U.rj.C. Library
Sarials Dept.
Box 870
Tonight's Free Flick is "The
Prisoner," starring Alec Guin
ness and Jack Hawkins. Set
against the background of a
police state, Guinness por
trays a Roman Catholic cardi
nal arrested for treason. Haw
kins is his interrogator.
nl off
Fauiitleroy Speaks
Know the difference be
tween culture and agricul
ture? See Fauntleroy's column to
day on the sports page.
The South's Largest College Newspaper
Vol. 74. No. 21
CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1965
Founded February 23, 1893.
TT"T
IB
liecalJ.
etition
n Women's
orms
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NSA: Third In
Critici
(Ed. Note This is the last
in a series of articles by DTH
Political Writer John Green
backer on the NSA congress,
held last August in Madison,
Wis.)
Last fall students at this
Graham Memorial
Committee Heads
Students have been chosen
for the Graham Memorial Ac
tivities Board Committees.
Committee members are as
follows:
Drama Committee: Bever
ly Bailey, chairman; Nancy
Griffin, Mary , Elser, Kelly
Roberts, John Marshall Jones,
Annette Randall, Sam Blate,
John Swartley, Meg Graham,
and Pat Robertson.
Current Affairs Committee:
Camilla Walters, chairman;
Faryl Sims, Chet Arnold, Pat
ty Fitzpatrick, Sam Robinson,
Al Ellis, Lee Fambrough, Pun
Barrett, Shirley Patterson, Te
ry Henry, Ann Crutchfield,
Ada Lea Birnie, Randy Fen
ninger, and Frank Parker.
Social Committee: Charles
Evans, chairman; Pat Tario,
Billie Marie Young, Alice
Creech, Jack Winston, Gary
Gross, Bill Slebos, Erin Chal
len, Gale Hunter, Jim Nichol
son, Ibby Pollard, Annette
Fairless, Carolyn Hopper,
Steve Israel, Gloria Shepherd,
Pamm Northcutt, Ashley Har-
'Fink' Rules
Bring Protest
AMHERST (CPS) Stu
dents at Amherst College are
protesting a new set of parie
tal rules, including a so-called
"rat-fink" clause which makes
all residents in each dormitory
responsible for reporting vio
lations of the social code.
Student protest has taken
the form of college-wide dis
cussions and letters to the stu
dent paper. About 100 students
have not handed in signed
honor code cards, bv which a
student indicates he is willing
to abide by the social code,
ine the "rat - fink" clause.
The student council is or
ganizing a poll of all students
on the social hours issue and
is encouraging all dormitories
to elect representatives to a
student inter-dormitorv coun
cil, which is in charge of for
mulating the social code.
Along with the exclusion of
tne "rat-link" clause, students
are demanding an extension of
tne hours during which worn
en are allowed to visit the
dormitories.
No Jinx This
tate9
By PAT STITH
DTH Sports Editor
If North "Carolina players
are superstitious then it's a
good thing that today's game
with N. C. State isn't their
first of the year.
If it were the 21,000 who will
jam their way into State's
Riddick Stadium could expect
the Wolfpack to come out
ahead, regardless of who the
experts tab as the team to
beat.
Over the past ten years
North Carolina has opened
with her sister institution in
Raleigh seven times and
the Wolfpack won six of those
ball games.
UNC, on the other hand,
won all three non-openers, in
cluding a 31-10 victory here in
1963. In last year's opener
State stunned Carolina 14-13
and put its season into a tail
spin before it got off the
ground.
It doesn't mean anything
really, but North Carolina
reigns as a. one touchdown
favorite to break State's eight
game home winning streak,
dating back to 1962.
Both teams have 1-2 records.
A Series
sm. Defense Of N
university were involved in a
campus-wide controversy over
UNC's affiliation with the Na
tional Student Association.
Local opponents of NSA crit
icized the national student
group for its public stands on
dison, and Robert Little.
Film Committee: Robin
Dial, chairman; Scott Castle
berry, Jim Chesnutt, Dan
Tartaglia, Bill Wyatt, Kath
rine Stewart, Fred Kelso, Joel
S. Simpson, Mike League and
Ken Shepsle.
Publicity Committee: David
Jennings, Carol Anne Peters,
Bobbi Woodall, Mary Ellison
Strothers, Anna Helbig, Mary
Alice Morris, Martha Weeks,
Dave Le Barre, Tom Livings
ton, Tom Gorham, Scott Sim
mons, Joanne Jackson, Trisha
Timmons, Susie Gebhardt, Ma
con Remsburg, Margaret
Barnhart, Janet Deal, Terry
Barnes, and Peg McQueen.
Music Committee: Harold
Cameron, chairman; John
Hutcheson, Mary Lou Nuss
baum, Eric Silverstein, Carol
Cantwell, Charles Gibson,
Candy Sikerot, Alfred Mo
ran, Cathy Waldron, Jim Ray,
Becky Rhodarmer, and Ann
Cameron.
Games Committee: Frank
Cathey, chairman; Dick Bab
cock, Frank Bryant, Rick
Blue, Sue McFarland, Joan
Hancock, and Jane Feiera-bend.
He Leads Three Lives
By JUDY BOLCH
UNC News Bureau
If you had to appear calm
and unfazed on your own ra
dio program, fight a fire and
then study for a zoology quiz
all in the space of 24 hours,
do you think you could do it?
Win Donat student, fire
man and radio announcer
does. The three jobs are all
in a day's work for him.
The last two roles are as
sumed as ways of earning
money to put himself through
the University of North Caro
lina here. But they're also
work he thoroughly enjoys for
itself.
First and most important, of
course, Donat is a student. A
tall, slender guy with a deep,
resonant voice, he's a junior
and majors not as might be
expected in radio-tv or in
speech, but in zoology.
That field might seem alien
to his other two interests, but,
Time
Carolina Meet
North Carolina looked im
pressive in a 31-24 loss to Big
Ten defending champ Michi
gan in its opener and then
played excellent ball in a 14-3
win over Ohio State. But the
Tar Heels dived head first off
their pinnacle of success in a
21-17 loss to Virginia here last
week.
N. C. State, the defending
ACC champion, lost 21-7 to
Celmson, whipped Wake For
est 13-11 at home, and then
lost to South Carolina 13-11 last
week.
If past performance means
anything, it ought to be a free
wheeling ball game if State
passes and North Carolina,
runs. UNC ranks seventh in
the conference in pass defense
and State ranks at the bottom
of the list in rushing defense.
Over the past two games
North Carolina's defensive line
has been rougher than a file
on enemy backs Ohio State
managed only 66 yards on 47
carries and Virginia got Just
60 yards on 44 attempts.
North Carolina's secondary,
however, has looked like a
hunk of Swiss cheese. Virgin
ia's Tom Hodges hit 14 con
secutive passes against the
controversies in national and
international affairs.
Most of the resolutions pass
ed by previous congresses of
NSA had been of an extremely
liberal nature, and therefore
conservative groups have
worked on many campuses to
disaffiliate member schools
from the organization.
The UNC campus voted in a
referendum last fall to con
tinue University affiliation
with NSA, but the critics of
the Association would still
like to see NSA concern itself
with the betterment of student
life rather than national or in
ternational issues.
UNC's delegates to the NSA
national congress held last
August were both liberal and
conservative in their political
philosophies, and their im
pressions of the congress are
significant in light of the pro
and anti-NSA controversy.
Bob Powell, a junior from
Thomasville and a political
moderate, praised the con
gress for the "tremendously
maturing and elightning ex
perience" it offered him.
"It is noteworthy that the
UNC delegation was quite ac
tive and prevailing in moder
ating the congress," he said.
Bill Scott, a senior from
Nashville, Tennessee, criti
cized the congress for its
pronouncements on the Viet
Nam situation.
"I don't see how the NSA
position on Viet Nam, as pass
ed by the congress, is going to
help the Carolina student,"
he said.
He did, however, state his
"firm belief" that UNC re
main affiliated with NSA.
he says, "Both jobs are en
joyable. They vary my out
look. I meet people constant
ly and this is something I
need. It's better than living in
just one world."
The Raleigh native takes a
full - course load at UNC and
hopes to enter graduate school.
In his second world that
of fire - fighter Donat some
times dashes off to as many as
three blazes in one night. Then
again he may not be called
upon for a week.
In between the trips, Donat
uses his evenings to study.
For his work as a fireman, he
gets a free room in the mod
ern Chapel Hill firehouse.
The position as radio an
nouncer is a pretty varied one
in itself. In charge of the 4
p.m. until sundown hours of a
local radio station's time, Do
nat finds himself spinning rec
ords, reading advertisements,
doing his own engineering and
Tar Heels last Saturday to
beat them in the dying min
utes of the game.
Offensively North Carolina
carries two headliners into
Ml
DAILY REMINDER Every day for the past year Charlotte News' columnist John Elgo
has received a post card like this one from an anonymous State fan. Kilgo will be at the
game today hoping praying even that his Tar Heels will pot an end to this nonsense.
SA
"Our delegation was the
leading factor in diluting and
defeating powerful liberal
proposals," he said.
"NSA was chaos but
tressed by radicalism, with an
'open forum' thrown in as a
fringe benefit," conservative
Sandra Burden said. "Such
were my first impressions of
NSA.
"The radicals want NSA to
be heard," she said. "Caro
lina wants NSA to be listened
to; Carolina must not back
down from this stand.
"We must strengthen our
stand and the position of NSA
by encouraging new 'conserv
ative' schools to join and
member schools to stay in,"
she said.
Possibly the most significant
perspective of the congress
came from senior Wright
Doyle, a member of the small
conservative caucus at the
NSA congress.
Doyle said that although he
disagreed with much of the
legislation passed by the con
gress, he does not advocate
withdrawal of UNC from NSA.
"Moderate liberals and con
servatives are not active in
student politics and have gen
erally not been interested in
NSA," he said.
Urging moderates and con
servatives "not to quit when
the going gets rough," Doyle
said, "It behooves all of us to
take an interest in and try to
improve NSA.
"We must not concede the
battle before it has been
fought," he said, "and we
can't allow the presitge of
NSA to be used by those with
whem we do not agree."
programming and sometimes
doing field work.
His program a smooth
and easy show of the best in
popular music and show tunes
calls upon him "to obliter
ate everything else from my
mind and be as pleasant as
possible.
His mature voice has led
his listeners to think of him
as older than he is and Donat
admits that he pays extra at
tention to articulation while
he's on the air.
So far no disasterous bloop
ers nave occurred in h i
radio career, and Donat feels
his job isn't terribly tense or
demanding.
m 1 i
ine ratner reserved young
man doesn't think his sched
ule is particularly fast or un
usual.
"The things that I do regu
late my time," he says. "They
really help me to be organ
ized." the game. Quarterback Danny.
TaiDott leads the conference in
passing with 40 completions
and ranks second behind
Hodges in total offense.
In
ZACKY
Queens Needed
For Homecoming
Getting ready for it
It happens to be Homecom
ing Weekend, about the big
gest thing to hit the campus
in the fall. What it comes down
to is Jubilee in the Fall.
Preparations for the week
end are already underway.
Rick Kramer, president of the
Carolina Athletic Association,
said earlier this week that en
trants for the Homecoming
Queen contest are now being
accepted.
The contest will be held in
the Rams Club Room of Ken
an Fieldhouse Oct. 20. Four
judges will select eight coeds
as finalists.
These beauties will make up
the Homecoming Court and
will have their pictures in the
Daily Tar HeeL
The Queen will be selected
from this group by campus
wide balloting on Oct. 27 and
28.
Zacki Murphy, last year's
Homecoming Queen, will
crown this year's winner dur
ing halftime ceremonies.
Any organization may spon
Special Art Exhibit Opens
In Ackland Center Today
Ackland Art Center is now
exhibiting a special collection
of new works in honor of Uni
versity Day. The display will
run until Oct. 31.
Prints, drawings, paintings,
sculptures and other arts,
many of which have not been
shown in university art gal
leries form the exhibition.
The new works include gifts
as well as purchases. Among
them are four paintings and a
Louis Comfort Tiffany lamp,
gift of the John Motley More
head Foundation.
Cdr. and Mrs. L. E. Stahl
lalei
gh
Running back Max Chap
man is the conference's top
rusher with 236 yards on 42
carries, an average of 5.6
yards per trip.
-s i '
MURPHY
sor as many contestants as it
wishes. Each entry must be
accompanied by $5 and turned
into the Graham Memorial
information desk by Oct. 18
at 6 p.m.
Kramer also said that a pep
rally and fireworks display
will be held the night before
the game.
On Saturday morning the
judging of the Homecoming
Display Contest will be con
ducted. Trophies will be awarded to
the best all - campus display,
best fraternity, best sorority,
best men's resident hall and
best women's resident hall.
Judging is based on beauty
and originality.
Then of course the ball
game will commence at 1:30
against the Georgia Bulldogs,
currently ranked number four
in the top ten.
Georgia beat Michigan 15
1. The Tar Heels lost to the
Wolverines 31-24.
The Bulldogs' dropped Car
olina 24-8 last year in Athens.
Georgia holds the lead in the
series, 13-12-2.
have given two prints and a
painting in memorv of the late
Charles E. Kistler,' of Fayette
ville. The art center has also pur
chased many new paintings.
Artists who are featured in
the show include: Durer, Wen
zell Hollar, Domenico Tiepolo,
Thomas Gainsborough, Theo
dore Chasseriau, Jongkind,
Daumier, Gabriel Decamps,
H. Flandrin, Emile Nolde and
Dean Meeker.
The Ackland museum is
open to the public Tuesday
through Saturday from 10 to
5 and Sunday from 2 to 6.
The galleries are closed Mon
day. Combo Party
Saturday Night
N. C. State University will
sponsor a combo party at its
student union Saturday night
after the UNC - State football
game and UNC students will
be admitted free, according
to Consolidated University Stu
dent Council member Faryl
Sims.
Closed circuit television of
the game and the Rooftop
Singers will be featured at
Raleigh's Reynolds Coliseum.
Student Body President Paul
Dickson has warned students
to avoid unpleasant incidents
before, during and after this
year's game.
Get His Goat
Pittsburg, Kan. AP)
Police Sgt. Lowell Forbes
wishes someone would get
his goat.
Forbes recently answer
ed a call that a goat had
climbed onto the roof of a
home to get away from a
dog.
He lassoed the goat, took
it home and waited for the
owner to call for it. He's
still waiting.
Petition Demands
Vote By Oct. 19
By ANDY MYERS and
ED FREAKLEY
DTH Staff Writers
A petition began circulating
yesterday demanding a recall
election for the office of Presi
dent of the Student Body.
The petition followed a
speech Thursday night in the
Student Legislature by Sharon
Rose, a member of Dickson's
party, the SP. The recall de
mand began circulating in
women's residence halls late
yesterday.
The petition reads:
TO PAUL DICKSON III,
PRESIDENT OF THE STU
DENT BODY:
"We the undersigned here
by petition you to direct the
elections board to hold a re
call election for the office of
President of the Student Body.
We further petition that this
election be held on or before
Tuesday, Oct. 19, 1965."
President Dickson will be
required to direct the elections
board to hold the election if
the petition is successful. At
least 15 per cent of the total
student body must sign the
petition for the recall to be
conducted.
About 1,900 names will be
required.
Immediately after Miss
Rose's demand for a recall
Thursday, the Student Legis
lature was adjourned. There
was no discussion.
Rebuttal Due Sunday
Since that event, Dickson
has not commented on the
speech or the recall petition
but Student Party leaders are
preparing a rebuttal state
ment which will appear in
Sunday's DTH.
It was reported that the cir
culation of the petition was
concentrated in Spencer, Al
derman and Nurses residence
halls.
Last week Dickson's decis
ion to remain in office re
ceived unanimous support of
the Di-Phi Senate during a
closed executive session.
That body passed a resolu
tion which supported Dickson,
tion's interference in the Dick
son matter and urged student
leaders to work with Dickson
during the coming year.
Part of the resolution read:
"We do support the decis
ion of Paul Dickson in choos
ing to remain as President of
the Student Body. We urgent
ly request the administration
to cease and refrain from any
further interference in this
particular question and to
work with President Dickson
in the fullest spirit of coopera
tion during the coming year.
Miss Rose, the legislator
who proposed the recall, was
unavailable for comment yes
terday.
Earlier Action
The Dickson flare up began
last month when eight stu
dent leaders presented a pe
tition to the president asking
him to resign.
The leaders said they felt
they could not function in their
Placement Service Says
'Register Now,' Seniors
"Now is the time to regis
ter with the Placement Serv
ice to make best use of it,"
Director J. F. Galloway told
senior and graduate students
who filled Hill HaU's auditor
ium Thursday night.
He told students to register
"tomorrow morning" because:
1. Faculty members know
you best now.
2. If you are not seeking
employment now, the bureau
will have your permanent rec
ord for future reference, per
haps after military sen-ice.
3. Companies will be recruit
ing on campus for adminis
trative and managerial per
sonnel. "Companies will begin in
terviews here in one week,"
he said and expressed opti
mism about opportunities to
be offered this year.
He introduced guest speak
er Donald M. Cook, corpor
ate manager of college rela
tions for the Radio Corpora
tion of America, as one well
qualified for discussing secur
ing employment because he
has seen it from both sides.
Cook began by saying, "I
various duties if Dickson re
mained in office.
Dickson had been given an
official reprimand by the
Men's Honor Council this sum
mer for a Campus Code viola
tion. The charge against him
was helping a coed enter a
closed fraternity house.
The University administra
tion threatened to reopen Dick
son's case if he didn't resign.
Later, after taking with stu
dent leaders, they withdrew
their ultimatum.
Dickson issued a statement
after being presented with the
petition by the student lead
ers saying he felt he had not
betrayed the student's trust
and that he would not resign
under outside pressure.
First Petition
A few days later three stu
dents circulated another pe
tition asking Dickson to resign
in the interest of the student
body.
They presented the request
to the president with almost
1,500 names on it.
Dickson thanked them for
their effort but said, "I will
only leave office through re
call or impeachment."
The chancellor released a
letter dated Aug. 26 saying
the administration would no
longer "except or inforce the
dual standard" decisions of
the honor council.
Dean of Student Affairs,
C. O. Cathey, said the letter
was released to reply to state
wide criticism concerning the
administrations' role in han
dling the matter.
Two weeks ago the faculty
committee planning Univer
sity Day said Dickson would
not represent the Student
Body at the program. Senior
Class President, John Har
mon, was selected instead.
Tryouts Tomorrow
For Summer Tree
Five male and five female
parts will be up for grabs to
morrow at 4 and 7:30 p.m. in
Playmakers Theatre for the
Carolina Playmakers second
production of the year, "The
Summer Tree," written by
UNC's Schubert Fellow in
Playwriting, Randolph Umber
ger. Mr. Umberger has been her
alded by Tom Patterson, di
rector of the production and
Professor of Playwriting at
UNC, as one of the finest
young playwrights ever to
come out of this area.
Reminiscent of the plays of
Tennessee Williams and Ers
kine Caldwell, "The Summer
Tree," which is set in Ra
leigh in 1919, concerns the
"loss of innocence of a 16 year
old girl." Tryouts are open to
all students, faculty and towns
people, and to anyone within
a commuting distance of Chap
el Hill.
Scripts are available in the
reserve reading room of the
library or at" 307 Bynum Hall.
was recently on the Ohio
State University campus and
the students there asked to
be remembered to you."
Then he told the audience
what the adult world thinks of
college students, according to
research analysis: College stu
dents have gained in Knowl
edge and curiosity. They have
more concern for the present
than the future, greater desire
to be with a crowd, less re
spect for their elders. They
are more cynical about the
world and society and differen
tiate more between social
classes. They are frank, open,
unsuspicious, self - centered,
passive, cooperative and more
anxious to get ahead. They
grow old before their age,
reaching middle age in the
teens, but they are ignorant
of the economy in which they
live. They are smarter than
the preceeding generation, but
many are in debt. They find
it difficult to communicate
with their parents and other
adults. Finally, they have the
facts, the education, but they
don't know what to do with it.