"He Library
Bx 870
ChPel Hill, h. C.
Durham Boycott
hjUdents interested in
Kcott win mett .n
forehead parking lot today at
P-m. Hides are needed.
27514
College Council
Student members of the
Residence College Council are
asked to contact Len Tubbs at
968-9192 concerning the
formation of the new MRC
76 years Of Editorial Freedom
Volume 76, Number 27
UttAtL mill,, rsurvin tM xf uuiuiser 18, 196S
Founded February 23. 1893
fy I I I
Representatives of various
campus organizations met
today with Charles Jeffress, a
member of the Supervisory
Board of the National Student
Association, and Ken Day,
student body president, to
discuss plans for Time-Out Day
projected for Oct. 29.
The group discussed
questions about the validity of
the theory behind Time-Out
Day, whether Time-Out would
be misinterpreted as a boycott
of calsses, what organizations
and speakers should participate
in this day, and what specific
issues might be discussed as
Time-Out topics.
The representatives decided
that Time-Out Day should be a
day on which basic questions
about the university and its
relationship to society might
oe raised, i ne iocus win De on
larger-than-campus issues.
An open meeting will be
held Tuesday, Oct. 22, in front
of Silent Sam at 4 p.m. for all
students
and organizations
interested
part.
in taking an active
Discussions on themniversity
in society, how the university
is treating the racial issue in
contrast with international
treatment, and the
responsibility of the university
to the student are planned
Robert Powell, former
student body president and
present NSA head, is scheduled
to return to Chapel Hill on
Time-Out Day to address the
student body.
Mrs.- --Joh:nEenne!.dv--'Discloses:"Plans;
To Marry Onass is Within The Week
J
NEW YORK (UPiy-Mrs.
John F. Kennedy has found
romance after nearly five years
of widowhood and will marry
62-year-old Greek shipping
billionaire Aristotle Socrates
Onassis, probably within a
week, it was announced
Thursday.
The announcement made by
Mrs. Kennedy's mother, Mrs.
I Froeber Will Represent
I UNC At Beauty Contest
Miss Judy Froeber, a
blue-eyed blonde from
Winston-Salem, was chosen
Miss UNC Football Queen
Wednesday night.
Miss Froeber, last year's
Yack Queen and a Tri-Delt, is a
junior majoring in special
education. As queen, she will
act as UNC's representative to
the ACC Football Queen
Contest to be held in Raleigh
Nov. 2.
The contest, sponsored
nationally by Chevrolet, will
v ' A -s - c-i a o
.,.' ) ((; )
) 'Z - f By BOBBY NOWELL
I S- rCt'( : DTHSUtfWriUr
- V-YY,'A i ji - v j
v 0k,, r wi A n i )
r ... , Mitt LX-
IT WAS A BLAST Beer, eight kegs of it, went
fast at the Senior Class beer
House on Finley Golf Course
By TOM GOODING
DTH Staff Writer
An organizational meeting
to set up support for
Resurrection City will be held
Sunday Oct. 20 at 2 p.m. in 111
Murphy.
Hugh D. Auchincloss of
Washington and Newport came
as a surprise to all but a few of
the 39-year-old former First
Lady's intimates. For nearly a
decade Onassis, a divorcee, had
been linked to tempestuous
opera star Maria Callas, but
their idyll ended last summer.
Nancy Tuckerman, Mrs.
Kennedy's secretary, said she
choose a National Football
Queen from the winners of the
various conference contests.
The finals for the crown will be
held in Los Angeles later in the
year. The winner will receive a
$1,000 scholarship and will
appear in Chevrolet
advertisements during her
reign.
Three requirements are
placed on each contestant who
enters the contest. First, she
must be in good academic
standing; second, she must not
be planning to marry in the
J a. K SSOC Petition
blast at the Pi Kappa Phi
Road Thursday afternoon,
lesiiFFectioii
The meeting will be
sponsored by the Wesley
Foundation. Lawrence
Whitfield, social action
chairman of the Wesley
Foundation. said,"This isn't
going to serve as a
camp and it won't
refugee
be just
was uncertain about the date
or the place of the marriage
but that she thought it would
occur within the week rather
than in two or three weeks.
Another informed source
said the ceremony would be
"on an island somewhere."
Onassis owns the Aegean island
of Skorpios.
The engagement came after
near future; third, each
contestant must be returning
to her school for the second
semester of the school year.
Twelve contestants
participated in the contest held
Wednesday night. The
atmosphere was informal as the
girls talked with each of the six
judges informally before
questions were posed to the
participants.
Miss Froeber was
questioned about her major
and future plans after her
graduation. She replied that it
was her desire to teach
physically handicapped
children at the kindergarten
level. Her student training
begins next year, and after
graduation she hopes to return
to North Carolina after
working in Philadelphia for a
while.
Chosen as runner-up to Miss
Froeber was Miss Kern
Eisiminger, a junior transfer
student from the University of
Mississippi. She was asked to
compare the support and
enthusiasm of Carolina and Ole
Miss, for their respective
football teams.
She responded by saying
that the enthusiasm here is
greater to the extent that the
students at Carolina will
support the football team
when it is losing, whereas at
Old Miss, they won't.
In the event that Miss
Froeber is unable to act as the
representative for UNC, Miss
Eisiminger will assume the
title.
At last report
were dropping
the beer was
, i
mg out in a nurry.
Supporters Meet Sunday
another typical example of
whites helping poor blacks."
When the Resurrection City
is set up in Alabama it is
planned to be a multi-racial
effort. "This city won't be for
only the poor. We need anyone
who can help in the formation
months of speculation over
Mrs. Kennedy's friendship with
the Earl of Harlech, British
ambassador to Washington
during the Kennedy
Administration. While Harlech
was denying they were
anything but "devoted
friends", Mrs. Kennedy's
longtime friendship with
Onassis was deepening into
love.
Mrs. Kennedy is Roman
Catholic and the attitude of
the church toward her marriage
to a divorced person may force
her to be married in a civil
ceremony or in the Greek
Orthodox faith of Anassis.
Onassis was divorced in 1960
by his first wife, Greek
shipping heiress Athina Tina
Lhranos, after 14 years of
marriage. The Vatican
recognizes the validity of
Greek Orthodox marriages, so
that his remarriage within the
Roman Catholic church would
depend on unusual and
extenuating circumstances.
Mrs. Kennedy was first
entertained aboard Onassis'
32 5-foot yacht, Christina, on a
Mediterranean cruise while she
was still First Lady. Onassis
was the first person outside the
family to visit her at the White
House after her return from
Dallas with her assassinated
husband's body in 1963.
Sources in Athens said Mme.
Callas decided to walk out of
Onassis' life after he invited
Mrs. Kennedy and Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy for a recuperative
cruise to Skorpios Island
aboard the Christina last
August after the assassination
of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
The diva had divorced her
Italian industrialist husband,
Giovanni Banghini, for love of
Onassis.
"Onassis
Kennedy's
never left Mrs.
side during her
one-week vacation on the
island," said an informed
source in Athens. "Maria left
the island just before an
all-night party Onassis gave for
Jackie."
Before the announcement
Onassis had laughed off rumors
of a romance saying, "Jackie
told me she likes tall, thin men.
I don't think I fit the
description."
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
going fast and the seniors
F
Lammed
of an ideal city. We have
already had some professors
volunteer to go down to
Alabama and help set up an
educational system."
The city is being designed by
a group of University of
; Maryland architecture
students.
There is currently a great
' need for people to work-on a
newspaper for the " city. This
paper according to Whitfield
will "not only serve the
residents of Resurrection City
but will also be used as a
communication media to
inform anybody anywhere
concerned with the project"
The first group of refugees
are expected to arrive in
Alabama around Thanksgiving.
Current plans call for about
5,000 residents.
"Some people from around
here have already indicated an
interest in going
during Christmas
down there
to live and
Gladys May Bring
Much Needed Rain
While weathermen at
Raleigh-Durham Airport offer
a "for sure" three-quarters of
an inch of badly-needed rain to
the area over the next two
days, speculation is rising that
Hurricane Gladys might really
do the trick.
The hurricane, if it passes
'Murder Trial9 Set
By J. D. WILKINSON
DTH Staff Writer
Wayne Hurder, Daily Tar
Heel editor and noted
"mad-dog" political assassin,
goes on trial in the UNC Law
Humphrey III Will Meet
With College Newsmen
Hubert Horatio Humphrey
III will appear at a rally at
12:30 p.m. today in the
restaurant at the
Raleigh-Durham airport.
Humphrey is scheduled to
meet with college leaders and
newspaper people in a series of
appearances sponsored by the
Youth Division of the State
Citizens for Hump hrey-Muskie,
according to Roger Foushee of
Chapel Hill Democratic
Headquarters.
Members of the Southern
Student Organizing Committee
Wednesday presented its coed
petition, containing nearly
4000 signatures in favor of
instituting the visitation
privflege at UNC, to Dean of
Student Affairs CO. Cathey.
Sam Austell, local SSOC
organizer, said, "With 3,904
names, the petition showed a
strong current of student
feeling on the issue."
My feeling," he
continued,"is that some action
on the issue must come about
shortly. However, we will not
settle for any token decision.
"It is our position that
students have the right to
decide if and when they want
visitation in their rooms. They
should have this right in full,
although they don't here."
Carolina has never allowed
work as a part of the city.
"However, there is a great
need for many items before the
city can properly function. The
city will have a hospital and
consequently there is a need
for medical supplies. We need
financial aid such as grants and
donations and there is an
urgent need for transportation
such as buses to carry the
people down - there, said"
Whitfield.
"Another thing we need is
proposals. People who don't
have time to do anything else
could come and just give us
thfeir ideas on how to form the
city. For example, sociology,
economics or city planning
students could supply us with
ideas on how the city can be
organized." Whitfield said.
Whitfield emphasized that
this is not a refugee camp or a
camp for only poor people.
"This is to be an ideal
community for anybody who
is willing to commit himself to
a dream."
directly over the center of
North Carolina, would likely
do little damage, they say.
Furthermore, it would bring
along two to four inches of
rain enough to cause
sufficient run-off to stave off
the water crisis for several
weeks.
School courtroom today for
the mock murder of student
bocy vice-president and
professional political hack,
Charlie Mercer.
Hurder is accused of
"gunning-down" Mercer
Following the airport rally,
Humphrey will depart at 1:15
p.m. for Greenville. He will be
back in Raleigh at 4:15 p.m.
and will tour the State Fair
where he will be greeted by
Fair officials. Humphrey also
plans to participate in the
turkey shoot at the fair at 5:30
p.m.
Anyone interested in
attending the rallies and in
need of transportation contact
Democratic Headquarters at
929-4226.
female visitors in men's
dormitory rooms, although
neighboring Duke and N.C
State have embraced this
privflege for some time now.
Austell said that
approximately 90 per cent of
the students approached signed
the petition.
According to Austell, Dean
Cathey said he was impressed
with the stack of petitions, and
did not plan to use any
'stalling tactics."
Cathey declared,"We believe
in participatory democracy,
and that's the procedure we're
following now."
Cathey said he "hoped for
speedy action on the
problem," stating that he
"expected some change to
come soon."
When the SSOC spokesmen
pressed the dean for details on
the procedure for passage, he
outlined the following plan:
Cathey has referred the
petition to the StudentrFac-ulty-
Administration
Committee on Dorm
9
if""! I r
M i .? - -. , . ' , I i ill
in JUL i !
JU n ii s nnn
J
DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabel
What A Day For A Daydream
.But Standing Up While Leaning On A Car???
Monday afternoon in Y-Court
before a large number of
students and faculty members.
The "Mercy-killing" trial
will commence at two o'clock
this afternoon in the
University's new Van
Hecke-Wettach Law School
Building.
The Honorable L.H.
Thornberg, prominent western
North Carolina judge, will
preside.
Hurder is expected to plead
"not guilty by reason of
temporary insanity."
Reportedly, his attorneys
will call to the stand a number
of Daily Tar Heel readers to
support that contention.
Hurder refused to discuss
his trial in detail Thursday,
saying that he feared such
discussion would prejudice his
case.
The articulate Hurder did
say, however, in his most
polished southern Illinois
(Georgia) accent, that he felt
he had done "... That
(censored) grit Mercer" a favor.
Visitation, chaired by Dean of
Men James O. Cansler and Bill
Darrah, a special assistant to
Student Body President Ken
Day.
The joint committee will
discuss the issue and present
recommendations to Dean
Cathey.
Dean Cathey will then
deliberate and present his
recommendations to the
Faculty Advisory Committee
for Student Affairs.
This committee will
deliberate and present its
recommendations to Dean
Cathay, who will then make
the final decision as to
administration policy.
Austell said that in talking
to Cathey the dean referred to
the value of patience rained
with age and the impatience of
youth.
Cathey told a reporter he
did not know how long it
would take the petition to go
through the proper channels
before a decision could be
made.
v,
M i ,
X.
Today
Student Body
Vice-President Mercer said
Thursday afternoon, when
located in the Daily Tar Heel
Business office, that he "may
drop in to the trial to see
Hurder get his."
A reliable source revealed
Thursday afternoon that Bruce
Strauch, noted cartoonist and
professional anti-hack hack, is
in line for Hurder's job should
the law students' count
become over-zealous and
condemn the editor to death
for killing Mercer, "That noble
knight of Day's forces."
Meanwhile, Student Body
President Ken Day has
organized a committee to
study "the ethical jurisdiction
for the elimination of student
politics on the UNC campus."
Hurder, will be defended by
law students Joel Stevenson,
Gerald Shaw, and Loub Sauls.
The prosecuting attorneys,
law students Joe Savona,
Harmon Stevens, and Fred
Johns, will ask for the death
penalty.
I . J