Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 20, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
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Library IT1 m? teelf aifilg? mSta'S1 aultery is still Sited h- e DTH finally con- Fullhuj!8 &Tnd Cousin- Mis she 0 indiated that if vo Titten out of her wffl. Dlea ,TC any formation, Please call 933-1163 before 6 i Careers for Carolina Students who wish to sign up for Careers for Carolina may do so by calling GM in formation at S33-22S5 or com ing by the desk. Volume 74, Num W CHAPEL HILL, N. C.t THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20, 1966 Founded February 23, 1893 Ousting Causes Concern Homecoming Queen Candidates tractor Removal. kzz HiiimiiMi y mutt 0 WHWi ' , F " -rr M mnm mm mm wmam I ..... Jim I, imv. flpt, - tr Ins I :t ') or- " .W: - o ) J'J I i Susan Alexander By Pi Beta Phi Peach Pearce By Chi Psi V f"J "If School Closes In After Nightime Disorders OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) Rioting Negro youths assault ed five- teachers and - forced closure of a high school today in a resumption of last night's disorders in East Oakland. One teacher's nose was bloodied and his eye blackened in the melee at Castlemont High School. The assaults oc curred on the grounds during a gathering of 200 Negroes. School officials decided on the shutdown - shortly after noon. The disorders began last night in East Oakland and sp read downtown after a trffic accident involving a Negro woman's car. Police arrested a young Negro woman passer by after they said she flew in to a rage. Her brother inter vened and was arrested. The disorders grew and spread. Five persons were injured; 19 were arrested; and 47 bus iness firms were damaged. The start today of a three day high school boycott, called by a group protesting the qual ity of education for Negroes, also kept police on the alert. .School officials said a pre liminary spot check indicated absenteeism of about 20 per cent against a normal 10 per cent. A group calling itself the Ad Hoc Committee had urged both students and teachers to stay away to attend four "freedom schools." South Campus Show Tickets Still i o "V - O "" f- The Brenda Ballard By Pi Beta Phi lev Liz Scott By Kappa Alpha The group claimed about 700 students were in the first classes today held in churches and a night club. A call to the night club brought 4 gasp, "oh, I forgot to unlock the doors." District Attorney Frank Coakley issued a warning that any teachers absent from regular classes to take part in such schools might face prosecution on charges of con tributing to the delinquency of minors. The office of the Mademoiselle Coed Career Coeds interested in careers in magazine writing are in vited to meet Mrs. Jacque line Henderson, Mademoi selle's editor of college board competition at an informal open house in Gerrard Hall 10:30-12:30 p.m. Friday. Mrs. Henderson and Ann Jamieson, campus marketing agent at UNC for Mademoi selle, will talk to women about possible careers with Conde Nast publications and advise coeds planning to en ter this fall's Modemoiselle college board competition. Each year 20 young women are selected from college board competition to edit !) x ; 'ibm0 .- :'..f , A I j Remain For Weekend Ojays Emily Cathey By Chi Psi ' V1 ; Carol Smith By Morehead Residence - College Oakland superintendent of schools had no word on any teacher, ab sentees; Across the bay in San Fran cisco, off duty firemen, to gether with some representa tives of the teamsters and bar tenders unions, staged a rally today at city hall stemming from Negro rioting last month in that city's Hunters Point area. The rally was to protest treatment of policemen and firemen To Sponsor Talks Friday Mademoiselle's fall fashion is sue. Entrants are judged on talent in writing, editing, art, photography, research layout, fashion display, promotion, merchandising or advertising. Any work by contestants printed in the magazine is bought at regular rates, and runners-up are considered for permanent jobs with Conde Nast. According to Miss Jamieson, any undergraduate woman working toward a degree who will not graduate before April 1967 is eligible. She said oth er contest details wUl be avail able at the open house Fri day. Plenty of tickets still re main for South Campus Week end which is sponsoring the three big-name groups that will appear in Chase Hall Saturday night. The groups, including Mau rice and the Zodiacs, Dr. Feelgood and the Interns, and the O.J.'s will be appearing from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. The special entertainment is being sponsored by the South Campus residence halls, Mor rison, Craige, Scott and Eh ringhaus. The cost of the entire eve ning of entertainment is $2 for residents of the sponsor ing colleges and $2.50 to all other students. Tickets at the door will be $3 per couple. The three groups are all be ing scheduled so that they will appear after the Mama's and Papa's have finished their concert in Carmichael. Tickets are being sold in Y Court and Chase Cafeteria. They will also be sold Satur day morning in the lobby of Craige. Annette Fairless By Spencer Dam 4 . fit Anita Wilkinson By Alpha Tau Omega Campus i Teacher Placement The School of Education Tea cher Placement Service has announced the following list of school systems that plan to interview for public school tea chers in the near future: Oct. 20 Charlotte - Meck lenburg Schools, 1-4:30 p.m. Oct. 24 Carteret County Schools, Beaufort - Morehead City Atlantic Beach area, 1-4:30 p.m. Oct. 25 Raleigh City Schools, 1-4:30 p.m. Oct. 26 Fulton County Schools, Atlanta Ga., 8:30 -4:30. Oct. 27 and 25 Chapel Hill City Schools, 1-4:30. Nov. 1 Goldsboro City Schools, 1-4:30 Nov. 3 Chatham County Schools, Pittsboro, 1-4:30 Prospective teachers who will be available for employ ment in January especially are invited to sign up now in Room 103, Peabody Hall, Teacher Placement Bureau. Angel Flight Rushes The UNC Angel Flight's fall rush will begin today. A tea will be held for all interested coeds in the AFROTC Cadet Lounge in Caldwell Annex from 7-8 cm. The Angel Flight is a nation al organization of coeds who serve as hostesses to the AFROTC cadets and is spon sored by the Arnold Air ' So ciety, an honorary AFROTC organization. The Angel Flight is not a military organization. An alternate tea will be Illegal Cars To Be Towed Camous Seduritv Chief Arthur J. Beaumont said yesterday that the Univer sity will again start towing cars parked illegally on campus. The policy followed will be the same as that last year, and will be imple mented immeditately. Student cars parked in staff areas or staff cars parked illegally will be tow ed to the University com pound at Horace Williams Airport. Owners of towed cars will have to go to the Dean of Men's Office and pay a $10 towing fee. This fee is in addition to the fine for the violation incurred. Beaumont will then make arrangement for the owners to reclaim their cars. "It's tough, but it has to be done," he said. Beth Marshall By Edward's Ecsse cl Mcrrixea f - Jan Wuerhmann By Kappa Delta Briefs given Sunday, Oct. 23, for those who cannot attend today. All coeds are invited. Poetry Forum Meets The fourth meeting of the UNC Poetry Forum will be held today in 103 Bingham. The first three meetings were unqualified successes. The Forum .was so crowded last time that people stood in the halls to hear the poets. Readings at todays meeting will be made by Lucius Shep ard, Dave Southern, Marshall Hay, and Ray Kass. Voter Regisration The Young Democrat's Club is conducting a voter registra tion campaign in Victory Vil lage. All YDC members are urged to attend a meeting at Y-Court today at 3:00 p.m. This meet ing will be to organize the distribution of campaign liter ature for Harold Cooley and to pass out information on where and how people can re gister to vote The YDC will take people to register or baby - sit while they go to register. These ser vices will be provided on Fri day afternoons, October 21 and 28 from 2-4 p.m. and on Sat urday, October 29 from 11 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. Call 929-5374 to arrange for these services. r Jt . .. V v , " i i - 0 . My Best Friend's By BOB HOPE There was a great deal of excitement at the little house next door to the Barretts of Wimpole Street. My best friend was having a baby. Me. I was born in London and both London and my father were very foggy that night. 1 was so foggy I could hardly see the doctor before my face. I looked from one side to the other for a while, not knowing quite what to do. That was the first time I was ever born. They named me Lester Tow nes Hope and at the time I didn't care one way or the other. But when I grew up I began to care and it wasn't one way it was the other. So I changed it. ... . It was just great performing for the U.S. State Department in Moscow. The Muscovites let me creep under the Iron Curtain by the way of the so called "Cultural Exchange". Here's how it works we send over "Porgy and Bess" and they send the Moscow Ballet. I went in exchange for Mike Romanoff and four cans of caviar. . . 11 o By BILL AMLONG . DTH News Editor A meeting to discuss gradu ate instructor Michael Paull's removal from teaching has been called for 8 p.m. tonight in Gerrard Hall. Paull, however, won't be there, he told the DTH Wed nesday. Coeds Given Late Hours On Saturday Coeds have 2 a.m. late per mission for Saturday. The closing hours extension was approv3d Wednesday by the Dean of Women's Office on reccommendation of the Women's Residence Council. In other action at their Tuesday night meeting, the WRC: APPROVED a motion giv ing one vote each to the fresh man and upperclass town women's representatives on the council. CLARIFIED regulations for dormitory guests, saying that seniors' guests will also be allowed senior closing hours including special sign-out late permissions. Seniors are responsible for seeing that their guests are signed in and out properly, the Council said. EXCUSED freshmen coeds from closed study to attend meetings with Peace Corps representatives tonight through next Friday in resi dence halls and sorority houses. Trustee Switch Proposals Given By PETER HARRIS DTH Staff Writer A proposal which would in crease the rotation of the ex ecutive committee of the Board of Trustees will be presented at their meeting Monday morning. The proposal calls for an in crease in the number of mem bers of the executive com mittee from twelve to f i f teen. It also proposes that no member may serve for more than two consecutive terms. The proposal is an attempt to combat the charges that only twelve trustees make the decisions for the entire board. The proposal will be made by Wade Barber, a Pittsboro at torney. Barber said that this would not affect the University other than increase the rotation of the officers. - tw t Hope In Action Steady; Jane The Russian language is very gutteral. . . I cleared my throat in a restaurant one day and the waitress slapped my face. Those Russian bubush kas are really big and strong. . . One morning the maid made up my bed with me in it. Anyhow, I found it very in Of "I don't plan to go to any meeting at all," he said, de clining to comment on wheth er he objected to the meet ing's being held. The meeting was called by Stu Matthews, a 20 - year -senior who said he is acting independently of any group. He said, however, that he expects the meeting to be at tended by members of the Committee For Free Inquiry which was active during last year's speaker ban controver sy. "The issue is not only that Mr. Paull has lost his job," Matthews said, "but that peo ple in similar positions are open to the same kind of state wide WRAL pressure." Among the speakers at no said, will be Russell Whitak er, a member of Paull's class. "This is the beginning of what I would say is going to be a pretty large - scale dis cussion of events." Paull was reassigned from his job as Freshman Eng lish instructor Tuesday after a theme . assignment he made on the poem "To His Coy Misstress" drew fire. WRAL - TV reported dur ing its Monday night broad cast that Paull had assigned his students to write a theme detailing a seduction. Paull said, though, that he had merely assigned the class to paraphrase the poem by the 17th century English poet Andrew Marvell. Chancellor J. Carlyle Sit Tuesday, saying that an inves tigation into the matter re vealed that "apparently the class misinterpreted the as signment with the results that have developed." "In our opinion," the state- The proposal cannot be act ed upon until January, be cause the code governing the trustees states that there, must be at least a ten - day period between the time of the proposal and the period of enactment. Since the board does not meet again until Jan uary, Barber said, "the pro posal will not be acted on un til then." Barber said that the execu tive committee needs to be increased in size bcause of the growing jobs it deals with, and because there are more sub-committees today than there were in the past. If the proposal passes, a member of the executive com mittee who has served for two consecutive terms will not be eligible for re-election until one year after his sec ond term expires. Baby Was Me... j - ''.'---;.i:"':v' . m am r v - ... m - x teresting over there. Before my visit all I knew about Russia was what I read on a Smirnoff label. But I wised up quick, and soon after, I got thrown out of the Kremlin. . . There was a star on the door und I thought it was my dress ing room. ... Meetin ment read, "the normal tea cher - student learning rela tionship has been seriously dis turbed by these events, with the result that it appears that 'a reassignment of Mr. Paull to other departmental duties class would be in the best in terests of the educational func tion of the University." Dr. Raymond Adams, chair man of the English depart ment, said Wednesday that Paull, a 24 - year - old Ph.D. candidate and editor of the Carolina Quarterly, has been given a research assistantship. Meanwhile, Student Body President Bob Powell said the action by the University "dis turbs me a great deal, espe cially since the official Uni versity statement on the mat ter left many questions unan swered." "I have not yet had an op portunity to speak with the Chancellor or His Provost about the matter, but I will meet them today," Powell said. Powell said he will attend the meeting tonight. Coming For Cotton Maid Interviews will be held on campus next Wednesday for any coeds interested in being a contestant for the 1967 Maid of Cotton. If selected as a finalist, the girl and her chaperon wUl re ceive a trip to the final con test to be held in Memphis, Tennessee December 27-28. v' The. girl selected as Maid of Cotton will represent the cotton industry and its prod ucts and will travel through out the United States and around the world to stimu late interest in cotton. At the end of her six-month tour she will return with. t a beautiful cotton wardrobe, .' a new car, a many wonderful memories. She will be entertained by scores of dignitaries, hold press conferences, appear on radio and television and mod el in fashion shows. She will wear a wardrobe of cottons created for her by famous designers. The interviews next Wed nesday will be held in the Grail Room in Graham Me morial between 10 a.m. and 12 p.m. A few of the requirements are that an entrant be be tween the ags of 19 and 23, be born in a cotton-producing state, be photogenic, be at least 5 feet, 5 inches tall, and be willing to make an inter national tour beginning early in January and lasting until August. Any interested girls can obtain more information from the Office of the Dean of Women. This is my fifteenth year on the network for N.B.C. (no thing but commercials). How well I remember the early days of radio. . .ah, radio thats television without the eye strain. Of course being a comedian was a lot easier in those days. We weren't getting aU that competition from Congress and it was a cinch to get laughs all you had to do was to call up your sponsor and mention money. Through the years I have told a lot of jokes on radio. . . really, I don't know exactly how many but I can always check with Milton Berle. People watching television are very discriminating they sit there with their fingers on the tuning knob and if they don't like you they simply switch to another channel. I heard of one guy who switched channels so fast he saw Hopa long Cassidy riding a can of Ajax Cleanser. And I suppose you readers know that tele vision has brought a lot of things into the home sporting events. . . operas. . plays. . ; . movies. . . . repair men.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1966, edition 1
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