Box 870 Cbtpal-HlU B. C Pledg es Want to know toho what? See list of pledges on page 3. Founded Feb. 23. 1893 Editor's Notebook With, Hugh Stevens The legend called Billy Cun ningham scored just 13 points and went to the bench with five fouls early Thursday night, and in that moment an era ended for thousands of North Carolina basketball lovers. It was 'an ignominious end to an illustrious career. The campus consensus, right or wrong, seems to be that it would have been a thousand times easi er to take if the bigger score had been listed under some other name than "Wake Forest," and cn campus yesterday more than one person chose the words "bush league" to vent his pent-up feel ings about Baptist Hollow. But Wake Forest or not," it is over, and the fabulous Brooklyn jumping jack has 'jumped for Carolina for the last time. The words aren't in the diction ary to describe his unique left handed shot that seemed to con sist mainly of soaring into the ir and simply staying there un til everyone else came down. Nor could anyone draw a word pic ture of how he looked, stretched to his full height, batting the ball down the throat ol a surprised opponent. You simply had to see it to believe it. Thus, I don't intend to try to describe his skills; too many bet ter -writers have tried and failed. First Time But as Billy went to the bench to sit out the last seven minutes of his career Thursday, I couldn't help remembering the first time I saw the Kangaroo Kid. He wasn't the Kangaroo Kid then; no enterprising press agent had coined the name. He was just Billy CunningTiam, a fresh man and a basketball player, and he was making his first appearan ce in a blue and white uniform with "North Carolina" on the front. The occasion was a varsity freshman scrimmage game on a mild autumn night hard on the heels of the 1961 football season, which had been dismal and had given Carolina fans little to cheer about. Like hundreds of other students, alumni and die-hard fans, I had straggled down to Woollen Gym to see if the basketball team might provide the balm to heal the University's wounds. I was not prepared for what I saw that night, and in retrospect l doubt that few of the two thousand sDectators were prepared, either. Not that I hadn't heard of Billv Cunningham. I had. Like every other follower of Carolina .athletics. I knew that ne naa been the greatest thing In New York high school basketball since they invented the backboard, and I knew all about how he had come south in the dead of winter to enroll here in January before I came in September. What to Expect? But he had never appeared in a Carolina uniform, and few of the 2,000 people on hand knew what to expect Recalling the whole thing to day, more than four years later, I am impressed by the fact that I remember nothing about the game except that the varsity's performance was woeful; tnat, and Billy Cunningham. Before the teams even appear ed the talk flew down the creaky rows of seats. "He's the greatest ever," some said, "just the great est." Along with such vague praises went a ton of rumors about feats that even Superman couldn't have performed, and by the time the teams emerged 1 was all set to join in welcoming a combination of Rock Hudson and Goliath. I was disappointed, and I wasn't the only one. "Where is he?" "Which one is Cunningham?" came the col lective inquiries, until finally by the process of elimination we picked him out. Or perhaps some body in the crowd wGo "knew" pointed an excited finger in his direction. However it was, I'm glad every one present didn't discover Billy Cunningham at once, for there would certainly have been a col lective gasp and a shocked silence which would have put him in the next train back to Brooklyn, where appearances don't count for so much and he would have been better aDoreciated. For as the fans crowded into Woollen focused one by one on Billy, their voices disaDueared and they were left in stone-cold (Continued on Page 2 Wm pledged fraternity B Spearman Brands Gag Law i - - 'Most Important Problem 9 By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer , Student Body President Bob Spearman blasted the Speaker Ban Law as "the single most important problem facing our academic community" during his state of the campus address before Student Legislature Thursday night. Spearman's remarks on the law were part of an eight-page address outlining the accom plishments of his term of office and listing the areas for future progress. Referring to the Speaker Ban, Spearman said, "Each day its devastating effects become more apparent." He cited the scheduled or genecist Dr. J. B. S. Haldane proposed appearances of famed and playwright Arthur Miller, which were called off because of the law.' . - . Two national science associa tions have refused to hold meet ings on campus because of the law. "The alleged aim of the Speaker Ban is to protect stu dents from communist subver sion," he said. "Its actual ef fect is to cripple the free ex change of ideas in a great uni versit3'." Spearman called for "ra tional, determined and effective action" against the law, rather than emotional reaction. He listed the contributions which he said his administra tion made for the benefit of students and the community." V List Achievements The Fine Arts Festival, the course evaluation booklet, the booklet on honors courses, the formation of VIGAH, progress n civil rights, and formation of Fraternity House Thefts Tied To Youth Chapel Hill police said yester day a 13-year-old youth has ad mitted entering all the frater nity houses in fraternity court at least one to three times since Christmas. According to police, two high school class rings, one from Reynolds and one from Dover High, both bearing the date 1962, were found on his person. The youth also admitted tak ing $230 in checks and $100 in cash from the Sigma Phi Epsi lon house in November. Police said he showed them where he had hidden a strong box containing all checks. There has been no report fil ed with police concerning loss! of the rmgs. Owners may con tact the Chapel Hill Police headquarters. DTH Kite Contest Will Get Woman's Touch Mrs. Sharp 11 II V.--X s i ':' , . , J MRS. PAUL SHARP (A Ikf CHAPEL Dropped! On Discriminatory Clauses the Residence College System were mentioned in the address. . "It is my firm opinion," Spearman said, "that a fully developed Residence College System could go far in helping us to meet the problems of a mass university. "This can only be done, how ever, by hours of work, by at tention to painstaking detail Broadcasting Legislation Is Postponed A major campaign issue was eliminated Thursday when Speak er Don Carson told Student Legis lature he would not introduce any more legislation for the campus radio station "because of the political situation." Carson made the announcement after an extensive period of ques tioning by legislators on an im pending radio bill. ' 'There has been no rational discussion on this bill, and I re fuse to see this project be de stroyed because of partisan poli tics," he said. "We have all the necessary technical information and knowl ege to put this station into opera- m - 5J IlL.. -A. 1 J lion, ne saia, due Because ue- ferment of consideration 6a these measures until after the elec tions." During the questioning period, Communications Committee co chairman Armistead Maupin pre sented the body with the results of a recent opinion poll held on the radio issue. "We received the opinions of 400 students, male and female, Greek and non-Greek," he said. "We found that 20 per cent are against it 16 per cent are unde cided and 64 per cent are in favor of the station. "That wins as big as Goldwater lost," Maupin said. The body was also conveyed a message from Student Body Presi dent Spearman that he would veto a bill calling for reports on his use of the President's Dis cretionary fund unless a compro mise was achieved. Hugh Blackwell, author of the bill, introduced a compromise measure to the body which was accepted in place of the . original measure. Student Party Leader -Arthur Hays condemned Spearman's message as an example of "legis lative blackmail." "You canot reconsider a bill that has been vetoed," Hays said. "By conveying his intentions to us, the president merely found a way of getting around the veto by forcing a compromise." Mrs. Paul Sharp, wife of UNC's chancellor, signed on as a judge for the second annual DTH Kite Contest yesterday. Carolina's vivacious hostess joins Kays Gary, popular colum nist of the Charlotte Observer, as judges for the event. The final judge will be announced later. In accepting, Mrs. Sharp said she had flown kites "once upon a time" but did not expect to try it at the contest, which is scheduled for March 20. "I'll be content to add a wom an's touch," she said, indicat ing that she would be especially interested in the "Prettiest Kite" category. Within the next few days, the DTH will announce the exact, final schedule for the contest, along with a list of prizes. All kites have to be homemade, so contestants are urged to begin making preparations. In connection with the con test, the DTH Kite Queen will be announced on March 19. HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, Faculty Council Orders and by adequate financial sup- port." Spearman called for continu ed evaluation of the campus judiciary system. : Limit Code "I am convinced that the Campus Code needs to be limit ed to the Chapel Hill commu nity and to student functions,' he said. "I fear that the code will become increasingly h relevant for a large portion of students." - ; He called for increased co operation between Student Government and the adminis tration, and cited the conference at Reidsville last December between leaders of both groups as a starting point. Spearman defended the rights of fraternities and sororities to discriminate, but he said they should be freed from nationally restrictive, clauses, ,.,- , "Restrictive clauses based on race or religion deprove local chapters of free choice," he said. "I am doing everything within my power to see that calm and considered action is being taken along these lines.1' Urges Bond Issue Quoting statistics which show the need for expanded state educational facilities, Spear man said, "Our needs probably cannot be met without a state wide bond issue. "Nothing could be a better in VM4mpnt., fnr -. Nnrth. c.nrrMna v,- tntn hf education of its youth." Spearman also announced plans for a meeting of the stu dent body presidents of all state-supported colleges to con vene in Chapel Hill later this month. Election Head Explains Rule On Expenses Elections Committee Chair man Bill Schmidt yesterday is sued this statement to clear up questions which have been raised about campaign expen ses for candidates: "All expenses incurred in be half of a candidate shall ap pear on the candidate's ex pense account, due at noon, March 22. "However, if the candidates or in the case of the parties, the party officers, have no know ledge and have given no con sent to an expenditure, such an expenditure is not to be includ ed on the expense account. "Any person who incurs such an expense without the. know ledge and consent of the candi date or party officers shall be tried by the Constitutional Council for an offense against the student body. "If there are other questions concerning expenses, candidates should check with me in Stu dent Government offices." Election Postponed YWC A President Mary Linda Lewis announced yesterday that a re - election of YWCA officers will be held "within two weeks." She said establish ed election procedures were not followed in Thursday's election be cause of a "lack of un derstanding between the chairman "of the YWCA Elections Com mittee and the Wom en's Residence Coun cil." i II is 3g m U 1 1 III T 1: p. Hi ft? SATURDAY, MRCH 6, 1965 - "7 ,1 y 1 - ' f " - ' i vy V' r '"""TV I '" V V -I a jy ' fy ' i iz MJUJWWi'- J ROTC RIVALRY took to the volleyball court yesterday as the Navy and Air Force units closed Military Week contests. - The volleyball points were split evenly between the two units, but the Navy walked off the court as victors of the week-long activity. Members of both units will attend a military ball tonight in Dur ham. Photo by Jock Lauterer. Scott Molds First " . - r . -..-s. A . -a ,.- - ; ? -, . ? EC Senate The first residence college senate meeting was held by Scott College (Parker, Avery and Teague) Thursday night in Parker with congratulatory mes sages from the university ad ministration, student govern ment and campus political par ties. On hand to laud the experi mental project and congratu late members o Scott College on their succesful organization were Dean of Men William Long; Rev. James Cansler, late members of Scott College chairman of the Men's Resi dence Council; and representa tives of the Student and Uni versity Parties. Bob Spearman, president of UNC student body, administer ed the oath of office to the of ficers and senators and congrat ulated them on their installa tion. Scott College officers are Bob Hunter, governor; Mike League, It. governor; Tom Mimms, sec retary; and Ed Little, treasurer. The senate consists of the presidents of the residence halls in the college Jim Ward, Avery; John Leonard, Parker; and Bill Hunt, Teague as well as representatives from the member halls: Bob Farris, Tom Brantley, Mark Williams, Chuck Richards, Bob Sanders, Ed Blair, Gery Sandling, Dale Smith, Skep Raughton, and Leon Woodruff. Morehead College (Stacy, Graham. Everette, Lewis and Aycock), the second half of the English Satire On Tap "Beyond The Fringe," a "delightfully Eng lish," prize-winning satire of three years' Broad way fame, will be presented as part of the Graham Memorial Series at 8 p.m. March 17 in Memorial Hall. The satire, written and presented by four Eng lish intellectual amateurs, has been called "the materialization of the impossible." Critic Max Gendal finds it "ferociously English, a show with special humor, full of Britishism, non-American slang and unique English capacity for savage-yet-civilized satire of its own sacred institutions. The play, presented in two parts composed of 23 skits, depicts England past, present and per haps future. It resulted from the expansion of an idea, of four young Oxford and Cambridge graduates, which was presented before the 1960 Edinburgh Music and Arts Festival. The cast, composed of Robert Cessna, Donald Cullen, Joel Fabiani and James Valentine, are typical representatives of English wit "keen- Bars Dropped Meeting experimental system, is plan- mng senatorial elections tor April 23. Tim Haithcock, gov ernor, also reports that a news paper for the college has been organized. Morehead officers are Tim Haithcock, governor; John Ben son, It. . governor; Richard Urquhart, secretary; and John Surratt, treasurer. The resdence college system is an attempt to break up the university community into smaller units. One Coed Excused; Another Campused The Women's Honor Council this week voted to excuse one coed for being late and gave a 16-day campus to another for failing to report the lateness of a dormitory guest. In the first case, a coed plead indefinite to a charge of enter ing the residence hall an hour and 15 minutes late Feb. 20. The council excused her after learning that her lateness was caused by automobile trouble. Another coed pleaded guilty and was found guilty to a campus code violation when a guest she had at her dormitory failed to come in the night of Feb. 20. Honor Council rules make hostesses responsible for the con duct and well-being of their guests. "The council felt that the coed "did not act responsibly in failing to report the guest to the dormi tory administration," and so sen tenced her with 16 days of cam edged scalplers at work." They are replicas of the original cast and writers Alan Bennett, Pe ter Cook, Jonathan Miller and Dudley Moore. Sweet patriotism, stuffy hypocrisy and glib statesman-ship are victims of their assault. Wandering through a varying set, they are im pudent to everybody and everything. Their sketch of a bland, ineffectual MacMillan is devastating. They also depict the vicar of the parish of St. Jack in a lifeboat, trying to be folksy with God to lure young people into his church. A civil defense lecturer advises his listeners "to get out of the danger area since that's w here the bomb drops, you know." Ticket sales begin at 1 p.m. . Wednesday at GM Information Desk. Reserved seats for UNC students are 50 cents with ID card; $1 for date or spouse. General public sales . bgin Friday. Prices will be $2 and $3. Singers Monday is the deadline for en try in the March 29 Valkyrie Sing. Interested persons most submit an entry blank and $18 entry fee to Mary Cobb before that date. Compliance Date Set Sept. 1, 1966 By PETE WALES DTH Associate Editor The Faculty Council yesterday passed unanimously a resolution calling for an end to fraternity and sorority discriminatour clauses. The new University policy gives social and professional fraternities and sororities until Sept. 1, 1966, to drop all national or local discriminatory requirements for membership. Discriminatory requirements are defined as "those re quirements which prohibit the local chapter from pledg ing or initiating any student in the University because of his or her race, creed or na- Student Leaders Express Approval 0 Council's Vote "I am delighted to see that this action has been taken by the faculty Council, and it has my whole-hearted approval." This was the reaction of Stu dent Body President Bob Spear man to the policy on discrimina tory clauses passed unanimously yesterday by the Faculty Council. The news met with wide-spread approval among students leaders. Spearman noted that "sufficient leeway" had been given the frat ernities and sororities to change or waive their clauses by the 1966 date. "This means that individual housesr will be freed from national restrictions and requirements in selecting their members," he said. "Now every fraternity and sorority may look at every parti cular person who comes through rush without having their minds made up for them. The policy gives them a greater degree of autonomy without forcing them to take anyone." Spearman expressed apprecia tion to Dr. Herbert Bodman, chairman of the faculty commit tee, for allowing him to sit in on meetings. IFC President Frank Martin was pleased with the policy and anticipated no difficulty in re moving the clauses. He felt that sufficient time had been granted. "Each fraternity should be free to choose any boy in the school whom it feels to be suitable with out being restricted by constitu tional clauses of its national. "I don't think you should re strict yourself prior to seeing the boy." Panhellenic President Jean Dil lin felt that the policy was a "necessary step for the Univer sity. This is a trend that is be coming obvious all over the country. "The University has not only a legal, but a moral obligation to take this stand. I don't think that it can sanction any group that discriminates on the basis of race or creed. "I hope that the time limit will be sufficient for all sororities to comply, but I have no official in formation. I don't think this will hurt the sorority system." Presidential candidate Paul Dickson and Don Carson both favored the decision. PETE WALES Volume 72, Number 10G tional origin." Chapters not complying with this policy by the stated date Will be asked to disband. All the fraternities with such clauses have cleared the pos sibility of obtaining a waiver from their nationals through correspondence this fall, accord ing to IFC President Frank Mar tin. Waive Requirements Certain national fraternities have allowed local chapters to ."waive" national membership requirements when the admini stration disallowed such clauses. Panhellenic Council President Jean Diilin was unsure of the effect on some of the sororities. Kappa Delta has refused to sign such statements on certain other campuses. "I'm very pleased that the faculty accepted the report un animously," said Dr. Herbert Bodman, chairman of the Facul ty Committee on Fraternities and Sororities. "I hope that the fraternities arid sororities will do all they can to meet the requirements established there in. "Most fraternities and sorori ties have no problem, but there are a few who still do. We sincerely hope that there will be no problem in removing the clauses and do not anticipate any at this time. "We hope that the local chap ters will combine with us to persuade their nationals to re vise their documents to elimin ate any type of discrimination by category. This has no place in any fraternal organization." With regard to "socially ac ceptable" clauses, Dr. Bodman said that the committee would have to rule on the intent of the clause in each case. If the clause was being used to dis criminate on the basis of race, creed or national origin, then it would not be acceptable. Sharp Pleased Chancellor Paul F. Sharp also expressed satisfaction with the decision. "It was a .solid action of the Faculty Council," he said. The vote climaxed an investi gation of fraternity and sorority documents by the committee started last fall when Dr. Bod man replaced Dr. Clifton II. Kreps as chairman. The committee had passed a policy in 1959 forbidding the establishment of any new fra ternities or sororities with dis criminatory clauses. Policy Text The text of the policy: "All chapters of social and professional fraternities and sororities at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, on or before Sept. 1, 19GG. shall in good faith stipulate to the Faculty Committee on Frater nities and Sororities, in a state ment signed by the president of the chapter and the responsible national officer, that no dis criminatory requirements are imposed upon the chapter eith er locally or by the national organization of the fraternity or sorority, through its charter, constitution, bylaws, ceremonies or regulations. " 'Discriminatory' requirements' are defined as those require ments which prohibit the local chapter from pledging or initi ating any student in the Univer sity because of his or her race, creed or national origin. "Any chapter of a social or professional fraternity or soror ity which fails to present the above signed statement to the Faculty Committee on Frater nities and Sororities by the date specified shall appear before the committee through repre sentatives and show cause why the committee should not lee ommend to the chancellor of the University that the Univer sity terminate its recognition of the chapter involved for faihue of the chapter to conform to University polio-."