Box 870 Chaoel Hill, N.C. i Combo Party fo?htLS rtDS Seven play will be from 8 to 12 p.m. Organization Heads Those people or organiza tions wishing to contract for a page in the 1957 YACKETY YACK should come down to the Yack office through Fri day between the hoars of 12 noon and 3 p.m. 17x1 so) I I I 1 I f I I in umber 19 Draft Test Offered Here In November By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer The Selective Service Col lege Qualification Test given last year for use by draft boards will be given again November 18 and 19. Anyone who has not previ ously taken the test and would like to can pick up an appli cation and information at the Selective Service desk in the basement of Hanes HalL The application must be completed and postmarked no later than October 21. Stu dents are advised to pick up the material immediately. The purpose of the test is to provide evidence for the use of local boards in considering deferment of a registrant from military service as a student. The scores achieved on the test are sent immediately to the local draft boards as soon as they are processed by the testing service at Princeton, N. J. Raymond E. Strong, direct or of the office of records, said that the test cannot hurt any student, but can definitely help if the student is in the lower part of his class. "I especially advise fresh men and seniors to take the test," Strong said. Freshmen who do not rank in the upper half of their class and chose not to take the test will be available to be reclas sified for military service un der the current policy of the Selective Service System. Any seniors who hope to go on to graduate school next year would also be liable for the draft if they do not pass the test or do not rank in the up per fourth of their graduating class. Strong said, "Some of last year's graduates who did not take the test are now being drafted out of graduate school and law school because they were not in the top fourth of their class." Strong urged anyone who has any doubt of their class rank ing to take the test as a pre cautionary measure. "Most of our students who take the test score 70 or high er," Strong said. A score of 70 makes a student immune to the draft. A score of 80 or more is required for the students en tering graduate school next year. The UNC Chess Club will meet from 7-11 p.m. in Roland Parker III. The club is open to both graduates and under graduates of all playing ability. This is the last meet ing in which to enter the club tournament. Old East Rites Robert Mangan, Deputy Un der Secretary of the U. S. De partment of the Interior, will dedicate the Old East Building as a national shrine in cere monies Wednesday, Oct. 12, in ' Memorial Hall at 11 a.m. Man gan was once a graduate stu dent and teacher at UNC. The dedication of Old East will be a part of the Univer sity Day activities in Chapel Hill. On the same program, Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson will be installed in office. Pre sident Friday will preside. Gov. Dan K. Moore will take part. The principal address is by Chancellor Sitterson. Other speakers will be Deputy Sec retary Mangan of the Interior Department in Washing ton, Governor Moore, Presi dent Grier Martin of Davidson College, Chairman of the UNC Faculty C. P. Spruill and Pres ident of the Student Body Bob Powell of Thorn as ville. The Interior Department an nounced the selection of Old East as a national shrine last year. October 12th is the tra ditional birthday of the Uni versity, commemorating the cornerstone laying of Old East building at 11 a.m. Oct. 12, 1793. Old East is the oldest state university building in the nation. The two highlight occas ions of the day are the 11 am. ceremonies of installation which is combined with the na tional shrine dedication, and an evening reception at 8 p.m. in Woollen Gymnasium, to Set '4 - .x . . - - -r- ' ' i ,t ' 1 - - f ' I ' N : - ' I!) x J ' "" " .' - ' ' f tj r ' ( r y J K. , . ' ; . . I I i ' " v J 1 U: -St. -hf 'E 'I 7 .. UJ ' A r - yl . 7 TIIEY SING songs about places they'd rather torhim Saturday, Oct. 22, dsrlsg Csaecciafctg. be and about waking up on Monday mornings Tickets for the concert go on sale Thursday without anybody to love. They are The Mamas at the GM information desk, along with tick- and The Papas. And they'll be singing these ets for the Bob Hope show Oct. 27. songs and many others in Carmichael Audi- Inez Still Out Rampage Hits Florida Coastline MIAMI, Fla. (AP)-Hurri-cane Inez, the end of her mur derous rampage nowhere in sight, slashed and clawed through the Florida Keys Tu esday and then burst into the Gulf of Mexico and new tar gets for her wild winds. 'Churning backwards from the heart of the Bahamas, the vicious, unpredictable storm whip-lashed 6i 5,0 0 0 square miles of sea and shore with screaming winds and slashing rain. Along southeast Florida's gold coast from Fort Lauder dale to Miami, power trans formers blew in showers of green sparks, palm trees bent and snapped and foaming surf cut streets and highways in two. A teenjager wading in the thundering surf in Fort Laud erdale, Charles Taylor, 17, was knocked down by a huge wave and disappeared. Police said they feared he drowned, Historic Oct. 12 Robert Mangan which faculty, students, towns people and the general public are invited. Robert Mangan's title is Deputy Under Secretary of the Interior for public land man agement. He was appointed in 1965 by Interior Secretary Ste wart L. Udall. He is a veter an of 28 years of service with the federal government. Manyan is a native of Bing hamton, N.Y., is a 1939 gra duate magna cum laude of the University of Wisconsin where he majored in political science and economics. He was a graduate student at the University of North Ca rolina in Chapel Hill in 1940 41 and was at the same time a research assistant, seminar member and teaching fellow. He received . the law degree from Georgetown University. - f uw J a, J A, . 1.. f . .. . fc. . but the body was not found immediately. Two elderly Miami Beach residents Isaac Buzy; 84, and Miriam Radin, 74 collapsed and died of apparent heart at tacks while trying to rig shut ters at their homes. Seventy-mile-an-hour winds and mountainous waves bea ched the 82-foot coast guard cutter Point Thatcher on a jet ty just off the usually-glistening resort row of Miami Beach. Then in a heroic act that ad versity often promps, 50 to 75 men, women and children wad ed into the towering surf and formed a human chain to help the stranded coast guardmen reach the safety of shore. On one side of the wavering line lay the jetty's huge jag ged chunks of concrete, and on the other side lay the open water whipped to a fury by one of nature's most powerful forces, a hurricane. "It was the most dramatic thing I've ever seen," said newsman Les Smith of radio station WOID. "Men, women and children going into this raging sea to form a human chain." With top winds hitting a 90 mile clip at Key Largo,, the start of the 100-mile-long neck lace of Keys that leads from Florida to just off Cuba's co ast, Inez was only a shadow of the storm that killed possib ly hundreds in the Caribbean. Outside of widespread power failures 30 per cent in Miami and the nuisance of shred ded shrubbery and uprooted trees, there was little substan tial damage. No cases of st ructural damage were report ed. In the low-lying keys, which can. stand the winds but get plastered by the water, Inez hit at low tide. The main art ery, U.S. 1, was cut by driving surf and rolling debris at sev-r eral points. But flooding was minor. The disaster coordinator for the Florida insurance depart ment, Bruce Caswell, made a quick survey behind Inez as she rumbled south and an nounced that the storm was doing little damage to property in Florida. The main reason, the weath er bureau said, is that Inez is no longer a major hurricane. Late in the afternoon, Inez veered more westerly and cut across the Keys about midway down.. The move cut down the dan ger to Cuba, which has already taken a 48-hour beating from the storm and had begun an emergency evacuation of the northern coast as Inez headed back for another shot. But ahead of Inez lay the warm waters of the Gulf of Mexico and a bountiful supply of warm moisture to keep her CHAPEL HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1966 1' - k. .v. 9 going and: perhaps restore her old fury. And Inez was on a path tak en -by the most destructive, hurricane of all time, Betsy, who plowed into the Bahamas last September, then turned around and barrelled through the Florida Keys before regen erating over the gulf and bat tering New Orleans. The Weather Bureau said Inez would leave Florida at its southernmost city, Key West, ' and throw hurricane winds against the Cuban co ast going into the gulf. After that, the next target was any body's guess. Numerous persons, cut by flying glass or injured while trying to batten down storm shutters, were treated at Mia mi hospital. The excitement of the hurricane, inducing la bor in pregnant women, took a parade of them into hospit als. Inez put on a spectacular show in Miami but little dam age was expected. A tough building code requires struc tures that will stand up to 125-mile-an-hour winds. Most damage along the coa st was expected from water. Tides running four to six feet above normal crumbled some seawalls, hurled froth hund reds of feet into the air, block ed roads and piled sand dunes along ocean front hotels. CPU, SP Back Speaker Ban Suit Plaintiffs The Carolina Political Un ion and the Student Party each went on record Sunday in support of the plaintiffs of the Speaker Ban Court case. Both resolutions were very similar to the one passed Thursday night by Student Legislature, saying, "This body supports. . .the plain tiffs in Dickson, et. al. vs. Sitterson et. al. (C-59-G-66) in seeking judicial relief from any past, present, or future attempts of the State, or any of its subsidiary agencies, to prevent students from con ducting a truly open forum for speakers and ideas." The SP gave unanimous consent to its resolution, while .the CPU vote was 21 for, two against with several members absent. The SP resolution, intro duced by M y 1 e s Eastwood, was considered under sus pended rules so that it might be passed before Wednesday, the court-set deadline for the submission of evidence. SXT LtZ"l DTH Staff Writer : The more liberal policy of this year's visiting agreement for residence halls provides for a more social atmosphere. According to MRC President Lew Brown, the agreement has extended the hours wom en can visit in residence hall social rooms because the re sidence halls are so well -developed. The agreement includes a list of the special social rooms and snack bars that women can visit during the week from 12 noon until their closing hours and the places they can visit on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. The section of the agreement devoted to "special planned and approved visiting" lists a smaller number of places in 4.1 1 . 1 m , . me residence nails mat are open to women for scheduled social events from 12 noon un til their closing hours. The agreement is divided in to two parts to provide for handling the two types of oc casions when the women visit in the residence halls. The "open visiting" rules are used mainly for girls who drop by to see a boy or who are wait- ing for him to change clothes. Assistant Dean of Men Fred Schroeder said that the regu lations of the visiting agree ment had not actually been changed very much from last year, but they had been sim plified for easier understand ing. The agreement was drawn up by Schroeder, the president of-the MRC Lew Brown and the President of the -WRC Su san Gretz. - . One of the most important regulations of the agreement is the rquirement that any house or college register in . advance any organized activi ty for when house or college funds are spent or to which the entire membership is invited, Committee Pre-Christr Subcommittee chairman for the Academic Affairs Com mittee were announced yes terday by Mike Menius, chair man of AAC . In addition, Menius outlined the goals his committee will pursue this year. Menius will work on an in vestigation of the advisor sys tem in an effort to promote more personalized attention for students. One suggestion that is being considered is the development of a clerical staff to handle more of the advisors' paper work thus freeing them to spent more time with their advisees. Elder Witt will conduct a study on ways to reorganize the academic calendar to have exams before the Christ mas holidays. The committee will survey student opinion on all campuses of the Consoli dated University in develop ing its proposal. An investigation of possible modifications of the grading system will be conducted by Rom Carver. This study will Weather It Will Rain Or Not - ? Temperatures Thursday through Monday will aver age two to seven degrees below normal. Some high and low temperatures are Asheville 71 and 46, Char lotte and Raleigh 75 and 52, Columbia 80 and 56 and Charleston 80 and 58. Mostly cool nights and mild days through next Monday. Precipitation will total less than one-third inch as occasional rain coastal sections about early part of next week. Otherwise little if any rainfall is expected through Monday. Nuclear-Type Based In 'Viet WASHINGTON (AP) The United States has two nuclear capable ground weapons ' in South Viet Nam, but no atom ic warheads have been sent to that country, military officials said Tuesday. They ruled out the likelihood of any tactical nuclear wea pons being used in the cur rent military situation. They said the grave political indi cations would far outwegh mil tary gains. In the jungle war of South east Asia, they added, it is difficult to envision targets suitable for nuclear hits. But if by some unforeseen circumstance the United States felt desperate enough to draw upon its nuclear arsen- al, they said, atomic warheads could be fired from 155 MM and 8 - inch howitzers now in operation against the Com munists. The warheads are not in Viet Nam but they could be in the army's hands in short time, officers said in inter views. The same applies for air and naval forces. The question of whether nu clear arms should be used in Viet Nam rose again this week with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's statement that he would take "any ac tion" and "would not auto matically exclude anything" in efforts to end the war quickly and honorably. The Pentagon position is that no military requirement exists which would call for use of nuclear arms under pre sent circumstances in North or South Viet Nam. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara told a house ap propriations subcommittee last spring he didn't want to state categorically such weapons would never be employed in the Viet.Nams "but I cannot conceive of a situation which would require their use in ei ther of those countriees." The administration fears that such a radical turn of the military effort might draw Red China or Russia into the war. PROPAGANDA PUSH At the very least, military officers say, the use of tacti- Studies nas Exams include a survey of curricu lum reform ideas, a critical look at the present grading system, and consideration of pass-fail and seven point ! grade' scales. Warren Schonfeld will work on improvements in the com puterized class evaluation ser vice provided by the com mittee. Past experience has shown a need to clarify the questions so the student re plies can be better interpre tated by the instructors. With over 900 classes cov ered by the service last year, the committee anticipates an even greater response with the improved questionnaire. S, ' : ..itA - . r 1 j ;,'- Y'eT-:, - ... - .a i ' .:' " - ? - -s- - . "B.r. -- ' ' l: I I I . ; )' " - ----. 1 - - J - - "f VJlJt I M r - i: ' ' - - I .r-r- - i f JLr ' (ill 1 ' I V ) : 7 1 . , ve 4v : - - "' " .! 7 , 07 - i I 7 -' .. .. - - IN THE ROUND Modern Theatre came to Chase Cafeteria this past weekend when Mi chael Hardy and Kritine Hoover performed a scene from "The Lark" for the Joint UNC Duke Faculty Club meeting. UNC's Chancel cal nuclear weapons would bring on a massive commun ist propaganda campaign against the United States. Officers hasten to point out that the decision rests not with the military but with the president. For that reason they are extremely hesitant even to discuss the possibility of nuclar war in Viet Nam. "I would be dubious about the use of atomic weapons in South Viet Nam in any fash ion," one officer said. Their devastation, he explained, would quite likely claim civil- lans among whom the Viet Cong operate. You don't succeed in your effort to win the hearts and minds of men by blowing a few of them up," he said. If pressed, Pentagon officers speculate that atomic explos ions might be used to seal off with massive eruptions of earth certain infiltration routes such as the Mu Gia pass along the North Viet Nam-Laos bor der. B52 bombers have flown a numer of missions and have dropped thousands of iron bombs m attempts to close down the Mu Gia pass, but the North Vietnamese manage to get through. Officers said consideration might possibly be given to the use of a tactical atomic strike if at some point Communist Dot Silver Leads In Open ing Play In most musical comedies the": dancing is usually a "di vertissement," an irrelevancy that is very pleasant, but sel dom has anything basically to do with the plot of the story. This is not the case in the Carolina Playmakers' upcom ing production of "Finian's Rainbow," the Broadway mus ical hit which opens Oct. 14 in Memorial Hall. Dorothy Sil ver, as Susan the Silent, dan ces most of her role because the barefoot girl she portrays is mute. 'She doesn't do talk - talk', she does 'foot - talk'," as one character in the show puts it, but her "dialogue" is as cru cial to the plot as any of the characters who speak conven tionally. Only at the end of the show, as the result of the magic of a leprechaun's pot of gold, does she acquire the power of natural speech. Mrs. Silver has danced in the Playmakers' productions of "Oklahoma!" "Under Milkwood," "Little Mary Sun shine," "Carousel," and 'South expression through the medi Pacific." urn of dance, for pantomi- Professionally, she has per- mic capacity, understanding, formed in concert on Broad- and imagination. If you watch way and on tour with Martha her feet, Dorothy Silver as Su- Graham, Nina Fonaroff, Jean san the Silent will "talk" your Houlouse, and Sophie Maslow. head off. She has also been solist with Tickets for "Finian's Rain- Merce (Cunningham and Pearl bow" are now available at the Lang. Playmakers business office, Susan the Silent is no role 214 Abernethy Hall, and at for the ordinary dancer, but a Ledbetter - Pickard in down dream role that faH for true town Chapel HilL Founded February 23, 1893 Force Nam troops massed in great num bers above the demilitarized zone. Officers stressed, however, they could foresee no nuclear usage unless war was declar ed. The eight - inch howitzer can hurl a warhead packing a charge equivalent to several hundred tons of TNT for eight miles and th 155 MM can fire one with a 50 to 100 - ton TNT equivalent about the same distance. But the massive troop con- centrations or big armored at- tacks the targets these nu clear - capable cannons would warrant are lacking in Viet Nam. THE NUKES Short of obliterating Hanoi and Haiphong, which officers say the United States would not do for humanitarian rea sons, there appears no justi fication for turning to what military officers call "the nukes." The United States, they point out, still has some convention al options which could be ex- ffcisea agamst wortn v 1 e 1 mm - , mwmt These include iron bomb strikes to knock out complete ly the port of Haiphong or to level dams to flood wide sec tions of the country. Dorothy Silver - Mf ' 'f r;f; W1s7 !: J 7 lor Sitterson, Duke's President Knight and some 530 faculty members watched the two playmakers portray Joan of Arc's triumph over her own despair in the English prison. ( DTH Photo by Jock Lanetrer)