UaC Library Sarials D$pt. Box 870 Cbnnl HI II, ?T. C. Smith's Catch See page 5 of today's DTH for the complete story on Coach Dean Smith's latest hardwofrd catch prep bas ketballer Charlie Scott. '67 Qass Committees Final day for interviews for next year's Senior Class Com mittees. Interested rising sen iors come by Roland Parker I. 3-5 p.m.. for a brief inter view. Committees include pub licity, finance, and social ac tivities. Volume 74. Number 153 r HA PEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, MAY 5. 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 Morrison No. 1 On Campus By LYTT STAMPS Parker was the Most Im- UTII Staff Writer proved .Residence Hall, and The long - standing battle Morehead College was the between Big Mo and Maver- Most Improved Residence Col ick House was settled for this lege. Craige ran first runner year last night at the annual up in the Residence Hall di award.s program of the MRC vision and Scott College in the as Morrison was named the Residence College division. Outstanding Residence Col- Parker President Bob Far lege for 1965-66. ris was named Outstanding In addition, "Mighty Mo," Residence Hall President, the Morrison College newspa- Scott College's Bob Hunter re per, received the Outstanding ceived the award for Outstand Newspaper Award. In present- ing Residence College Cover ing the award, retiring MRC nor. president Sonny Pepper said, Pepper cited three areas of "The only problem with the accomplishment in this year's paper is that it was not pub- MRC work. First, he pointed lished I often enough." He add- out the Women's Visiting ed. The Mighty Mo present- ed more than rehashed Play boy jokes." The Most Outstanding Resi dence Hall was Mangum, cit ed in particular for its high percentage of intramural par ticipation. A new award given this year was the Roger A. Davis Me morial Award for Outstanding Service. A permanent plaque for this award will be placed in the lobby of Craige Resi dence College, where Davis was a resident until his death last fall. Pepper received this award as well as the President's Plaque, which is traditionally given to the outgoing MRC president. The awards were presented to Pepper for his work in helping to establish the residence college system on a firm basis. The Craige Heart Fund Walk was named the Out standing Service Project. Sophomore Injured By- Fly Glass 'inn C7 A 20-year-old sophomore was hit in the eye by shattering glass during Jubilee Weekend, it was learned Wednesday. Hubert Parrott, of Kinston, N. C, said he heard bottles being broken outside the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity house, where he lives, and uent to the third floor bath room window to look out. When he did, a bottle few through the window, shattered as it hit a foot-and-a-half from his face and sent splinters fly ing into his eye. Parrot went to the infirmary where the splinters were re moved. Wendesday. he said he was seeing alright. Dean Long said that disci plinary action may follow an investigation. No one has been accused so far. Jeff's' ? - . iiA J A ' STUDENTS BROWZE through the offerings at Jeff's. Best sell er is Playboy, which goes at the rate of 1,600 every month and the customers buy it "inside" unseen. DTH Photo By Jerry Lambert Na med stone for residence halls. Second, Pepper mentioned the increase in residence hall student fees to add financial support to residence halls and colleges. Finally, he said that this year's MRC had laid the groundwork for a complete residence hall system. GOP Views Wallace Win As Expected WASHINGTON (AP) Ala bama Republicans took the view today that temporary emotional factors propelled Mrs. Lurleen Wallace to her sweeping victory in the state Democratic primary and that their party's chances of win ling the Governorship are aright. "I think there will be a dif ferent story in the fall, Rep. James H. Buchanan of Bir mingham said in an interview. Bucchanan is one of five Re publicans elected to Congress from Alabama last year. Mrs. Wallace, who made it clear Gov. George C. Wallace will continue to run things if she is elected, outdistanced nine male opponents and cap tured a majority vote for the Democratic nomination for governor in Tuesday's pri mary. Rummer-up but still far be hind was State Atty. Gen. Rich mond Flowers who had openly bid for the Negro vote and re ceived strong support in Ne gro voting precincts. It was the first major voting in the South since enactment of the 1965 Voting Rights Law, and Negroes made their strength felt in many local of fices. A Negro was nomi nated for the legislature and three Negroes ran ahead in races for sheriff. Pushes Playboys Monthly 1 r n nif rr- i - J j ( 'ftf V( n V A FEW TENSE MOMENTS and it was all over and not so bad afterall. These girls have just finished their interviews in bidding for model positions for Mademoiselle Maga 130 'Model' Coeds Vie For Mademoiselle Pix By CAROL GALLANT DTH Staff Writer There it was, right on the front page of The Daily Tar Heel "Models needed for Mademoiselle Magazine, THE magazine for fashion - consci ous coeds." The announce ment did not go unnoticed by Carolina coeds and 130 of them signed up for a Wednesday afternoon interview. By virtue of the fact that I'm a reporter and somewhat in cidentally a girl, I ventured over to Gerrard Hall, note book in hand, to see how the interviews were going. Say what you will about the Carolina coed, Carolina Gen tleman. They looked fashion able, and Nonnie Moore, sportswear editor of Mademoi selle was most complimentary about the girls who had come for interviews. She and pho tographer George Barkentin said they had found the girls "most attractive and nice." Unfortunately, only four or five will be selected for the August "Back To College" is sue of .Mademoiselle, not ten as was originally announced. Zackie Murphy, a member of the Mademoiselle College Board and a model for the magazine herself greeted the By JOHN GREENBACKER "Jeff's Campus Confection ery" the painted gold sign on the front window proclaims. The real spice inside, how ever, is not the candy which Ues neatly wrapped in rows on the counter. "I sell 1,600 Playboys eve ry month," proprietor James A. "Jimmy" Mousmoules said in a matter - of - fact tone of voice early one spring morn ing. Mousmoules, a thick - set middle - aged man with burly arms, has been running the newsstand - soda shop for 17 years since his uncle died. "This place sells more mag azines than any newsstand in this part of the country," he said with more emphasis. "I don't even know how many kinds of magazines I sell." Taking up a third of the wall next to the front door is a magazine rack that must hold about 40 different publi cations. On rotating racks nearby are at least 50 differ ent types of salacious paper back novels. "We have young college boys for customers," Mous moules said. "If they don't go here they'd go to Durham to buy it." He said he hasn't had ny trouble with little old ladies with umbrellas. "Hell," he exclaimed, "they buy books here, too." Mousmoules doesn't know which magazines will be put in stock and which will be taken out. It's the job of the distributer to keep the racks filled with everything from Popular Mechanics to Pain Lusters. "Playboy is the only maga- girls at the door girls with carefully made up faces and nervous smiles. They were handed little pink cards to fill out with necessary informa tion. No, not that necessary in formation, just name, height, dress size, weight, hair color and class. The interview consisted of the girls walking up to the ta ble Nonnie Moore and Barken tin were seated at. handing them the pink card, the en tire groups exchanging smiles, and the Mademoiselle repre sentatives nodding and say ing "thank you very much." After this extensive interro gation, the girls could leave. Some were asked to return at 6:30 p.m. to try on the clothes, Correspondence Courses Offer Students Credit By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer This summer any Carolina student can complete one or two correspondence courses for credit from a selection of over 100 courses that are of fered through the Bureau of zine the students will without looking at it, buy he said. Every afternoon students file into the store and thumb through the magazines, trying desperately not to be recog nized by their fellows. "The same guys that come here and look at the maga zines in the afternoon are the same guys who come back at night and buy three or four dollars' worth," Mousmoules said. From the rack the assorted covers competed with garish colors to attract the browser's attention. Tht titles catered to any in terest: Escape; Adam; Pix; The National Informer; Man To Man; Sexology; Realities; Muscular Development; Har pers; The Atlantic; Track and Road; Rogue; The New Yor ker. "We run an over-the-counter business here," Mousmoules hastily clarified. Jeffs has been in business since 1927 at the same loca tion. It was originally owned by Mousmoules' uncle and fa ther. "We've been selling beer longer than anyone in North Carolina," he said. Photos of famous UNC ath letes, yellow with age, cover the walls at the back of the building above the stall seats and tables. Mousmoules said all the ath letes come to Jeffs when they return to Chapel Hill. "This is the only place they know," he said. Mousmoules was born in Virgina, grew up in New York and came to Chapel Hill to run his business. zine. Of the 130 who were interviewed yes terday, only four or five will be selected. DTH Photos By Jerry Lambert "really wild" as Zackie put it. Barkentin said it was large ly a matter of finding the girls to fit the clothes. The girls selected will ap pear in the August issue ten page spread on Carolina. The other school selected to be fea tured was "William and Mary.'' This particular issue is actually edited by 20 col lege girls selected as editors. .As a final flourish I decid ed to get comments from some of the observers in Y-Court who had been there "Oh, a couple of hours." One boy, leaning back heavily, folding his arms and gazing medita tively into the sky said . . . "Oh, if only that were the door to my apartment." Correspondence Instruction. Each course consists of about 24 assignments which must be mailed in no more than four a week and a final exam which must be taken under the supervision of an administra tive official. A student should generally allow three hours a day to fin ish one course in six weeks, which is the minimum amount of time in which a course may be taken. A student may take up to 13 months to complete a course, but cannot take the course while he is enrolled in classes here at the University unless he receives the written con sent of the dean of his school. Miss Mary Elizabeth Henry, head of the Bureau of Cor respondence Instruction, said, "I advise students who will be working this summer and would like to take a corres pondence course to begin by taking only one course and de cide later if they will have time to complete another one before classes begin in the fall." Miss Henry recommends that students who need to earn quality points should enroll in the courses in which they have made the best grades. "It calls for a student's own self-dicipline to get through the correspondence course, Miss Henry said. Fees for the courses are pay able when the student enrolls and usually runs about $35 for a three-hour course. These fees cover the cost of the prepara tion and grading of the course assignments by members of the faculty. The required texts listed with each course should be brought through the Bureau which keeps the edition of the text on which the course is based. The final exam may be tak en when the student returns here in the fall. Exams are scheduled by the Bureau ev ery Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. Information and catalogues on correspondence instruction may be obtained in Abernathy Hall. Trustees To Name Chancellor Monday By ALAN BANOV DTH Staff Writer Consolidated University Pres ident William C. Friday an nounced yesterday that he has called a special meeting of the UNC Board of Trustees for Monday morning to select a chancellor for the Universi ty. The meeting will be at 11 a.m. in the House Chamber in the State Capitol in Raleigh. Kenan Endowment Complete In 1972 By RON SHINN DTH News Editor The last of the 25 William R. Kenan, Jr. Professorships es tablished Monday at a cost, of $5 million will not be set up until 1972. "We just won't have all the money until then," said Charles M. Shaffer, director of University development. A check for $1 million was presented to jGov. Dan K. Moore here Monday by the William R. Kenan, Jr. Chari table Trust of New York. Ad ditional checks for $1 million will be presented each Janu ary until 1970 when the $5 mil lion pledge is filled. "The principal cannot be touched under the terms of the endowment," Shaffer said, "so we will invest the money and use the interest. "Since we have only one fifth of the endowment at the present time and cannot touch the money, we will have to wait until next spring to see the results." The million dollars, invest ed for the University by the Wachovia Bank and Trust Company of Winston-Salem, will return approximately $40, 000 by next May. The first William R. Kenan, Jr. Professorship will be awarded then. About $8,000 will be added to the yearly base salary provided by the State of $12,000 to $15,000 for each professorship. A. R. MacMannis said Mon day when making the pres entation that the responsibility of selection is being left up to the University, but asked that arrangements be made to insure that the professors se lected "work as close to the students as possible ... as professor Francis Veneble did with William Kenan." The nominations will proba bly be handled the same as the present Kenan professor ships. A committee appointed by the Chancellor presents the nominees to the chancellor's advisory committee, who in turn screen the applicants. Fast Protest Continues Into 4th Day Some six or seven students continued to fast yesterday on the third day of their Student Peace Union-sponsored five -day fast in protest to U. S. involvement in Viet Nam. Wednesday afternoon SPU Chairman Chuck Schunior ad dressed a group of about 80 students on "Saigon and Sel ma in an open-air seminar in Polk Place. Students continued to gather to discuss and de bate the war for some time after the speech. Schunior asserted that the war in Viet Nam "grotesquely distorts our own national priorities, causing beneficial social legislation to be subor dinated to the politics of war making. Seminars were scheduled last night in Ehringhaus and Craige to discuss the fast and the war. One of the f asters, who are drinking only orange juice and water until 6 p.m. Friday, said he felt "lousy physically, but morally and spiritually I feel reinforced in my own personal convictions. "I really enjoy talking with people who have opposite, hostile views. When 1 feel I get a point across I feel satis fied, and when someone teach es me something I didn't know, I consider it a learning exper- ience. It is open to the public. Formal notices were sent to the trustees Wednesday morn ing by Miss Billie Curtis, as sistant secretary of the Board of Trustees. Friday had con ferred with Gov. Dan Moore, chairman of the Board of Trustees, and the two called the meeting jointly. At the meeting Friday will nominate for chancellor one of the three names submitted The final decision is up to the chancellor. The new professorships will go primarily to new profes sors here and not administra tors. 'The trustees of the es tate specified this," said Shaffer. The William K. Kenan Jr. Charitable Trust was founded in conformance with Kenan's will. His total estate, estimat ed to have a value in excess of $100 million, places the Kenan Charitable Trust among .the foremost of educational foun dations of the nation. UNC was the first recipient of an educational grant from the estate. The professorships represent the third and largest bequest memorializing members of the Kenan family. Kenan's sis tr, Mary Lily Kenan Flagler Bingham, established the first Kenan Professorships in 1917 as a memorial to her father and her two uncles, all gradu ates of the University. There have been a total of 68 Kenan Professors in the University here since that fund was es tablished. Two additional professor ships were established in 1964 through the Sarah Graham Kenan Foundation; the Gra ham Kenan Professor of Law and the Sarah Graham Kenan professor of Medicine. Fraternity Pledges Paint Red Cross Headquarters Fraternity pledges 99 of them painted the Red Cross building in Carrboro Wednes day as part of the IFC's pro gram of community service. "They painted the whole building and did the trimming too," said project chairman Drummond Bell, a St. A. Asked why, Bell said that "the main thing was that the Rpd Cross needed someone to do it and we thought we could tit rnrrc c T t n j in an IFC project held yesterday. Each fraternity was asked j to contribute 10 of its youngest painters to give a new face i to the building. DTH Photo By Jerry Lambert to him by the Advisory Com mittee on the Chancellorship, chaired bv Kenan Professor of English William Wells. A simple majority vote of a quorum of board members is required for an approval of Friday's selection. The chancellors of the four branches of the University, in cluding Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson, were invit ed to attend the meeting, ac cording to custom. Their attendance is not com pulsory, but Sitterson, a prob able nominee for chancellor, is expected to attend, accord ing to his secretary. Sitterson said he had not received a special invitation. He is con sidered the most likely nomi nee. Otis Singletary, chancellor of UNC-Greensboro, could not be reached for comment, and his secretary said he would not be in Greensboro on Monday morning. She said she did not know whether he would at tend the trustee meeting. Wells said that he and all members of the Advisory Com mittee on the Chancellorship were invited to the meeting. The chancellor approved by the Board of Trustees will take office immediately. Sitterson has served as act ing chancellor since Paul F. Sharp left the chancellorship on Feb. 15 to become presi dent of Drake University. He received his A.B. degree from UNC in 1931, his mas ter's here in 1932 and Ph.D. from the University in 1937. Sitterson taught at the Uni versity from 1935 until becom ing a teacher at Georgia Mil itary Academy. He returned here in 1946 as a professor of history and became dean of the College of Arts and Sci ences in 1955. He also served as dean of the General College and was named a Kenan Professor of History in 1961. He was a vice chancellor here from July, 1965, until Feb. 15, 1966. do it and it wouldn't cost them anything but the paint which they already had." Brushes and pledges were supplied by the houses, Bell said, and ladders by Chapel Hill merchants. Bell said he thought the community service projects such as the Greek Week clean-up day and the Red Cross painting would continue next year.

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