Box 971
Chapol HUl, n. c.
Yeah, Team!
On page 3 in today's Daily
Tar Heel js a photo feature
by DTH photographer Ernest
Hohi on the antics of UNC
cheerleaders during the Vir
ginia football game last week
end. Strangely, everyone h
smiling.
Mm 1
Billy The Kid
Kead what happend to the
Kangaroo, alias Billy ""the
Kid" Cunningham on page fi.
Sports editor Tat Stith gUrs'
a run-do n on Billy's pro ca
reer prospects.
The South' s Largest College Newspaper
Vol. 74, No. 18
CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1965
Founded Februarv 23. 1S93.
Undents Endorse Carrier Current 3,301 To L099
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PRETTY COEDS Mary King (left) and Zakki Mnrpfcey
(right) were announced as finalists of the Carolina Women's
Council "Miss Consolidated University" Competition, yesterday.
Association Complies
College
The Southern Association of
Colleges and Schools is com
plying with Secretary of State
Thad Eure's request that they
file for domestication in North
Carolina.
But association officials said
Monday they are not happy
about it and are filing under
protest.
Acting Director Donald C.
Agnew said he has sent Eure
the completed forms and a
$45 check to cover the filing
fee.
"We are including a state
ment to make it clear that,
while we are complying with
the request, we do not feel we
should have been asked to do
mesticate in North Carolina.
We just don't feel this is
necessary, Agnew said. f
Grid Player
Hit, Robbed
Tar Heel fullback Leon Fon
ville, a junior from Tabor City,
was robbed of $1 Monday
night, after being knocked un
conscious from behind with a
"huge stone," police said.
Fonville was hit with a five
or six pound chunk of large
concrete pipe, police said. He
said he remembers nothing but
hearing footsteps behind him
before being attacked, which
took place near the south east
corner of Kenan Stadium.
Campus Police Chief Arthur
Beaumont said Fonville had
left Woollen Gym about 8:30
p.m. and turned up in the
emergency room at the in
firmary at p.m.
"He "must have been out for
15 minutes," Be?umont said.
"We got some bloody finger
prints on the rock and there
are some distinctive footprints
in the area."
Beaumont said Fonville re
ported seeing a man walking
a collie dog a few hundred
feet in front of him before he
was attacked. If the man were
located he might give police
some clue to his assailant. .
"If that man could be lo
cated he might tell us if he
noticed anyone hanging
around the fieldhouse m Ken
an Stadium," Beaumont said.
Fonville was kept in the in
firmary Monday night for ob
servation, and released Tues
day afternoon.
Chuck Erickson, athletic di
rector said that most likely
Fonville will be ready for Sat
urday's game with State, if
he is needed.
When he woke up, Fonville
said his wallet was lying be
side him. The dollar was
gone, but some money in his
pocket was untouched.
Beaumont said the footprints
at the scene resembled those
of boots or crepe soled shoes.
No plaster impression was
made because of the rough
ground.
Captain B. E. Durham, of
the Chapel Hill police, and
detectives are investigating.
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Group Is Unhappy
Eure replied to Agnew's
statement saying, "I wouldn't
say one word or fail to say
one word that I wouldn't say
about any other foreign cor
poration. There's absolutely
no distinction."
The statement will not be
released until, it. -arrives..-in-.
Eure's office.
Officials of the Association
met in Atlanta Monday to con
fer on the situation before the
letter was drafted.
The Southern Association is
a regional accrediting agency
which has figured prominent
ly in the controversy over the
speaker ban.
Dean Emmett B. Fields of
Vanderbilt, chairman of its
Commission on Colleges, said
Informal Rush
The scurry of Formal rush
is ended, but the round of so
cial life began again this week
with informal rush. Informal
rush is a smaller version of
the parties and the introduc
tion to sorority life on the
campus. The rushees are in
vited to the houses for a meal
and a friendly evening of chit
chat. All women who participated
in formal rush and dropped
out, or failed to receive bids
are automatically place on
the rush list. All other inter
ested women are eligible, pro
vided they have a 2.0 aver
age. They should sign up in
the Dean of Women's office as
-soon as possible, as rush
started Monday.
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WHAT'S A NICE GIRL LIKE PATSY doing
in a place like this? Performing a ribbon
cutting ceremony, that's what. Patsy Puckett,
Miss Mississippi first runner-up to the Miss
America contest and recent visitor to cam
V
They will represent the four
CU Day ceremonies here Oct.
Zakki is from Hillsborough.
at the August ban hearings
that the law is "an infringe
ment on the trustee adminis
tration of the University."
Agnew said last week that
Eure's request was a "red
herring" growing out of the
association's threat to with
- draw -accreditation of State
supported schools because of
the Speaker Ban Law.
2
Youthful Newsmen
Get Set For Tough
By DAVID ROTHMAN
DTH Staff Writer
The managing editor of
Newsday told a group of
journalism students Monday
night to prepare for irregular
hours, unglamorous beginning
worV and demanding bosses.
William F. Mcllwain also
exrl ined why the syndicate
owned by the Long Island
Daily no longer distributes
novelist John O'Hara's col
umns. Mcllwain himself profession
ally entered the newspaper
business after an education at
Wake Forest College. Before
he came to Newsday, he had
'worked on the Charlotte Ob
server and other North Caro
lina papers.
Throughout his talk, Mcll
wain kept the audience enter
tained with tales of successes
campuses of the University at
8. Mary is from Greensboro;
Eure wrote the 1963 law
which outlaws Communists
and Fifth Amendment plead
ers from speaking on State
supported campuses.
Deputy Atty. Gen. Ralph
Moody wrote an opinion on
whether the association should
be required to domesticate in
North Carolina at the request
of Eure.
and failures in his paper's city
room.
One Newsday staffer be
came known as "the hot lunch
man," the managing editor
said, because he thought he
could always stop working at
a fixed hour so his wife could
serve him a hot dinner.
The "hot lunch man" didn't
last long at Newsday.
Another young journalist
"a beautiful girl" was not
even hired after she declined
to work from 7 p.m. to 2:30
a.m. The staff hated to see
that one go, Mcllwain said.
Newcomers, he explained,
should not expect to become
U. N. correspondents, famous
political writers, columnists
and dramatics critics at
least not immediately.
In fact, Mcllwain remarked
they shouldn't even expect to
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pus, officially opens the "Red Garter Room"
at Maverick House. The room is the newest
edition to the Craige Residence Hall night
Club.
In Election Computed By IBM
Every District Turns Out For
By ANDY MYERS
DTH Staff Writer
It's all over but the legisla
tion. Campus radio was endorsed
by the student body yester
day, with 3.301 voting for and
President Faces
Operation Friday
WASHINGTON (AP) Pres
ident Johnson announced per
sonally yesterday he will en
ter Bethesda Naval Hospital
Thursday night for removal of
a poorly functioning gall blad
der. Johnson, reading a state
ment to reporters in the White
House cabinet room, said "doc
tors expect there will be a
minimal time during which I
will not be conducting busi
ness as usual."
The chief executive empha
sized that, should presidential
action or decisions be re
quired at a time when he
could not personally carry
them out, Vice President Hu
bert H. Humphrey will act
for h'm.
The one-to-two-hour opera
tion will be performed Friday
morning at the naval hospital
in suburban Bethesda, Md.,
where Johnson was a patient
last January with a heavy
cold.
The President said his doc
tors have diagnosed his condi
tion as "a poorly functioning
gall bladder with stones."
He said the physicians de-
Beware:
Work
do a lot of feature writing.
"Everybody should get a
whack at it," he commented.
Besides, he went on, report
ers need to master both
"hard" and "soft" news. Fea
ture writers frequently have
better working schedules than
their colleagues and some
times write articles covering
nearly half a newspaper page.
Then Mcllwain told of a
young reporter who went so
far as to try specifying be
fore he got hired the exact
percentage of feature work he
would do. Like the beautiful
girl and the "hot lunch man,"
he soon left the Newsday city
room.
Newcomers, the managing
editor warned the audience,
should be able to "dig up"
their own stories. He said
many gruff city editors have
a tendency to send them out
on difficult assignments to
test their ability and their en
thusiasm. Mcllwain thinks one of the
best ways to move up in
newspaper work is to have a
desk job, though a competent
reporter cn "lo advance.
O'Hara was hired as a News
day columnist because of his
reputation, Mcllwain said,
commenting that the famous
novelist got "a handsome fee"
and nobody tampered with his
columns.
But, Mcllwain continued, ed
itors across the country still
didn't like the product, so
Newsday had to lower
O'Hara's salary. And when the
paper lowered it, the best-selling
writer decided to become
"an unemployed newspaper
man" for the tenth time.
Asked if he agrees with Art
Buchwald that editors shy
away from political humor,
Mcllwain said:
"I think there's some truth
in that . . . Some papers are
pretty jittery but read
ers sometimes frighten you by
taking things too literally."
Newsday, a tabloid with a
circulation of about 400,000,
was started less than 30
years ago. UNC journalism
"professor Kenneth Byerley be
lieves its success is largely
due to its stressing the "local
I angle" in news stories.
1,099 voting against the sys
tem. Voting on IBM cards in
stead of ballots, the 4,400 stu
dents passed their mass judg
ment, on something the Stu
dent Legislature has been sit
ting on for a semester.
cided it should be removed. I
Johnson reported that he
first experienced difficulty on
Sept. 7 while on his Texas
ranch.
Felt Pains
"I felt some pains in my
stomach which seemed to be
the result of something I had
eaten," he related.
Johnson went on to say that
the W'hite House physician,
Vice Adm. George G. Burk
ley, suspected gall bladder
trouble and that further ex
aminations confirmed that ten
tative diagnosis.
The operation will be per
formed by Dr. George A. Hal
lenbeck, 50, who heads a sec
tion on General surgery and
the section of surgical research
at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester,
Minn.
Dr. Hallenbeck, who met
with newsmen after the Pres
ident made his statement, said
that the risk involved in the
operation is minimal.
Dr. J. Willis Hurst of At
lanta, who has been John
son's heart specialist since
the chief executive's 1955 heart
attack, also was present and
said that Johnson is as able
to stand the operation as anv
one his age who never had a
heart attack.
10 To 14 Days
In response to a question,
Press Secretary Bill D. Moy
ers said the doctors expect
Johnson will remain in t h e
hospital 10 to 14 days.
Hallenbeck said that after
the President leaves the hos
pital, "a reduced schedule
would probably be necessary
for a few weeks." During that
time, he said, Johnson might
"become tired more quickly
than he normally would."
When Johnson finished read
ing his own statement a large
gathering of reporters started
to walk smiling from the
room, the newsmen called out,
"Good luck Mr. President."
He seemed visibly affected by
this expression.
Humphrey made a brief
statement after Johnson's de
parture, saying that:
"The President has fully dis
cussed the situation with me
and with the cabinet and we
are clear as to the procedures
to be followed during his short
absence if necessity arises."
Yarbrough
Sings Here
Next Week
The lyric tenor voice of
Glenn Yarbrough will bathe
the walls of Carmichael Audi
torium Tuesday as Graham I
Memorial presents the singer
as a grand finale to Univer
sity Day.
All UXC Students, dates and1
staff will be admitted free to
at 9 p.m.
Yarbrough, former lead
singer of the reknowned Lime
lighters Trio is one of the few
popular singers who concen
trates on melody and not on
beat.
He is not interested in being
branded as a folk singer. "I
just try to do good songs, I
don't care where they come
from," he said. He wants to
branch out beyond the strict
confines of folk music.
He is a former student of
St. John's College in Annapo
lis and later studied classical
Greek and pre-Socratic phil
osphy at Mexico City College.
He went to New York to work
and due to a chance meeting
became acquainted with Lou
Gottlieb and Alex Hassilev of
the Limelighters.
Although the tallying of
votes was supposed to be sim
plified by the computerized
cards, returns were no known
until after 10 p.m. last night.
Graham Memorial received
numerous calls from students
wishing to know the "instant"
results, but a delay in process
ing the cards took over two
hours to correct.
Hugh Blackwell said yester
day that the campus radio bill
will be approved by the fi
nance committee as soon as
possible.
After that, it will pass to
the floor of the Student Legis
lature to be voted on.
Campus radio will take $34,
848 from the general surplus
of the SL this first year. Some
$11,000 of that will go for op
erating costs, and the rest will
be for setting up the facility.
From studios on campus, a
signal will be sent via tele
phone wires over to Swain Hall
where there is an FM trans
mitter. A signal will be broadcast
over a range of five miles
from Swain. It will be FM.
Each dormitory will be pro
vided with a special FM re
ceiver to change the signal to
AM. The signal will be fed
into the electrical wiring of
the dormitory, but the wires
will act only as short-range
antennas.
Any radio, including ransis
tors, within 50 feet from the
dormitory will be able to re
ceive the signal. The station
will be somewhere on the low
er end of the radio dial.
Programming will be en
tirely by UNC students. Some
.suggested-shows -include Top
40," Oldie-Goldie shows, jazz,
classical and folk music.
In addition, intensive sports
coverage of intramurals as
well as varsity events will be
featured. John Stupak, chair
man of the campus radio com
mittee, said pre-game warm
ups and game wrap-ups will
probably be used.
News, weather and com
mentary at regular intervals
and campus news hows have
been suggested. Stupak said
that one unique aspect of the
campus radio will be an ab
sence of advertisements.
He said that unlike most
popular radio stations in the
area, which cater to the sub
teen and teen set, the campus
radio will appeal only to the
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Machine,
Radio
UNC student.
Quiz promptings, panel dis
cussions and emergency an
nouncements will be a" valu
able service of the campus ra
dio. The carrier current system
has grown to be popular on
the American college campus.
Both N. C. State and Duke
have carrier current systems.
While many campus radio
systems are limited, the sys
tem at UNC will be "quite mo
bile" according to Stupak. He
said on-the-spot coverage of
campus news events will
most likely be popular.
"Suppose there was a rally
in Y-Court like the Students
for Teachers one last year,"
he said. "We could bring our
microphones to the spot and
get instant coverage."
Voting by district went as
follows:
Men's District I: Victory
Village and out of tow stu
dents, 437 for, 46 against.
Men's District II: Town stu
dents, 70 for, 74 against.
Men's District III: town stu
dents, 88 for, 44 against.
Men's Distrcit IV: town stu
dents, 61 for, 28 against.
Men's District V: Carr, Old
East, Old West, Battle-Vance-Pettigrew,
136 for, 56 against.
Men's District VI: Grimes,
Manly, Ruffin, Mangum, 269
for, 72 against.
Men's District Vll: Aycock,
Graham, Stacy, Everett, Lew
is, 384 for, 127 against.
Men's District VL11: Joyner,
Alexander, Connor, 203 for, 88
against.
Men's District IV: Avery,
Parker, Teague, 229 for, 95
against. - . . .
Men's District X : Ehring
haus, 321 for, 84 against.
Men's District XI: Craige,
313 for, 84 against.
. Men's District XII: Morri
son, 524 for, 139 against.
Women's District I: Sorori
ties, Victory Village, town, 49
for, 28 against.
Women's District II: Alder
man, Mclver, 98 for, 33
against.
Women's District III: Spen
cer, Smith, Whitehead, 162
for, 32 against.
Women's District IV: Nurs
es, 159 for, 19 against.
Women's District V: East
and West Cobb, 126 for, 28
against.
Women's District VI: Win
ston, 54 for, 20 against.
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On Here?
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