UIIC Library
CQrials Dpt.
Lox 870
Chir,l Hill, ?j. C,
te latltt
1 A
Free Flick
The Free Flick will be
"Breakfast at Tiffany's" star
ring Audrey Hepburn and
George Peppard. Shows at 7
and 9:30 in Carroll Hall.
Honor Systems
Meeting of Honor Systems
Commission In Grail Room,
second floor of GM at 4 p.m.
The South' Largest College Newspaper-All-American Award Winner
J
Volume 74, Number 121
Starts
Campus Carnival
Has 'Vice, Sadism'
By ANDY MYERS
DTH Staff Writer
"Vice" has finally arrived
at Carolina. "Sadism" is here.
Naturally, these two popular
activities will lure every stu
dent to today's Campus Car
nival in the Intramural Field.
Festivities begin at 1 and
last until 6 p.m. In between
times students can prepare
themselves for dates tonight
by:
throwing pies at smiling
faces.
knocking coeds from pre
carious perches into vast vats
of simulated boiling oil (warm
water).
tossing loaded baseballs at
weighted bottles.
a greased pig chase.
a strip show by Winston
Residence Hall.
Collection activities for the
Campus Chest, sponsor of the
event, began Monday. The Car
olina Women's Council shined
shoes Wednesday and yester
day in Y-Court and Lenoir Hall.
The shoeshine collected
$110.55, according to '"shoe
shine" chairman Ellen Sugg.
Last year the event netted
about $40.
Money from the shoeshine
Universities
Must Prove
Value-Sharp
DESMOINES, Iowa (AP)
Former UNC Chancellor Paul
F. Sharp, new president of
Drake University, said Thurs
day American universities are
on trial today and must prove
their relevance and value.
In his first appearance be
fore Drake faculty and stu
dents since assuming the pres
idency on Tuesday, Dr. Sharp
said.
"Higher education has raised
such high hopes among so
many of us that now we call
upon it to prove its relevance
and its value, to demonstrate
its vitality and its leadership
in a fast-changing, increasing
ly complex and unfamiliar so
ciety." Sharp talked about the touch
stones by which a university
and the system of higher edu
cation is judged.
He listed these touchstones
as ". . . the university's free
dom, its quality of instruction
and learning, the depth of its
productive scholarship, re
search and creativity, and fi
nally, the significance of its
services to the larger world of
which it is a part."
American universities are on
trial, at least in part, he con
tinued "because their expecta
tions are distressingly conven
tional, their ambitions march
with chain gang precision and
their corporate images fit gray
patterns of conformity lacking
in distinctive character and
personality."
Sing Out '66'
By ED FREAKLEY
DTH Staff Writer
CHARLOTTE "Sing Out
"66" drew the largest crowd
in the history of the Coliseum
here Wednesday night and
had more than 14,000 people
on their feet applauding them
for the last 15 minutes of the
show.
Charlotte police estimated
they turned away more than
1.000 cars filled with people
who were trying to get into the
free two - hour show.
The group of about 120, who
range in age from 15 to 24,
will be at the University in
Chapel Hill for two shows
Monday.
The turnout in Charlotte was
so large that the stage's back
ground curtain had to be tak
en down so people who were
sitting behind the stage could
see.
The show, sponsored by
WBTV in Charlotte, began
with the cast of 120 charging
on to the stage and singing a
loud and fast version of the
"Star Spangled Banner."
Dressed in blues, yellows.
Today
goes to the Campus Chest.
Co-chairmen of this year's
Chest drive, Ellen Lentz and
Dave Bruenner said yesterday
more than 300 solicitors are
collecting money in residence
halls, sororities, and fraterni
ties. The drive will continue
through Friday.
Tuesday an auction in Me
morial Hall will have up for
bidding, among other things,
Dean of Women Catherine
Carmichael's last African Vio
let, a TV set and a batch of
home brew.
History Professor William
Geer has consented to donate
his famous "most treasured
possession" a red Bull Stamp.
He uses it on student quizzes
when the student, well, uh,
shoots too much bull.
The auction will be preceded
by a fashion show at 7 p.m.
sponsored by the Fireside.
Clothes will be given as prizes.
Carnival Barker Neil Thom
as said more than 30 booths
will be set up in Intramural
Field. The King and Queen will
be crowned this afternoon.
Money from the Campus
Chest goes to the N. C. Heart
Association, Murdoch Center
for the retarded children at
Butner, O'Berry Center in
Goldsboro, Cerebral Palsy Hos
pital in Durham, and the World
University Service.
The goal this year is $12,
000. Miss Lentz said this comes
to about $1 per student.
Long Approves
Cobb Proposal
Cobb Residence Hall is now
an official member of More
head Residence College. This
is the first women's residence
to be admitted to the college
system.
Voting in East and West
Cobb took place last week and
the proposal to join Morehead
passed unanimously. Dean of
Men William Long approved
the move.
Morehead College is now
composed of Graham, Everett,
Lewis, Stacy, Aycock and
Cobb.
Morrison College and Nurses
dorm are considered "brother
sister halls," but are not mem
bers of the same college.
Senators have been elected
from each hall in Cobb to rep
resent the residence hall in
the college senate.
Drusylla Murray was elect
ed Secretary of Morehead in
a vote Tuesday. Representa
tives to the senate from the
other residences will be elect
ed in the general elections
Tuesday.
At the Morehead Senate
meeting held Tuesday night
it was announced that a com
bo party would be held March
6.
The House and Grounds
committee of the college an
nounced plans to plant now
ers around the lower quad
and to place benches be
tween Lewis and Aycock halls.
A DTH
reds, greens and many oth
er colors, the rainbow - like
group sang for two hours with
out stopping. Their songs are
loud, fast and inspiring.
No writing can describe the
just plain good feeling that
comes from the group. One
thing is obvious, the cast has
the best time of all.
The group consists of Ne
groes, (one an ex-street fight
er and one a refugee from
Watts), Cubans, Scots, Eng
lish, Finns and many others.
They are about evenly split
between girls and boys.
All the songs they sing ex
cept two, were written by
members of the cast. Since
they started touring the coun
try last fall they have writ
ten over 50 songs. Shortly be
fore their show in Charlotte
they composed one for North
Carolina it's great.
Of the group 48 of them are
high school age. But they
aren't missing any of their ed
ucation. They have a travel
ing school with them and stu
dy about eight hours a day.
One of the girls, Cati Quinn,
CHAPEL HILL,
I IT "
:--f it
VI
GALE HUNTER, Diane Longino and Sandy will be given before the big auction Tuesday
Kelso (left to right) are practicing in the Fire- at 7 p.m. in Memorial Hall,
side for the Campus Chest Fashion Show. It
in iU ii urn' uriri iiH' 1 Tri
Campus Carnival Barker Neil
with the "fairer sex" as the
in the background dig a hole
Taylor
Michael William Taylor, a
sophomore from Macon, Ga.,
is next year's Paris Exchange
scholar with the Ecole Super
ieure d'Electricite. The son of
Dr. and Mrs. O. W. Taylor is
a Greek major and plans to
become an archaeologist.
Taylor is a member of the
Academic Affairs Committee,
the Baptist Student Union, the
Student Party, Phi Eta Sigma
the NROTC and the Sophomore
Honors Program.
He will go to France in early
July for intensive study of the
French language and will be
gin teaching English at the
Ecole Superieure in October.
He plans to study Greek and
archaeology at the Sorbonne in
Paris. He will return here to
continue his studies in the sum
mer of 1967.
Review
Packs Coliseum
NORTH CAROLINA,
m
- ojV ,
Thomas pleads pied by a booth.
poor workmen
soon be occu-
Wins Scholarship
YMCA Interviews
Interviews for YMCA offi
cers will be held Monday
through Wednesday from 3-5
p.m. in room 203-A of the Y
Building. Anyone interested in
applying for president, vice
president, secretary or treas
urer should come by the
YMCA offices and sign up for
an interview time.
Counselor Picking
Freshman Orientation Coun
selor selection will be next
Wednesday through Friday. In
tested persons may sign up for
interviews at GM information
desk any time beginning today.
is the daughter of Anthony
Quinn and the granddaughter
of Cecil B. deMille.
Another is the daughter of
Bob Richards, the Wheaties
man on television.
But all these young people
have dropped their past. They
are looking to the future, and
a young lady named Kathe
Green can tell you about it
better than I can.
"I was chased down the
freeway at 105 miles per hour
by the sheriff of Los Angeles.
He never caught me, but his
idea did. Entertainment has
always been my line, but re
bellion is my nature. I was
chucked out of 11 schools, and
left home at 15.
"When I got the invitation
to travel with "Sing-Out '66"
I decided to check my priori
ties. If American youth could
create a new image of Ameri
ca at a time when anti-Americanism
is growing so strong,
the whole course of events
might change. I knew the
thing was to channel all my
energy in the right direction.
My idea of Moral Re-Armament
is to do just that."
FRIDAY, MARCH 18. 1966
m
k
DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer
They should complete an ap
plication blank which should
be brought to the interviews.
Interviews will be from 5 to
8 p.m. except Friday when
they will be from 5 to 6 p.m.
Library Schedule
Wilson Library has announc
ed its schedule for the spring
holidays:
Saturday, April 27:45 a.m.
to 1 p.m.
Sunday, April 3 closed
Monday, April 4 to Friday
April 89 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday, April 99 a.m. to
1 p.m.
Sunday, April 10 closed
Monday, April 11 9 a.m. to
5 p.m.
Tuesday, April 12 resume
regular schedule.
Medicare Blanks
Application blanks for sup
plemental Medicare benefits
are available at the money or
der window of the Chapel Hill
Post Office.
They are available in the
search of the Social Security
Administration to contact 3.1
million senior citizens before a
March 31 deadline imposed by
the Medicare law.
Initially, some 2.5 million
application blanks were dis
tributed to nearly 34,000 main
post offices. Additional forms
are available as needed.
The supplemental program
costs $3 a month and provides
doctor bill and other benefits.
Everyone 65 or older is eligible
for the basic hospital benefits
under Medicare.
Senior citizens who reached
65 before 1966 face a two year
delay if they do not sign up
by March 31.
Candidates Needed
Some residence halls do not
yet have . people running for
senate and other offices. Elec
tion of these officers will take
place in the spring elections
Tuesday.
MRC President Lew Brown
said any residence hall presi
dent not having candidates run
i ning from his hall should con
: tact Brown before Tuesday.
Frats 'Hold Breath'
Awaiting Becisio:
O
By STEVE BENNETT
DTH Staff Writer
All 24 of UNC's social fra
ternities will regain women's
visiting privileges today if
Dean of Men William G. Long
signs the new "Interim Fra
ternity Visiting Agreement 1965
66." The agreement, voted into
IFC by-laws last night, will in
clude seven new sections
agreed upon following the dis
order last weekend.
The IFC also unanimously
passed a resolution stating its
outrage at the way in which
the investigation has been held
concerning the action of a few
irresponsible individuals dur
ing the course of last weekend.
Candidates Picked
For College Vote
By GLENN MAYS
DTH Staff Writer
Candidates for offices of a
residence college made up of
Joyner, Alexander and Connor
residence halls have been chos
en. Nominations will be open
ed, however, for all offices un
til 8 p.m. today.
Candidates chosen Wednes
day night by the present resi
dence hall officers included
Governor Ken Giles, of Alex
ander; Social Lt. Governor,
Sandy Hobgood of Joyner; Ac
ademic Lt. Governor, Wayne
Justesen of Joyner and Mel
Manson of Connor; Secretary,
Steve Rusmissel of Joyner;
Treasurer, Andrew Mackie of
Alexander and Dave Baughn of
Connor.
Rick Draper of Joyner, act
ing governor of the residence
college which has not yet been
named, said prospective can
didates can submit petitions
signed by any 50 residents
from the residence college to
him by 8 p.m. today for ap
proval. The residence college senate
will be made up of 14 members
including four senators and
president from Joyner and Con
nor halls and three senators
and president from Alexander
hall.
The residence college treas
urer will handle the money
from all the hails in the col
lege. "This will make it less
likely that the hall will over
draw its financial accounts,"
Draper said.
The Men's Residence Coun
!'.-. --.i-
v.v - .
A SIDEWALK AT LAST! Work started yesterday on the side
walk between Morrison and Kenan Fieldbonse. Here a worker
is setting op a string to make sure the walk is straighter than
the one Morrison residents built last week. Bricks in the back
ground were part of the old walk which was taken up Tuesday.
ocial Ban Rule
The resolution states that the
"unfortunate incidents have
been misrepresented as being
indicative of the conduct of the
fraternity system as a whole."
The Council expressed con
cern that the entire fraternity
system has been unfairly in
dicted for the misconduct of- a
few individuals as a result of
the "injudicious and unortho
dox manner in which the inci
dents have been handled by
the Office of the Dean of Men."
The solution states that irre
pairable damage has been done
to the image of the fraternity
system in the eyes of the pub
lic due to the incidents of last
weekend and the manner in
which they were handled re
sulting in inaccurate, exagger-
cil has handled the funds for
residence halls in the past.
Harry Day, housemaster of
Alexander, said, "The resi
dence college system will pro
vide a better academic and
social atmosphere for the peo
ple in the residence college
area. We hope to get the resi
dence college constitution rati
fied, officers elected and our
residence college in full opera
tion with the elections Tuesday.
"The name for the residence
college is to be chosen later,"
Day said.
Colleges Get
Money Late
Funds earmarked for resi
dence colleges are being re
leased now after a two-month
delay.
Scott College (composed of
Parker, Avery and Teague) re
ceived their money Monday af
ter their constitution was ap
proved by the dean of men and
the MRC.
The major hold-up in the
funds came as the result of a
requirement by Dean of Men
William Long that each college
have an approved constitution
and duly elected officers.
Long said his requirement
was to "assure financial sta
bility" in the structure of
each college.
The allocation of funds to the
colleges was approved in a
campus-wide election last falL
Founded February 23. 1893
ated and biased accounts of
what actually happened.
The normal established pro
cedures for the investigation
have not been followed. Events
such as those of last weekend
are subject to investigation by
the Attorney General of Stu
dent Government, and the sus
pected individuals are subject
to a subsequent trial by the
appropriate judicial body.
The IFC made the modifica
tions in the Women's Visiting
Agreement realizing that such
modifications will improve the
fraternity system, the IFC and
the University community at
large.
The additions to the new
Visiting Agreement are:
The president, officers and
executive board of each house
will be held accountable for
the maintenance of gentle
manly conduct by their mem
bers and guests at their re
spective fraternity functions.
Any fraternity agent guilty
of violating the state or local
laws with respect to the public
consumption and display of al
cohol will be subject to IFC
Court disciplinary action which
shall include a fine of at least
$10.
A fraternity which fails ,to
clean its grounds by 9 a.m.
on the morning following a
fraternity function will be sub
ject to an automatic fine of
$25 to be imposed by the IFC
Court.
Any fraternity in violation of
Chapel Hill Noise Ordiances
will be subject to trial by the
IFC Court. (This includes the
loud playing of music between
11 p.m. and 7 a.m.)
The IFC and its court recog
nize their responsibility in en
forcing this agreement. Repre
sentatives of the IFC will be
assigned to be responsible for
each fraternity on Friday and
Saturday nights and for morn
ing clean-ups. Specific IFC rep
resentatives will inspect the
public areas at each house
prior to closing hours.
Violations of the rules and
regulations under the visiting
agreement will be subject to
the jurisdiction of the IFC Court
or of the Men's Honor Council.
Lindsay told the Council that
he would notify them if the
new agreement was not signed
today.
Harold Cooley
Will Address
YDC Gathering
Rep. Harold Cooley of the
new Fourth District will speak
at 8:30 p.m. today in Roland
Parker Lounge.
Cooley's address will be a
part of the winter rally of the
North Carolina College Feder
ation of Young Democratic
Clubs which begins here at
4:30 p.m. today with registra
tion in GM. Over 100 students
from colleges across the state
are expected to attend the ral
ly. he rally which is the first
one to be conducted here since
the federation was established
in 1961, is being co-sponsored
by the Carolina YDC and the
Orange County YDC.
Cooley's address tonight will
be his first in Orange County
since the country became a
part of the Fourth District
which Cooley represents.
His address is opened to the
public and a reception will
follow in GM. After the recep
tion there will be a combo par
ty featuring the Seductives in
Graham Residence Hall social
room.
Tom Finan, attorney gener
al of Maryland, will address
the conference at 12:30 p.m.
Saturday at The Pines.
GLEN MAYS
IS'SA Candidates
NSA candidates in Tues
day's election may run a state
ment or a letter of endorse
ment in the DTH. Statements
are not to excede 200 words
ard letters of endorsement
must not have over It signa
tures. All statements are due at the
DTH office by 4 p.m. Saturday.