Symposium Interviews for Carolina Sym posium committee posts will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday in the Sym posium office in Y Building. Applicants may sign up there or at GM. Applications will be accepted through Monday. mm Looking Good The weatherman says enjoy Jubilee. Clear skies will prevail today, except for a chance of afternoon showers. Ilawevcr, they won't loose enough rain to wash out the festivities. The South's Largest College Newspaper CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. APRIL 30, 1965 Volume 72, Number 145 i i if i iif it ti V her 4 : 5 6 (J) if MS ; 4 I te ' Si1-? - it ' ? t i a V, S " i$ & v .V. .J.". .- WATCHING THE REVIEW: Waiting for the Navy ROTC Drum and Bugle Corps to pass in review are (front row, left to right) Lt. Col. Gordon Kage, Major WilUam Garrison, (back Retiring onored Retiring Professor of Areo space Studies, Lt. Col. Gordon D. Kage, was honored by the entire Air Force and Naval ROTC units in a Pass in Review Ceremony held on Fetzer Field yesterday afternoon. A Pass in Review for a retiring command' er is long established tradition in the military. Consolidated University Pres ident, William C. Friday, deliv ered the main address in which he cited Kage's fine work with ADA Chapter To Be Formed Support for the formation of a local chapter of the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) was voiced Wednesday night at a meeting of interested faculty members and students in the Faculty Lounge. A discussion on what the pur pose of a local chapter should be was led by UNC graduate student Phil Pavlik. " "Several people in the De partment of Political Science wanted an all - inclusive group or forum for liberal viewpoints and causes," Pavlik said. He proposed that a local ADA chapter be formed to serve as a "clearing - house" for other liberal groups. Possible ADA involvement in such local issues as The Speak er Ban Law, Negro housing, civil rights and the peace move ment was discussed. An organizational meeting for a local ADA chapter will be held during the first week of slimmer school. Alumnus Featured In Magazine i ' The Daily Tar Heel and the University were mentioned in the3pages of Time Magazine this week in an article in the "Press" section about former DTH reporter Vermont Connec ticut Royster. Royster was recently elected president of the American So ciety of Newspaper Editors. He graduated from Carolina in 1936 and went to New York, and according to Time, he was fired from a news service and "turned down by almost every paper in town." Finally, he was hired by the Wall Street Journal, says Time, "on a temporary basis, and claims that' he is still a tempo rary fill-in, though now he hap pens to be editor." Royster was raised in Raleigh and went to prep school in Bell Buckle, Tenn., and then to UNC where he worked for the Daily Tar Heel. Elected to Phi Eeta Kappa, "he was as busy as a .bumble-bee," Time reports. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1953 for editorial writing and was named editor of the Journal in 1953. "Royster is a North Carolina boy who was shrewd enough not to shed all his country ways in the big city," Time writes. "He still has a fetching Southern drawl, a dry wit that takes peo ple by surprise, and a name that H stands out even in New York." ' ' ' ' ' X j A f X4 "-': AFROTC .....Z- i t ftp At Military Fete the Air Force ROTC, the Uni versity and the community. He presented The Air Force Com mendation Medal issued by the Air Force in recognition of Kage's service to the ROTC pro gram since he came to Caro lina in 1959. Kage, retiring after 28 years in the Air Force, graduated from Coe College, Cedar Rap ids, Iowa, in 1936. He received his reserve commission through the ROTC program the same year. Since being called to active duty in 1942, he served in vari ous command and staff posi tions in Illinois, Ohio, California, Guam iand Japan. He also served in the Secre-.., tary of Air Staff s office and' the Reserve Forces Policy Board Office in Washington, President Dickson Says 'No Police' At Jubilee Student Body President Paul. Dickson yesterday issued this statement on Jubilee. "A meeting of the administration and student leaders was held yesterday afternoon to discuss Jubilee. It was again announced by Howard Henry, Director of Graham Me morial, that Jubilee would be held in Polk Place and that students and their, guests would be admitted at entrance points that would be manned by GM personnel. It was agreed by a majority of the students, my staff not included, that there would be no coolers allowed at Jubilee or any other function of a similar nature. I would like to remind students that there should be no public display of alcoholic beverages and no intoxication. "It was the consensus of the committee members Tues day that I instruct the Attorney General to establish a stu dent "police force" to control student discipline. Such action is not only hypocritical but unnecessary. The Honor and Campus Codes are effective because the student body wants them to be. We, the student body, make the system work. We can control the conduct at Jubilee ourselves. There will be no police force. "I want to urge you to have a good time, but also caution you ' to abide by the Campus Code. The Attorney General has' said that those who do not abide by the codes will be subject to prosecution by the student judiciary." -at - - - - " i JAMES BOND, alias Sean Connery and Claudine Auger, his knockout co-star in the new Agent 007 flick "Thunderball," frolic tfn the Bahama Island location of the film, UNC student Patty Nash was there with them. Connery's "much cuter than in the movies," she said. j 3 f ' SAC? 'At, II ft''. r row, left to right) Consolidated University President William C. Friday, Chancellor Paul F. Sharp, and Capt. Rex Warner. Photo by UNC Photo -Lab Chief D. C, before coming here to nead the Department of Air Sci ence. Kage has also received the Tar Heel Colonel Award in rec ognition of his pronounced inter est in the United States Air Force and dedicated work in the AFROTC program. This Award was founded in 1948 to recognize exceptional contributions to the AFROTC program at UNC. Kage's post is being filled by Lt. Col. Kenneth W. Slaker who has just recently returned from a tour of duty in Semback, Ger many. Kage and his wife have de cided to remain in ChaDel Hill where he will be assistant vice president of Central Carolina Bank. They have three daugh ters. v . s - 4 --y. St' A- -L'-A..r Jubilee Takes Off Tonight The Four Preps will kick off Jubilee UNC's biggest an nual all - campus weekend tomght at 7 p.m. m Polk Place . . . hopefully. Student, faculty and adminis trative opposition to Jubilee pol icies this year has made it a highly controversial issue. But the fervor has died down now, Jubilee is peacefully settled in Polk Place, and everyone is! anxious for it to begin. Student Body President Pau Dickson issued this statement yesterday regarding Jubilee conduct: In the event of rain Jubilee will be moved to Memorial HaL and tickets will go on sale at a first come, first serve basis. Each UNC student and his date will be admitted with an ID card, as well as be allowed two guests. Date tcikets may still be picked up at GM Infor mation desk. Figures yesterday indicated that 1277 had been is sued and were still going stead ily. The Athletic Department Tuesday announced that there will be no charge for date tick ets for baseball games during Jubilee. Students may get free date passes upon presentation of ID cards at the ticket booth at Emerson Stadium before game time. The Tar Heels will meet Clemson at 3 p.m. today and South Carolina at 2:30 p.m. Sat urday. Following the Four Preps to night a combo party featuring the Jammers Combo will be held in the parking lot between Caldwell and Bynum Hall until 12 midnight. Tonight's free flick features Janet Leigh and Tony Perkins in the Alfred Hitchcock thriller "Psycho." It will be shown at 6, 8, and 10 p.m. in Carroll Hall. '. Saturday's festivities begin at 3 p.m. in Polk Place with the Modern Folk Quartet followed by the Platters and a local stu dent dance band, the Sinfonians, at 8 p.m. "The time was changed from 7 p.m. because of the Platters' crowded schedule," GM Direc tor Howard Henry stated yes terday. He added that the Dy namics combo party in the By num - Caldwell parking lot will remain as scheduled until 12 midnight. Showing at 4, 7, and 10 p.m. will be Saturday's free flick, "Peyton Place," starring Carol Linley. Late permission until 2 a.m. for coeds will be granted Satur day night only. Friday night the regular one o'clock closing hour will be observed. Sunday's finale will be "coun try style," featuring the Johnny Cash show with June Carter, the Statler Brothers Quartet and the Tennessee Three at 2:30 p.m. in Polk Place. Two Sunday cinemas "Thunder Over Mexico" and "Blood of A Poet" will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Faculty members and famines are invited to Jubilee but no children will be admitted with out parental accompaniment. On By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer Tanned, square - shouldered, and not a day over 35, agent 007 deftly reached over the gunwale of the speeding boat for a secret message wrapped in a shirt that was tossed to him from a waiting skiff. The shirt fell into the water as they sped past the waiting craft. "Cut! Cut!" the director yelled through a megaphone. They had to shoot the scene over. James Bond, alias Sean Connery or agent 007, motioned to his bikinied feminine pilot, co - star Claudine Auger, to take the boat back to position. The scene was Nassau, on lo cation of the filming of the lat est James Bond thriller "Thun derball," which will be released by United Artists next Decem ber. UNC journalism major Patty Nash, of Lowell who was in Nassau during spring vacation, said it was a "dream come true" to watch James Bond in action. "He's much cuter in real life than he is in the mov ies," she says. Patty went to Nassau wioi c .Re sidence Craige Residence Hall re ceived first place awards in two categories and the leader of the Mavericks was recognized as best dormitory president at the Men's Residence Council's an .9 : r s ' t L A. Dt. FRAZIER " HOLDS THREE TROPHIES presented to him at Wednesday night's MRC Awards Program. Frazier, president of Craige, was awarded the Best Dorm President trophy, Marines Retaliate Against1 Snipers In Santo Domingo' SANTO DOMINGO, Domini can Republic (AP) U. S. Ma rines went into action against snipers in this revolt - torn cap ital yesterday less than 24 hours after their landing to safeguard Americans caught in a Domini can civil war. Snipers opened up on the U. . S. embassy from concealed positions and a detachment of marines fired back from the cover of automobiles parked on the tree - shaded lawn. The fir ing lasted less than 15 minutes and there were no reported cas ualties. In Washington, a State De partment spokesman said the sniper fire was "reasonably heavy" and added that the El cation Witli eight other members of the Al pha Gamma Delta sorority. She said that she had arranged to visit the "Thunderball" film set before she had left for her week long vacation. Patty wrote to the publicity people for the film a few weeks before vacation and she re ceived word "the day before I left" that she would be welcome on the set. She is an employee for the Raleigh News and Ob server. "When I arrived I contacted Tom Carlile, the publicity direc tor of "Thunderball," and he invited me to a cocktail party at exclusive Emerald Beach Hotel. We discussed the movie and its background that eve ning." The next morning at 10 a.m. Patty was taken to the set on the western tip of the island. She had arranged with the News and Observer and Carlile to "cover" the filming of "Thun derball" for her newspaper. Carlile had provided her with photographs of all the stars in the film. At the hotel Carlile had a large calendar on the wall snowing his schedule for each day. There were blocks on the In MRC nual awards program in the main lounge of Graham Memor ial Wednesday night. Newly - elected vice - presi dent of. the MRC Bob Payton presented the welcoming ad V -S ' r lilllllllllKk Salvador embassy also had been attacked. He gave no further details. Marine units supervised the withdrawal of Americans to ships off shore. On the fifth day of fighting in this Caribbean country there were these other developments: France ordered two war ships from Martinique to the Dominican Republic to evacu ate any French citizens who feel their lives are in danger. As expected, the Soviet Un ion, Red China and Communist Cuba assailed the landing of U. S. Marines in such terms as "monstrous," "cynical," "hid eous" and "a threadbare pre calendar, and I had a whole block to myself!" she said. When they arrived on the set, Patty said, they were filming a helicopter scene. Rik Van Nutter (who plays Felix Leiter, Bond's CIA connection) and Bond were there. Bond was in the water. "I was shocked when I saw three shark fins circling around Bond. But,, in the nick of time he was rescued and the three "fins" came out of hte water and took off their scuba gear." The scene in which Bond is supposed to pick up the secret message wrapped in the shirt, they kept having to shoot it over and ever, Patty said. "Two- motor boats were moved into . position and the di rector (Terence Young, who al so made "Dr. No" and "From Russia, Witn Love") called out: that they were ready to start filming." Bond and his two fem- . mine opposites swam ouohe "I, along with the photogra phers moved out into the water and aboard the press boat to watch the filming. Many spec tators stood along the shore." Bond's two opposites in the scene were Martine Eeswick, Awards lop Hall Trophies dress to the dorm presidents, MRC representatives and guests. Secretary Paul Russell pre sented certificates of recogni tion to the MRC dormitory rep- S v t ; l f ' and his residence hall took first place in both the Most Outstanding and Most Improved Men's Residence Hall judging. text." At the United Nations, U.S. chief . delegate Adlai Stevenson told the Security Council the marine landing was "to protect American citizens still there and escort them to safety from the country." Some Latin Amer ican diplomats predicted pri vately the reaction to the land ing would be bad in their coun tries and would help Fidel Cas tro. In Washington, the Organ ization of American States ap pealed for an end to the fight ing. Some congressmen blamed communists for the strife. There were about 2,000 Amer icans remaining in the country. who played in the gypsy scene in "From. Russia, .With Love," and Claudine Auger (the brun ette on Bond's lap in the photo), the leading lady, Domino. "Miss Beswick crawled into the boat farthest from the plat form, while Connery and Miss Auger (Domino) swam to the other boat. " 'Stand by shooting.' " ?Turn over.' " 'Scene 414, take two.' - "'Action.' - "Bond swam to the boat, where Domino was standing. He climbed in and struggled brief ly with her, then jumped back, splashing water into the boat. "'Cut.' "The scene began again." This time Bond 'almost fell over when Domino started the engine: The next time Bond dropped the shirt into the water. "In all, they had to shoot the scene five , times," Patty said, "but they finally got everything worked out." Patty spent the whole day with publicity director Tom Car hie. "He kept introducing me to different people in the movie," she said. "I never knew who I was going to meet next." "Martine Beswick talked to Agent HP tiree resentatives, citing their part in the improvement of the counf this year. Russell then introduced ou going president Jim Fulhvooc who addressed the roup, com menting on the progress that th MRC has made this year, espy cially m reference to the group' image among the students. He praised the members the council for their work in the organization of the new Resi dence College system, and chal lenged them to carry on the trend of progress, particularly in improving the MRC court. Emcee Sonny Pepper, new president, then made the pres entation of trophies on behalf of the council. The award for outstanding MRC Residence hall represen tative went to Wayne Cannday, ' who has served this year as MRC representative for Manly. The bulk of the large gold cups went to the Maverick dele gation. A. D.' Frazier was presented with the trophy for outstanding dormitory president. Frazier also carried home first place trophies in the two areas of residence hall judging, having the Most. Improved and the Most Outstanding Dormitory overall. Craige has been in the news throughout this year for work on such outstanding projects as the formation of the Maverick House "night club" and the Maverick "Push to Durham to collect money for the Heart Fund." Everett received second place honors in the Outstanding Resi dence Hall judging, and Stacy took the trophy for third. Ehringhaus also received a trophy for having the Most Out standing dormitory for the year 1963-64. The trophy failed to arrive in time for the awards program last year. After the awards were made, new officers of the MRC were officially sworn in. They arc Sonny. Pepper, president; Bob Payton, vice - president; Paul Russell, secretary; Howard Cro ker, treasurer; and Wayne Cannady, vice - chairman of the court. Mrs. UNC Today and tomorrow are the last days students will be able to vote for their favorite UNC wife in the "Mrs. UNC" con test sponsored by local mer chants. Ten women sponsored by lo cal student wives clubs are competing, and their pictures appear at each polling area. Anyone interested in voting may do so in any store in Chapel Hill which displays a "Mrs. UNC" announcement. Voters may cast their ballots in all stores participating, and are only limited to casting one vote at each store per day. 007 me between scenes. It was my first day on the beach so she offered me some sun tan lotion, but it was too late. I was burned to a crisp." Patty said that a helicopter swooped down from overhead once with CBS written on it. "They were filming for the Ed Sullivan show last Sunday. I didn't see myself on TV though," she laughed. The film is being shot in Great Britain and the Bahamas in "Panavision and technicol or," she said. The original story was written by Ian Flemming in conjunction with Kevin Mc Clory and Jack Whittingham. "Thunderball" will cost much more than "Goldfinger," be cause one - fifth of the film will be shot under water. "Goldfin ger cost only $2.8 million and they have already grossed $45 million from it," she said. "Thunderball" should come to almost $6 million to produce. Patty said she saw Connery's children playing on the beach but Mrs. Connery was nowhere to be seen. She asked publicity director Carlile why. 'His wife wouldn't set foot on a James Bond set for a million dollars!" (Continued on Page 3)

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