.
Zschiesche has been cartoon
ist for the Greensboro paper for
the past 14 months, replacing
William Sanders, who is now
cartoonist for the Kansas City
Star. The Zschiesche cartoons
are also being used in one Flor
ida newspaper and mne North
Carolina papers. The Daily Tar
Heel often carries his cartoons
GM Lounge
Is Site For
Sartre Play
Jean Paul Sartre's "No Exit,"
a situation play set in the dark
ness of hell, will be presented
tonight at 8 in the main lounge
of Graham Memorial.
A Graham Memorial Drama
Committee production, the brief
play, consisting of four charac
ters, will be presented in three
quarters round under the direc
tion of Don Calvert, set design
er Larry Mendenhall, and stage
manager Hatoshi Sato.
Playing the part of the Val
et, a bell - boy who ushers the
"guests" into their room and
seals it from the outside, is
Richard Philp. Garcin, a cow
ard sent to hell because he tor
tured his wife, is played by
Robert Linblad.
The two female characters
are: Estelle, a nymphomaniac
sent to hell because she killed
her child, portrayed by Tem
perance Parker; and Ines, a
lesbian and sadist who de
stroyed a young girl's life, de
picted by Rebecca Ranson.
In the existentialist play, the
three main characters are e
tombed for eternity in one hide
ous room in hell where each
soul is stripped of its pretenses
by the cruel curiosity of the
damned, and there is no exit.
miles high showed the flat crat
er floor which looks almost
smooth in earth - based photo
graphs pocked by hundreds
of meteorite impacts and brok
en by miles - long cracks or
grooves called rills.
The pictures fed to the tele
vision networks came from a
newly developed device called
a scan converter which speed
ed up signals from the space
craft so they could be received
on standard - broadcast sets.
The signals also were record
6 Wacky 9 Comedy
Set By Amateurs
UNC students, faculty mem
bers, alumni and faculty wives
are combining their talents in
the production of Noel Coward's
popular comedy, "Hay Fever,"
to be presented Thursday, Fri
day and Saturday evenings of
this week at 8:30 by the Purefoy
Players at the Chapel Hill Com
munity Church. ' Admission is
free.
Directed by Jo Pettis, the
comedy concerns a wacky Eng
lish family and the four guests
they invite for a country week
end. The family consists of the
mother, a retired actress,
played by Betty Sager, wife of
a. Dental .School professor; .the
father, a novelist, , played by
journalism professor Walter
Spearman; the son, played by
Carolina Playmaker Roberts
y
SOPHOMORE JOHNNY JOHNSON of Salis- bar during yesterday's track meet with N. C."
bury hovers 13 feet in the air over the parallel State. See page four for complete coverage.
Photo by Jock Lauterer
UNC Visited
By FRED SEELY
"I'm impressed," said one of
the Duke's (Men.
"I am too," added one of the
Spizwinks.
"So are we," replied the
members of Pi Beta Phi, Alpha
Delta Pi, Kappa Kappa Gamma,
Spencer Dorm, Cobb Dorm, and
ChiPsi.
The first two were members
of Yale singing groups who
stopped over here this weekend
for a few concerts and a night's
sleep on their way to Florida.
The final six heard them sing.
The singers got, to say the
very least, an enthusiastic re
ception. The Duke's Men sang
at Chi Psi on Saturday night,
then performed Sunday at Pi
Phi, ADPi and Kappa. The
Spizwinks added Sunday night
concerts at the two girl's dorms.
The groups are two of the six
on the Yale campus, and their
ed as images on film for study
by scientists.
It was the third straight sue
cess lor tne Ranger program,
severely criticized after the
first six shots failed.
Ranger 7 sent back more than
4,000 pictures last July 31,
Ranger 8 more than 7,000 last
Feb. 20. Both were aimed at
broad lunar plains. Though
they too are scarred by craters
of all sizes, scientists believe
they are the most iikely land
ing spots for astronauts.
Batson; and the daughter,
played by Playmaker Mary
Lindsay Spearman.
Guests of the Bliss family in
elude a British diplomat, played
by English instructor and grad
uate student James Gardner;
a. boxer, played by building
contractor Mark Burnham,
UNC Journalism graduate;
femme fat ale, played by Sally
Prange, wife of a psychiatry
professor; and a silly young
girl, played by Jo Stipe, wife
of a staff member of the Insti
tute of Government. Gi n g e r
Young plays the maid.
Playmaker Norma Cartwrighl
Scofield is ? - stage manager
RTVMP' Student ; Millard Mc
Donald ; is stage designer and
Math professor Robert Davis is
in charge of publicity.
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modus 'operandi is unique, in
deed. Mark Greene, a sophomore
from New Haven, Conn., the
business manager for the Spiz
winks, compared the groups to
UNC fraternities.
"Every fall we hold a Rush
Week, much like your spring
rush here," he said. "We in
vite anyone interested to come
by and audition, and the groups
compete for the best men."
"Of course, our prime con
sideration is for the boys with
the best voices; but we are to
gether so much at practices and
tours that there must be a de
gree of social compatibility.
"And, like your fraternities,
not everyone who wants to be
a member of a group gets in
about 80 boys go " through
rush each year and usually there
are only places for 40."
The legendary Whiffenpoofs
are composed; of only seniors,
Four Seats Are
Being Contested
By JOHN GREENBACKER
Dl'H Staff Writer
With all votes tabulated except in two men's districts,
the Student Party leads the University Party 21 - 17 in the
number of party endorsed
Legislature.
Unofficial reports indicate the SP may hold a majority
of nearly seven votes over the UP in Legislature.
Totals are incomplete in men's district II, where four
seats are being contested.
In MD I, there will be a runoff between Bill Whichard
for the fifth seat in
the fifth seat in that dis
trict.
Winners in men's districts of
Legislature are:
District I: Wagner (SP); Tate
(SP); Baggett (UP); Halsell
(SP).
District III: Crampton (UP);
Potter (UP); Scott (UP); Solo-'
mon (UP).
District IV: Ingram (UP);
Rowe (UP).
District V: Chandler (SP);
Smith (UP).
District VI: Jolly (SP); Mau
pin (UP).
District VII: Wright (SP);
Allen (SP); McPhaul (UP).
District VIII: Hobgood (SP);
Strickland (UP);, Longest (SP).
District IX: Cleaver (SP);
Little (SP); Sandling (SP).
District X: Ivins (SP); Long
(SP); Purdy (UP).
District XI: O'Toole (UP);
Frazier (I); Hodges (I).
Special Seats: Wilson (SP);
district 1, the closest race in
McCoy (SP); Johnson (SP).
Results in all women's dis
tricts are as follows: , ; ...
District !: Cauble CUP); Mc
Kenzie (SP); Southerland (UP);
Wilson (UP).
District II: Carlson (SP);
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and their method of selection
is entirely different than the six
regular groups.
"The 'Whiffs' take only the
best," said George Brown, tour
manager of the Spizwinks.
"They tap juniors on a Mon
day night after spring vacation,
and select the best from the
six regulars." -
And what about being tapped
for the "Whiffs?"
"Boy, everyone's sweating
it," Brown added.
Both groups are headed for
Florida for their annaul spring
tour. The Spizwinks sang here
Sunday, in Tallahassee, Fla:,
Monday night, at Ormond
Beach, Fla., Tuesday night, and
then proceeded to Miami for a
day's rest before giving another
pair of concerts.
Then it's off to Jamaica for
five more performances before
going back to school.
The Duke's Men's schedule
By
Spiz
members elected to btuuent
the Women's Athletic Associa
tion by 517 to 422.
Jerri Moser defeated Nancy
Mayer for chairman of the Car
olina Women's Council by 620
464. All other results are undeter
mined. Newton (SP).
District III: Allen (UP);
Rose (SP).
District IV: Barbara (UP);
Belcher (SP).
District V; Dorsey (SP); Mil
stead (UP).
Special Seat: Jones (SP).
Other than the tie in men's
District I, the closest race in
the election occurred in the
Lower Quad's district VII,
where Don McPhaul (UP) edged
Miles Davis (SP) for the third
seat.
New members of the Wom
en's Honor Council are Teague,
Grey, Jamison, Forester, Bail
ey, and King.
Elected the the Men's Coun
cil were Mundy, Hanan, Mitch
ell, Manley, Pittman, Miller,
and Holderness. A runoff will be
held in MD I.
A recount in the race for sen
ior class social chairman has
determined Semantha Townsend
defeated Beverly Bailey by 652
641. An unofficial report yester
day said Bailey defeated Town
send. Rick Kramer scored an easy
victory in his bid for re-election
as president of the Caro
lina Athletic Association by de
feating second - runner Joe
Churchill 2749-1487.
Penny Scobil defeated Grey
Reeves for chairman of the
Women's Residence Council by
715-357.
Peg Ormsby defeated Win
borne Shaffer for president of
the Women's Athletic Assoc.
Additional
Money Sought
By University
. The University will ask the
Legislature's Joint Appropria
tions Committee today, to add
a total of $4,250,117 to its budg
et for the 1965-67 biennium.
This total represents appro
priations which were original
requests made to the Advisory
Budget Commission, but were
omitted in the budget present
ed to the General Assembly.
The request for this restoration
will be made at a committee
hearing at 2:30 p.m. today.
The Chapel Hill campus will
ask for a total of $3,145,740 in
capital improvements.
W1IH.KS
is just as taxing.
Average price for a concert
is only $200, which isn't much
when one considers the group
contains 19 men.
"Of course," Greene added,
"we get additional revenue
from the sale of our records."
Both groups record with Colum
bia and sell the long - playing
discs for $4.
For example, the Spizwinks
sold 23 records after their
Spencer concert, attended by
over 75 coeds.
Tom Fiorio, a junior from
New Haven, made it 30 records
for the night after selling a
platter to his date.
"We usually show a profit for
the year," commented Greene,
"but this year we might go in
the red."
Both groups headquartered at
Chi Psi, with several members
staying at Delta Upsilon and
Kappa Sigma.