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Serial3 Dspt.
Box 870
Chapsi Hill, n.
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By FRED TIIOMAS
DTII Staff Writer
Thirty-six booths will dot the intramural field this afternoon
as the Campus Chest presents its annual carnival from 1 to
6 p.m. All proceeds from the take-a-chance win-a-prize games
will go to five charities: North Carolina Heart Association, Mur
doch Center for mentally retarded children at Butner, O'Berry
Center for mentally retarded children in Goldsboro, Cerebral
Palsy Hospital at Greenville, S. C. and World University Serv
ice. Exhibits along the midway will be judged at 3 p.m. with
- trophies being awarded in four divisions fraternities, sorori
ties and men's and women's residence halls.
The winners of the King and Queen competition will be an
nounced by Barker Neil Thomas "at 2:30. The penny balloting
for this event will continue through noon today in Y-Court.
Also, tickets for the 1965 Buick Special to be given away
Wednesday at the Campus Chest Auction-Fashion Show will be
on sale for $1 at the carnivaL
For those who like to take a chance, the 36 booths will offer
entertainment and a , chance for personal gain on everything
from nickel throwing to a "Beetle Beer Game." Sigma Phi
Epsilon will be holding a raffle with a grand prize of free date
tickets for all of next year's home football games.
Tickets will be sold at the SPE booth at the carnival and at
Y-Court, dormitories, and fraternity and sorority houses. Other
prizes in the raffle will be a $10 gift certificate from Campus
Laundry and Dry Cleaners, $10 worth of movie tickets at the
Varsity Theater, a steak dinner for two at the Pines Restau
rant and a gift certificate from the Sport Shop. The tickets will
be drawn May 1.
Women from Whitehead will be operating a "Pitch a Ping
Pong Ball Win a Gold Fish" booth. r . i
Anyone with nickel-throwing tendencies might win a prize
at either the Alexander or PiKA booth. - -
St. Anthony's Hall will sponsor a "Beetle Beer Game" and
the men af Kappa Sigma win be operating a casino. The Phi
Delts will offer an opportunity for the athletes to shine in
their three-obstacle races.
SAE has an unusual entry for the romantic-gymnastic com
bination man. A pretty girl will be perched atop a 15-foot
tower. A kiss goes to anyone who climbs a rope to the top.
William Tell will live again at the Spencer-Winston booth
as archers are given a chance to shoot an apple off a trembling
head. ,
Chi Psi will offer three events for participation: a pig chase,
a strong man machine and a "reactionary machine." Dart
throwers should seek out the Signa Nu booth, and for those
who haven't yet had enough gambling, East Cobb will be run
ning a "Guinea Pig Casino."
Delta Upsilon will sponsor a tricycle race; the Zetes, a pie
throw; ATO, a fish rodeo; and Sigma Chi, a mud-pie throw.
The Betas and the Tri-Delts will co-sponsor a dance hall
salon. For a nominal fee a student may throw a friend into the
Kappa Kappa Gamma "Kappa Clink" until the bail is raised.
Nurses Dorm will furnish candied apples.
'Lamipiiiis
36
B
Weather
The Campus Chest Carnival
will be held under cloudy skies,
but rain should hold off until
late afternoon. Continued cool
today and tonight.
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OFFICERS INSTALLED for Morehead Residence College
Wednesday night were (left to rigrht) Tim Ilarihcock, grovernor;
John Benson, lieut. governor; John Surrali, secretary; Jim
Sturges, president of Graham Residence Hall. Treasurer
Richard Urquhart was absent.
Men's District VI
Re-Elec Hon Upheld
By JOHN GREENBACKER
DTII Staff Writer
The Constitutional Council vot
ed unanimously in special ses
sion Tuesday night to uphold its
previous decision to have a
complete re-election for the leg
islative seats in the Upper
Quad's District VI.
The decision for the District
VI re - election came on the
heels of another vote which
called for a complete re-election
for the legislative seats in
Men's District II.
Both re - elections will be
held Tuesday.
Vote tabulation for District
VI after the regular March 23
elections showed veteran legis
lator Armistead Maupin (UP)
had won by a wide margin for
one of the two available seats,
and Steve Jolly (SP) had de
feated Jim Robinson (UP) by
two votes for the second seat.
Petition Filed
Robinson filed a petition with
the council last Monday which
called for a re - election in Dis
trict VI because Mangum Hall
was without legislative ballots
for a period of 45 minutes dur
ing the voting. Nearly 10 voters
were turned away from the
polls.
The Elections Board replaced
the ballot supply as soon as
possible and took down the
names of all students turned
away so that they might return
to the polls later.
Most of them didn't return.
. The council called for the re
election Monday on the basis
of Robinson's petition only,
claiming the voters turned away
would have decided the elec
tion. Jolly and Student Party offi
cials demanded a rehearing of
the case, as they were not in
formed that the council would
consider the District VI race
Monday and their side of the
issue was not heard.
Student Party Floor Leader
Arthur Hays, who led Jolly's
defense, told the council that
the Student Party, and Jolly
were willing to hold a re-elec-tion
in Mangum alone, as that
CWC SHINES
Carolina Women's Council will
sponsor a shoe shine from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday and
Thursday in Y-Court and out
side Lenoir. Shines will .be 25
cents with all proceeds going
to Campus ChesU
was the only hall where a short
age occurred.
Hays said the results from the
new Mangum election could be
substituted for the old Mangum
totals of the March 23 election.
"A complete re - election in
District VI would give the Uni
versity Party a chance to shift
some of the excess Maupin sup
port to Robinson," Hays
charged.
"He said shortages such as the
one in Mangum occur all over
the campus on elections days.
"This is something which can
not be helped, unless Student
Government wants to spend an
extra $200 for extra ballots," he
said.
The council called for the
complete re-election because it
felt that a re-election in Man
gum alone would be unfair to
other voters in the Upper Quad
halls.
"We felt this would give Man
gum a chance to swing the en
tire election," council member
Leith Merrow said.
Mangum is Jolly's residence
hall.
"It is the council's opinion
that if one part of an election
vote is invalid, then the entire
election is invalid," she said.
"We hope to be able to make
a few suggestions in the future
for the improvement of election
procedures."
Hays criticized the decision
afterwards for its "implica
tions."
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With The Festival
Today will be full of festival activity. Events
planned are:
3 p.m. Sculptor Seymour Lipton will talk on
training, patronage and creativity in the arts. Lip
ton's film "Archangel" will open the talks in Carroll.
5 p.m. Ackland Art Gallery opens a special
exhibition including works by major American art
ists. 8 p.m. Jacques Barzun, provost of Columbia
University, historian, literary critic and author of
'House of Intellect,, will speak in Memorial Hall.
8:30 p.m. Playmakers present "Billy Budd"
in Playmakers Theater.
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Offices,
Morehead
Gets Into
High Gear
The Residence College Sys
tem got its official kickoff Wed
nesday night with the installa
tion of officers from Morehead
College.
Fifteen senators, one from
each floor of each hall in the
college, were installed along
with college officers: Tim Haith
cock, governor; John Benson,
It. governor; John Surratt, sec
retary; and Richard Urquhart,
treasurer.
Dean of Student Affairs C. O.
Cathey and Dean of Men Wil
liam G. Long spoke at the meet
ing, held in the basement of
Graham." -y r J
Morehead College is made, up
of halls in the Lower Quad
Lewis, Everett, Stacy, Graham
and Aycock.
Men's Residence Council
President Sonny Pepper said
work will begin next week on
the new social room for the col
lege. The basement of Graham
will be renovated at a cost of
$3,600 to serve as the social
room.
Pepper said work on the room
will begin next week and "will
be finished this semester."
Some, furniture has just been
ordered, he said, which will be
delivered in five weeks.
The MRC provided $960 of the
cost of the room, the Residence
Hall Improvement Committee
furnished $240 and the rest of
the $3,600 will be paid by the
University.
Morehead College is sponsor
ing a dance for its residents
Saturday night in the faculty
lounge of the Monogram Club.
It will feature the Fiery Sparks
Combo, from 8 p.m. to mid
night. .
Pepper saicl the college has
already put out the first issue
of its newspaper and has estab
lished a college office on the
first floor of Graham. A More-
head College constitution is also
being drafted.
Plans for the social room in
Teague, for Scott College, will
' be finished next week. Officers
have already been installed
there.
"We'll be meeting in Teague
next week with John Bennett,
head of the Buildings Depart
ment, the. University's interior
decorator and Scott College ot
ficers to make final plans for
the social room there," Pepper
said.
m
The South's Largest
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, APRIL 1965
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LigMing
"STEP RIGHT UP!" shouts barker Neil
Thomas as he practices for the Campus Chest
Carnival planned for 1 to 6 p.m. today on the
intramural field. The coeds listening will have
Crowther
About Brutality.. In
By KERRY SIPE
DTH Staff Writer
Bosley Crowther, New York
Times screen critic and movie
editor, expressed concern yes
terday about the current trend
of the motion picture industry
toward "casual and cauous Dru
tality." He spoke in Carroll as part
of the Fine Arts Festival.
"James Bond is no Dick
Tracy," he said. "Tracy is
fighting for a cause. Bond is
an extraordinarily harsh char
acter with absolutely no moral
background whatsoever."
The winner of the first Screen
Directors Guild Award for criti
cism used the films based on
Ian Fleming's James Bond and
Peter Seller's "Dr. Strangelove"
as examples of the change in
the idea behind American film
making.
"Admirable Person"
He said the American cinema
has always been based on the
idea that "the individual is an
admirable person."
"American pictures have al
ways had an upswing of opti
mism and a prospect and prom
ise of a happy ending," he
said. - -
In contrast he said "movies
like Strangelove trap the view
er into laughing at the humor
of nobody being able to do any
thing about the fate of the uni
verse. Crowther said that the trend
started with the "super-shocker"
films such as Alfred Hitch
cock's "Psycho." He said that
it was encouraged by the inflow
of art films from Europe, which
provide a place for "an angry,
degenerate representation - of
life."
"Where is western humanity
going if this is what our youth
are responding to?" he said.
Where is the projection of the
idea of the American ideal?"
He said that many of the
films produced today are the
College Newspaper
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some company when the carnival opens. A
group of UNC-G coeds will arrive to add some
zest to the annual event JPhoto by Jock Lau-terer.
Expresses
"most vicious and violent ex
amples of rebellion" that have
come upon the American scene.
Crowther said that "the films
that best represent the trend of
today and the most dynamic ex
amples of art form are bemg
produced bv European filmmak-
ers.
Citing as examples
artist Andy Warwhol's eight-
hour film, "Sleep," which is
simply a camera focused in one
position on a man sleeping, and
his picture "Empire," which
shows a lengthy unnarrated and
undirected study of the Empire
State Building, Crowther said
that the European rebellion was
becoming evident in America.
He said that the increasing
prominence of violence and
frank examples of "all kinds of
sex" are an example of the
audience being stimulated to
sadistic and perverted enjoyment."
to
FILM CRITIC Bosley Crowther (left) chats with Fine Arts
Festival co-chairman Henry Aldridge yesterday before Crow
thers speech in CarroIL Last night Crowther was a member
of a panel which discussed the film The Playground."
.Funds
"si
-
Concern
Movies
He called many of the frank
sex scenes "an intellectual kind
of peeping - tomism."
Crowther urged his audience
to pay attention to the excep
tional things that are being
done with motion pictures to
day and to "try to become edu
cated about what makes a good
artistic film and what makes a
bad one."
" Professor . Walter Spearman
introduced Crowther to the Fine
Arts Festival audience.
Later last night, Crowther
participated in a panel discus
sion with producer - director
Richard Hilliard and screenwrit
er George Garrett after the
showing of the experimental
film "The Playground," written.
and produced by Hilliard and
Garrett.
The panel was moderated by
James Beveridge, director of the
North Carolina Film Board.
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Siiletcalk Art
Chapel Hill's seventh annual
Sidewalk Art Show opens today
on East Franklin Street. On dis
play will be paintings, sculp
tures, ceramics, prints and
drawings.
For Facm
Coeds May
From Smith To Cai
By ERNIE McCRARY
DTH Managing Editor
The University has submitted a special request to
the General Assembly for $50,000 to provide more facul
ty office space and to light intramural fields and tennis
courts.
Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey said yesterday
that no legislative action has
quests, but "we hope to see
Philosopher,
Critic, Marcel
Speaks Today
French philosopher. Dlav-
write and literary critic Gabriel
Marcel will speak at 4:30 this
afternoon in Gerrard on "The
Myth of the Death of God in
Contemporary Thought."
His appearance will be spon
sored " by the Departments of
Philosophy and Religion.
Marcel will also attend Dr.
Arnold wasn's class on con
temporary religion at 11 a.m.
Saturday jin 103 Saunders. .
Marcel will discuss questions
which arise in his lecture this
afternoon.
Interested students are invit
ed to attend this discussion.
Marcel has written a long list
of books which expound on his
belief as a Christian existential
ist. In 1949 he was awarded the
literary Grand Prix of the Aca
demie Francaise and was the
recipient of the Goethe prize in
1956.
He won the French National
Literary Award in 1958.
Bibb Concert
Will Be Free
To Students
Leon Bibb, concert soloist,
will perform in Memorial Hall
at 8 p.m. Tuesday.
Due to the change in spring
vacation schedule the concert
date has been changed from its
original time, and as a result
there will be no advance ticket
sales.
UNC students and dates will
be admitted free with ID cards.
Born in Louisville, Kentucky,
he spent two years at Louisville
Municipal College where he was
featured soloist with the college
glee club.
After completing his military
service, he studied voice in New
York and . began bis theatrical
career.
He was cast in several shows
including "Annie Get Your
Gun," "Finian's Rainbow," and
in the Kurt Weill Maxwell An
derson musical hit "Lot In the
Stars," in which he understud
ied the leading role.
A few years ago in a revival
of "Lost In the Stars," Bibb
won recognition for his re-creation
of the major role which
he had understudied.
During the past five years, he
has pursued a concert aad tele
vision career, making numer
ous appearances on major TV
shows and performing at col
leges and concert halls through-
out the country. ,
Volume 72, Number 129
Ity
Fields
Be Moved
yet been taken on the re
some results soon."
Cathey said $25,000 has been
asked to provide office space
for 60 new faculty members who
will be here next fall. The
money will be used to partition
ssome existing offices to convert
them into two - man offices.
"We won't be able to get CO
new offices this way," Cathey
. said, "but it will be enough to
ease the burden."
An alternative to douhled-up
office space, he said, is to use
Smith Dormitory for offices.
Men from Carr Residence Hall
would be moved to other places
on campus and the women from
Smith would be moved to Carr
and Winston, which will house
coeds next fall.
"We would rather use Carr
as an office building because of
its location near the center of
campus, but we have to con
tinue using it as a dormitory
because its rental funds have
been committed to repay feder
al loans. We could tear it down,
but we can't use it for offices,"
he said.
Carr, along with all other res
idence halls on campus except
Smith and Battle - Vance - Pet
tigrew, was mortgaged for 49
years to repay federal loans
used to construct Craige and
Ehringhaus. Therefore, Cathey
said, student rental fees from
every residence hall except
Smith and B-V-P must be used
for loan repayment.
Even if funds for office reno
vation are not made available
by the state, Cathey said ho
hopes Smith will not have to
be taken over.
"We expect department heads
to cooperate fully in helping us
find new spaces and make full
est use of existing rooms. The
head of a department wants his
faculty members just down tho
hall where he can talk to them
whenever he needs to, not
across campus in an office in
Smith," he said.
Another $25,000 has been re
quested to light four intramural
fields between the new Car
miehael Auditorium and the In
stitute of Government and to
light the 12 varsity tennis
courts.
Cathey said the planning for
the project has already been
done, bids have been received
and the job can be completed
by next fall. "All we need is the
money," he said.
Plans include the construction
on t-o new intramural fields
near Morrison Residence Hall,
behind the water tower. "Since
they will be close to the hospi
tal, it will probably be best not
to light these fields," Cathey
said, "but they are the perfect
location for intramural activity
from Morrison, Craige, Ehring
haus, Parker, Teague and Av
ery." Cathey reported that long
term work on another new in
tramural field across the
road from Ramshead parking
lot, near Ehringhaus has al
ready begun.
"Some dirt has been dumped
there now and we will get a lot
more when construction at
Davie Hall and Emerson Field,
where the new Student Union
will be, gets started.
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