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Frosh Football
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Goldwater Gag
Since the DTH's copyrighted
story about Barry Gold water's
statement on the speaker ban
appeared, newspapers across
the state have had comments
to make about the significance
of the statement. For the
Charlotte Observer's cartoon
editorial on the subject, see
page 2.
Crt-Fr.r an insiht into the per
soahty of this year's hopeful
page? Sprts Section "
77ie South's Largest College Newspaper
CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1965
Founded February 23. 1893
.Hetrial Of Former Grad.
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1XVES THAT COMPUTER Sylvia Wall, a senior
French major, couldn't wait for "Operation Match," a
program that will attempt to match dates by computer,
so she headH for UNCs computer center. The console
'Match Eliminates Much Hit-Or-Miss;
May Make Some UNC Misses Into Mrs.
A revolutionary new idea
designed to solve the woes and
frustrations of unattached col
lege students in their pursuit
of suitable dates will receive
its first test south of the Mason-Dixon
Line on the UNC
campus this fall.
The system appropriate
ly titled "Operation Match"
was originally devised by five
blind-date-weary Harvard Un
iversity juniors last year. Its
principal attraction is that,
unlike other, similar ideas, it
uses an IBM computer to pro
vide date contacts based on
individual likes and dislikes,
academic interests, religious
preferences, race, and other '
personality and character
standards.
According to David Broad
hurst, publicity operations
manager and coordinator of
the statewide campaign, the
UNC operation is being organ
ized by students living in Old
Wesl Dormitory. Heading the
state-wide campaign is Rusty
Taylor, a UNC law student,
who was one of the original
five men behind the Harvard
drive
Explaining that this plan is
being operated this year as a
"pilot program" for the rest
of the South, Broadhurst add
ed that it is limited to North
Carolina schools in order to
" enabie applicants to be within
reach of their suggested dat -s.
Five Districts
"The state is divided into
fit general match dis
tricts," explained Broadhurst,
"each of which encompasses
;.iost of tha colleges in that
Ulstrict. Jo far, we have
Matc'i represented on 33
North Carolina campuses, and
we mt.y expand it to one or
two ;fcore in this section of
the cotntry."
Broadhurst also mentioned
that tie questionnaires have
now teen placed at central
points on campus and that
they're available now to lnter-
. ested students. "They should
be reminded that they've got
to 1S1 out two Match
answer sheets if they decide
to participate," he said. ,4The
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Transistorized Sex
first is on themselves, the
second on how they would
want prospective dates to an
swer the questions."
Five Names
"All the information on the
answer sheets will be fed into
the computer at the same
time," Broadhurst explained.
"The machine will then digest
the information and issue
forth a minimum of five
names, addresses, and tele
phone numbers of prospective
dates for each answer sheet
it receives."
In its initial tests, Match
used information recorded on
questionnaires filled out by
20,000 college students who
John Morehead Foundation
Goal Is Increased To 400
A new policy adopted by the
John Motley Morehead foun
dation will enable the philan
thropic organization to reach
a goal of 400 undergraduate
Morehead scholars at UNC at
one time.
The change, which was an
nounced this week, will nearly
double the present program.
In another action, Morehead
Foundation trustees added
eight members to the organi
zation's Central Committee.
They are:
Gerald A. Barret; Dr.
James L. Godfrey (retired
Dean of the Faculty); Dr.
William F. Little (himself a
former Morehead scholar);
Robert Cluett of Kent, Conn.;
Horance F. Hill of Charlotte;
D. Edward Hudgins of Greens
boro; J. Harold Lineberger of
Belmont; and Dr. Paul W.
Sanger of Charlotte.
The first three additions
are UNC faculty members.
The Central Committee had
screened nominees suggested
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panel pictured is only a small part of the computing
complex in the basement of Phillips Hall. "Operation
Match" will actually utilize a computer at Princeton.
DTH Photo By Ernest Robl.
were willing to subject their
interest and value standards
to the computer's judgment.
Included in the application
form were such questions as:
Examples
"A friend of yours has
been earning money in the
summer by taking a door-to-door
survey for a research
organization. Some of the
questions are quite personal.
He offers you a chance to
take over the job for a day.
"You would do which of the
following:
(1) Be amazed that he would
even ask someone like you.
(2) Thank him, but decline
the offer this time.
by ten district committees and
selected preparatory schools.
The trustees recently invit
ed the following schools to'
participate in the Morehead
program:
The Hill School of Potts
town, Pa.; Lawrenceville of
Lawrenceville, N. J.; The Gil
man School of Baltimore;
Kent School of Kent, Conn.;
Hotchkiss of Lakeville, Conn.;
St. Paul's of Concord, N. H.;
Cranbrook of Bloomfield Hills,
Mich.; and Tabor Academy of
Marion, Mass.
Not dependent on the recipi
ents' needs, the grants offer
all-expense paid educations
here for students outstanding
in athletics as well as studies..
Largely financed by divi
dends from Union Carbide,
the foundation has assets
worth approximately $34 mil
lion. The funds will be used ex
clusively by UNC at Chapel
Hill.
la' a an' a 'm mT a.
uuuyu u
t.3) Get up your courage and
accept.
(4) Accept enthusiastically."
"In a snack bar you
overhear a college girl saying
how her roommate, an honor
student, is in trouble for com
ing back at 3 a.m., two hours
past her curfew, from a date
at a drive-in movie. Her room
mate has explained to the
dean that her boy friend's
car broke down on a back
road.
"You would immediately
think:
(1) 'car broke down hah!'
(2) 'I doubt it.'
(3) 'Well, maybe.'
(4) 'The girl is probably
telling the truth.'
"What do you do if you
have a blind date for a big
dance and your roommate
says she's good - looking
but you find she's not?
(1) Suggest going to a mov
ie instead.
(2) Monopolize your room
mate's date, leaving your
roommate only one noble al
ternative. (3) Dance with your date,
smiliiig weakly, but end the
evening as early as possible.
(4) act friendly the whole
time and run the risk of get
ting trapped into a second
date."
Other questions posed by the
Match system deal with
smoking and drinking habits,
education, social class, aca
demic record, church attend
ance record, family income,
and size of the student's
hometown.
Despite such probes, how
ever, Match assures its appli
cants that all incoming data
will be kept strictly confiden
tial. Information concern
ing Match's operation may be
obtained by writing to the Op
eration Match Quantitative
Personality Projection Test,
Compatibility Research, Inc.,
P. O. Box 72, Cambridge,
Mass.
Close-out date for the Caro
lina program is Oct. 15, and
all information will be fed into
the computer on Oct. 18.
'J
tndent Is Set For Oct. 11
The retrial of Frank Joseph
Rinaldi, former UNC graduate
instructor, for the alleged mur
der of his pregnant wife on
Dec. 24, 1963 will take place
before a special session of the
Orange County Criminal Court
on Oct. 11 with Superior Court
Judge George M. Fountain of
Tarboro presiding.
North Carolina Supreme
Court Chief Justice Emory B.
Donny made the announce
ment. Neither Rinaldi's attorney,
Barry Winston of Carrboro,
nor District Solicitor Thomas
D. Cooper Jr. of Burlington
had any comment on Foun
tain's nomination.
Rinaldi's attorney said the
former part-time English in
structor was in good spirits
and feeling well.
Overturned Ruling
Rinaldi was granted a new
Ex-Gridiron
Star Injured
Jack Tillery, a former foot
ball player, was listed in fair
condition yesterday in N. C.
Memorial Hospital. He was
critically injured in an automo
bile accident Saturday.
Tillery, 24, lives in Cedar
Terrace in Durham County.
He was reported to be in
the intensive care ward with
extensive injuries.
Police Capt. C. E. Durham
said Tillery apparently was
"running . at a high rate of
speed" when bis 1961 car,
traveling north on Roosevelt
Avenue, went off the right side
of the road, hit a curb and
then a tree.
The accident occurred about
4:30 p.m.
Durham said the car was
"cut practically in two" and
when the wrecker lifted it, the
auto broke into two pieces.
Stray Sororities
Unite On Campus
Every year with the begin
ning of fall semester comes
sorority rush.
The campus comes alive
with color as rushees pin on
blue ribbons and sorority wo
men wear red ones to remind
each other of silence rules.
Among all these are Stray
Greeks, women with green
ribbons, sporting pins largely
unknown to the Chapel Hill
campus.
Founded in 1944, the Stray
Greek organization is com
posed of sorority members
whose groups have no chap
ter here. Its aims are to pre
serve the bonds of unity and
sisterhood in sorority life, to
stimulate cooperation between
sorority and dormitory life,
Mails Used
To Pursue
Coed Killer
The Chapel Hill Police De
partment is sending letters to
all coeds, more than 3,000 of
them, who attended summer
school here asking them for
information in the fatal shab
bing of Suellen Evans.
Police Chief William Blake
said the letters will request
information on anything that
might have been connected
with the midday murder, or
any suspicious action by a
male toward a coed.
Blake added that detectives
are working on the case daily.
"We get many new leads, but
most of them amount to noth
ing," he said.
The Evans murder has baf
fled police for a month and a
half. Many suspects have been
questioned and released. Blake
said last week that police are
interested in any information,
no matter how unimportant it
might seem.
trial in late June by the North
Carolina Supreme Court. The
court, in a five to two ruling
overturned the conviction on
the basis of incompetent evi
dence given at the triaL
Rinaldi was convicted last
November in the Orange Coun
ty Criminal Court in Hillsbor
ough. Following his trial Rinaldi
has spent 10 months in Cen
tral Prison in Raleigh. He had
been held without bond since
his arrest on a grand jury in
dictment in the summer of
1964.
Chief evidence in the contro
versial case was the fact that
Rinaldi was to receive as
much as $40,000 in insurance
payments for the accidental
death of his wife.
At the trial, Rinaldi and
insurance agent John F. Sipp
said they found the body of
Rinaldi's wife upon returning
to Rinaldi's apartment after a
shopping trip to Durham.
Witness
Chief witness for the state
was a Chapel Hill handyman
Alfred Foushee. He testified
that Rinaldi had attempted to
hire him to kill Mrs. Rinaldi.
Foushee also testified that Ri
naldi had made sexual ad
vances toward him.
On the basis of the latter ev
idence, the Supreme over
turned the Superior Court con
viction. Writing the majority Asso
ciate Justice William B. Rod
man said: "Evidence tending
to show that the defendant is
a sexual pervert does not,
standing alone, tend to estab
lish the fact that he (Rinaldi)
is also a murderer. To make
such evidence competent, the
state would have to show some
direct connection between the
defendant's abnormal propen
sities and the charge of homi
cide for which he is on trial.
Not Prejudiced
"The jury should not be
and to serve its members as
a service and social organiza
tion. Important Role
During rush the Stray
Greeks perform an important
role. As impartial observers,
they operate the Panhellenic
post office, where women re
ceive invitations to rush par
ties. They also serve as ad
visers to rushees about pledge
ship and rush rules. They are
unique in that they are ac
quainted first-hand with Greek
life, yet can remain impartial
regarding sororities on cam
pus. This year many of the Stray
Greeks are living in Winston
dormitory, in its first year as
a women's dormitory. As a
nucleus of seniors in the pre
dominantly transfer student
living quarters they were able
to aid in the organization of a
residence hall administration.
"In the past the members
have been scattered in differ
ent dormitories, and it has
been hard to work as a uni
fied whole," explained presi
dent Lynn Barron, an Alpha
Xi Delta from Stetson Uni
versity in Deland, Fla. "Since
we have most of the senior
members in Winston this
year we hope to accomplish
more and achieve greater
unity.
Friendship
"We try to approximate the
close friendships and the ac-
tivities that were meaningful
to each of us in our own
chapters," she added.
The group has varied plans
for the school year. Later this
fall they will sponsor a picnic
for all new sorority pledges,
and will soon begin work on
a service project similar to
those of most sororities here.
"Last year we adopted a
group of underprivileged girls
and introduced them to some
of the cultural opportunities in
Chapel Hill," said Lynn. "We
hope to have a similar pro
ject this year."
prejudiced to the defendant's
detrement by evidence tending
to prove that he is a moral
degenerate, prepared to com
mit the abominable and de
testable crime against nature,
a felony. The court has re
peatedly held such evidence
incompetent, requiring a new
trial.
The first trial ran from Nov.
9, 1964, through Nov. 18. Both
attornies in the retrial indicat
ed that the trial could last as
long as the previous -one.
Solicitor Cooper said the
State plans to produce the
same witnesses who appeared
at the last trial. Defense at
torney Winston refused to com
ment on how he will handle
his case.
Jurors
Jurors for the trial were
drawn at the last meeting of
the Orange County Board of
Satellite Launch
In Future Of ETV
NEW YORK (AP) The
American Broadcasting Co.
announced yesterday it has
asked for permission to launch
a satellite to transmit televis
ion programs to its network
stations.
It would offer the facility
free to noncommercial educa
tional stations.
The network said it figured
the satellite transmission
would cost $6 million a year,
compared to - the million
the network now pays to lease
micro - wave relays of the
American Telephone and Tele
graph Co.
John E. Young, director of
WUNC-TV in Chapel Hill, pre
dicted yesterday it would take
at least two years before any
definite plans could advance
for National Educational Tele
vision via live satellite com
munication. "I can assure you that
AT & T will put up the darn
dest fight you ever saw,"
Young said. "AT & T has the
lines and microwave setups to
provide the same type sys
tem already."
He said that ultimately
there are two possible stages
in education television via sat
ellites. "First, the shows could
be beamed live to participat
ing stations and then to homes
by way of the local station.
"The second, and more ex
treme setup, would be to send
the signal live from New York
to individual homes, but this
is not in the immediate fu
ture." The transmissions now pro
posed by ABC, in color or
black-and-white, would be to
stations only, not to home re
ceivers. The application, filed with
the Federal Communications
Yack Photos Taken Soon
The Yack will start taking pictures of students
next week. Senior women are asked to wear black
sweaters with pearls. All other women are to wear
black sweaters. Men must wear dark coats and ties.
Staff interviews will be held next week. All
interested parties are asked to apply.
Photos will be taken from 1-6 p.m. as follows:
FRESHMEN
Those whose
begin with
A-E Sept. 27
F-J Sept. 28
K-O Sept. 29
P-T Sept. 30
U-Z Oct. 1
last names
SOPHOMORES
Those whose last names
begin with
A-E Oct. 4
F-J
K-O
P-T
U-Z
Oct. 5
Oct. 6
Oct. 7
Oct. 8
JUNIORS
Those whose last names
begin with
A-E Oct. 11
F-J Oct. 12
K-O Oct. 13
P-T Oct. 14
U-Z Oct 15
Commissioners. The list car
ries 96 names.
The first trial jury was
made up of three women and
nine men.
In the first trial Judge Ray
mond Mallard ruled out items
taken from Rinaldi's apart
ment the day his wife was
killed. They consisted of a
bent flashlight and r, blood
stained sofa pillow.
A patheologist who per
formed the autopsy on Mrs.
Rinaldi testified that she had
died of suffocation. He also
said that "one or more blows
to the head by a blunt instru
ment" had probably caused
her head injuries and cuts
around her face."
Rinaldi's principal defense
centered around testimony by
witnesses who said they had
seen Rinaldi in various stores
in Durham on the day of the
murder.
Commission, is the first for a
domestic satellite system.
ABC said it would not con
flict with the Communications
Satellite Corp's. Early Bird
which relays television inter
nationally. ABC said it could put up
its satellite in a couple of
years. It would be similar to
Early Bird, and would be
launched by an Atlas - Agena
rocket into synchronous orbit
,-aboui .22.300 miles Jvera spot
on the equator west of the
Galapagos Islands.
The plans have been work
ed out with the Hughes Air
craft Co.
The satellite would have
five channels, allowing ABC
to send its programs to its
stations in all 50 states, Peur
to Rico and the Virgin Islands
and permitting noncommer
cial educational stations to
receive network television for
the first time.
ABC said it could be ex
panded to accommodate Other
networks on a shared cost
basis.
It would be the first time
Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico
and the Virgin Islands would
have instantaneous viewing of
network television.
In addition, ABC said, it
would provide practically con
tinuous 24-hour network serv
ice, whereas the present net
works do not function for
some hours each day because
of the cost.
The cost of AT & T micro
wave facilities is out of the
question for educational tele
vision, the network said.
ABC estimated the initial
cost at $21,480,000, not includ
ing the receiving dishes which
each station would have to
provide for itself for about
$40,000 each.
SENIORS AND FOURTH
YEAR MEDICAL
STUDENTS
Those whose last names
begin with
A-E
F-J
K-O
P-T
U-Z
SepL 20
Sept. 21
Sept. 22
SepL 23
Sept. 24
For those who do not hare
their pictures taken on the
specified dale, a late fen of
SI will be charged. How.
ever, we are unable to guar
antee that the late picture
will appear in the Yack.
Deadline for lale pictures:
Seniors
Freshmen
Sophomores
Juniors
Oct. 1
Od. 8
Oct. 15
Od. 22