U.tJ.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chapel Hill, N,C. Kid Selected UNCs Billy Cunningham was the fifth choice in the NBA draft, conducted yesterday in New York. See sports page for full details. mm Interviews Public Affairs Committee will hold interviews from il a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, upstairs in Y Building. Any interested stu dents may apply. "The South's Largest College Newspaper" Founded Feb. 23. 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY. MAY 7, 1965 Volume 72, Number 153 mm lowenstein Says U. S. Action In Viet Nam 'Humiliating9 Al Lowenstein, Vice - Pres ident Humphrey's former sen atorial assistant, Wednesday night criticized the Adminis tration's actions in the Do minican Republic. In an address co - spon sored by the Carolina Forum and the Carolina Political Un ion, Lowenstein called U. S. military action against the supporters of Juan Bosch "hu miliating." Bosch, Lowenstein said, had been "illegally removed" from his position as head of the tiny Caribbean nation. Won Support During the talk, held in Gra ham Memorial's Grail Room, Lowenstein said that President Johnson is "remarkably suc cessful in domestic politics and seems to have won the support of the American peo ple." He continued: "Legally, our behavior in , the Dominican Republic cannot be justified so far as I can determine." But, he said, the Adminis tration's policy probably' en joys "a large amount of pub lic support." - Lowenstein did not directly say that domestic politics had caused the United States to D i'Phi Endorses Johnson's By JOHN GREENBACKER DTII News Editor Thfl Ti Phi Spnafp vnfpd to uphold President John son's action in sending U. S. Marines to the Dominican Re public by a margin of one vote after a debate on the issue Tuesday. .... The debate was led off by T-k T-ll tIT 1 a C .lt. ur. ttcupu VYOuuwdiu ui me UNC Department of History, who criticized the order to send troops into the revolt torn country. "This revolt is the sole bus iness of the Dominican peo ple," he said. - In remarks directed towards U. S. policy in Latin Ameri ca, Woodward said, "The State Department seems to be dominated by a narrow group of business interests." . He said the United States was concerned with protect- ing American business inter ests in South America rather than respecting the interests of the people. Woodwryrd cited figures which showed that although outside communist interests were active in the revolt, they were being supported by an army of nearly 12,000 native citizens. Woodward also attacked U. S. handling of the Cuban situation, charging the admin istration was driving Cuba in to the hands and influence of Russia by rejecting Castro's Everett . . S"S, t J " v ,! j , ? 4 s 1 V ? i ! - ! I I; 'i U ' 1 I i I i i i xw" ininii'in 111" w- -" '- v , 5 I " ... ' ' . . "' :' ;' ' - -. r X h v . 5 - - t - .w POTTED FROM TOO MUQI BULLION, proud (left to right) Randy Old, John Thorne, Andy residents of Everett Hall surround their new Martof. Thurston Cobb, Jim Hugenschmidt, color TV which they won for sending in 4000 John MacRoot, Mitchell Grant, and Bob Hill, bullion wrappers. Stewed on the brew, they are send troops to the Dominican Republic. Johnson's Motives He said that speculations about Johnson's motives are "highly unprofitable." Lowenstein also opposed the Administration's policy in Viet Nam. However, he said, "I get very sick of people say . ing Johnson can't impose con ditions on negotiations but the Viet Cong can." The former writer - in - res idence at Yale said that crit ics of the Administration's for eign policy like Sen. Gruen ing and Sen. Church must not be considered "pro -Viet Cong." Viet Cong Viet Cong sympathizers should not be persecuted, he said, "but I wouldn't want to be led by them." Students for a Democratic Society, the organization be hind the recent Washington "peace", march, is considered "radical" by many of its lead ers, Lowenstein said. Many SDS members, he said, "would be upset if it didn't have the image of a radical organization." Defines "Radical" Lowenstein broadly defined Actions overtures for friendlier rela tions. Les Bailey also scored U.S. policy in Latin America and this nation's failure to. regard the national aspirations of South American people. "We have failed to take a realistic pulsebeat of econom ic factors in Latin America," Bailey said. He supported the President's decision to send troops into the Dominican Republic, as such a move was clearly necessary in order to keep the peace. "The administration's' pur pose was not to rectify mis takes or clean up after fail ures of the past, but to pre serve order in the hemis phere," he said. Chip Sharpe attacked Amer icans for "picturing them selves as gallantly bearing the white man's burden." He scored what he felt was a "callous attitude toward war" in this nation. "It is ironic that the coun try with the first liberal revo lution in history is spending billions of dollars to put down badly needed revolutions else where," he said. John Harrison pointed to the strategic location of the Do minican Republic in the Car ibbean and the threat a com munist regime there would present to the interests of the United States and nearby South American governments. Is Knee-Beep In Bullio the term . "radical" as refer ring to groups who "consider American society so twisted that something else must be put in its place." He generally condemned the actions of the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, sug gesting that they had harmed the cause of modereate re form. "There's no question about the Speaker Ban being a ter rible law," he said. "But I'm against widespread student protests unless people think they can be successful." ! Six Trials Heard By Council Court The Men's Residence Coun cil Court in its past two ses sions has handed down sen tences in six cases ranging from driving a golf ball in a residence hall to spreading explosive chemicals around a dorm. ' ; The students involved in the golf ball incident were given court reprimands. Two students were found guilty of throwing tennis balls at light bulbs in the dorm. Two more students received conduct probation for one se mester for " breaking eight windows. The Court said they were under the influence of alcohol. In the fourth case, indefinite conduct probation was given to three men for breaking ashtrays against the walls of their social room. Four students were found ; guilty of participating in an egg -fight . which took place., both , inside and outside the dorm. Three were given in - definite residence hall proba tion, which puts them on con duct probation and prevents them from holding any dorm office or competing in intra murals. The fourth was given a court reprimand because he turned himself in and did not participate fully in the egg fight. In the sixth case, a student was given an official repri mand for spreading explosive chemicals over various areas of his dormitory. Free Flick Tonight's free flick will be a double feature.. "A Night At The Opera," starring the comical Marx , brothers will precede "Til lie's Punctured Romance" starring Charlie Chaplin and Marie Dressier. The latter picture was one of Chaplin's first full-length features one that es tablished his reputation as a star. They will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in Car roll Hall. - 1 1:J Students For Teachers Will Hold Rally Leaders of . Students for Teachers announced yester day that a campus - .wide rally will be at noon Monday in Polk Place to discuss the publish or perish situation on campus. - Students for Teachers is a group which formed cn cam pus this week to investigate the existence of the publish or perish policy at UNC. The group was formed after Dr. William Goodykoontz of the Department of Engilsh was dismissed, reportedly for his failure i to publish in scholar ly journals. Chuck Wrye, Pete Wales and other student leaders will meet with Chancellor Paul Sharp this morning to discuss the University's policy regarding the matter. Students for Teachers has issued flyers stating its posi- . tion that "a teacher's main obligation is to teach." Wales said yesterday that the group is also circulating petitions on campus. The flyer reads, in part: It is wrong for a university to dismiss an outstanding teacher without stating, clear ly sufficient cause. And it is wrong for a university to deny an. outstanding teacher the" continuing employment and advancement that is merited by his teaching ability. Because of the decision by the UNC English Department not to retain Dr. William F. Goodykoontz, who is regarded by the large majority of his students as a valuable, dedi cated and creative teacher, we want to see in the near fu ture: (1) A clear, unequivocal, statement of the precise rea sons why Dr. Goodykoontz wasnot retained -by the Eng lish Department. (2) An effective administra tive policy that affirms teach ing as the primary concern of a great university. (3) All department curricu lum committees to include graduate and undergraduate students from the respective departments. (4) The establishment of a policy in all departments to retain and promote teachers whose excellence in the class room is acknowledged by both students and other teachers. (5) Representation of grad uate and undergraduate stu dents on their department committees to determine pro motion and retention of de partment faculty. French Scholar A visiting scholar from the University of Lyon will lec ture tonight at 8 in Dey Hall. Prof. Georges Couton will speak on the contemporary novelist, Blaise Cendrars. Couton is currently a visit ing professor at Swarthmore College. His lecture will be in French and will be open to the i public. Story and Photo By JOCK LAUTERER Everett Residence Hall, bet ter known to residents as the ROGAH house, could now be called "Randy Old's Chicken and Beef Bullion Emporium." What other dorm on cam pus can consume 4000 cubes of "Herb-Ox" bullion, un wrap each cube, mail the wrappers to "Herb-Ox," and get a $515 color TV set back in return? According to former Everett president Randy Old, the dorm took part in a campus-wide contest sponsored by the "Herb-Ox" bullion company to see who could send in the most wrappers. "So we went down to the A&P and cleaned them out of bullion," said Old. "They thought it was very funny. We bought $55.60 worth of the stuff," he said. The color television arrived Wednesday at the residence hall complete with an outside antenna which will pick up more than the usual amount of channels. The contest was run at State where no one entered. "Some one could have won just by entering one wrapper," said Old. 6To Challenge The Establish: Give As if : ffll liliP ,-' - - i 5""V BEEKEEPING 161, OR UNDERWATER BAS- Creech, Betty Lawhon, and Frances Mock. KET WEAVING 53? The age old question of They remind you to preregister for next se- what to take next semester looms at pre- mester if you haven't yet done so. registration time. Perplexed readers of the Photo by Jock Lauterer UNC Class Record are (left to right) Alice - ; Discrimination Charges Denied By Dental School By ANDY MYERS ; DTII Staff Writer - Complaints of alleged racial discrimination in admitting students to the UNC Dental School, which were disclosed Monday by the. U. S. Public Health Service in Washington, were denied by spokesmen yesterday, saying that there is no intent to discriminate, and that there has been no dis crimination. ' The complaint, disclosed Monday by Robert Nash, spe cial civil rights officer for the Public Health Service, was filed because "the school had not admitted a Negro stu dent," according to Pete Ivey of the UNC News Bureau. The Dental School has no Negroes enrolled, and has never had any, Ivey said. He, added that there was no dis crimination in admittance practices in the school, but that only one Negro had ever applied and was turned down because he didn't meet the school's requirements. Dr. John C. Brauer, Dean of the Dental School, said yes terday that he could make "no official comment" on the sit uation, but it had been agreed that Chancellor Paul F. Sharp would be the spokesman for the school. Sharp was out of town yesterday. In a statement Tuesday Sharp said that UNC was not aware of any discrimination in the Dental School, and he is awaiting fuller details con cerning complaints. Dr. Brauer said yesterday he has a copy of the com plaint letter which was sent to Washington, but that he could not disclose who sent the letter. It is expected that Wolfe Award Pi Kappa Phi fraternity an nounced yesterday that "un usually good response" to its writing contest has made necessary a delay in present ing the Thomas Wolfe writing award. The presentation, a $100 cash award and a plaque giv en annually for the best short story or play by a Carolina student, was to have been an nounced Wednesday night at the world premiere of "Joy in the Morning." "The great number of high quality entries made it impos sible for the judges to render a fair decision before the original presentation date," Pi Kappa Phi spokesman Hoyle Broome said. The award will be present ed at a reception for all en trants, set tentatively for May 17. Purpose Of New JJ ( - f II atflVV.X'VVVriVJ ' Vl" an-inspection committee from the Civil Rights Commission will be sent to the Dental School, and that if any dis crimination is found immedi ate steps would be taken to end it.. It was revealed Monday that the complaints made against 17 medical institutions in North and South Carolina might render them ineligible for federal support. Many of them operate on 60 per cent of federal money. In the coming year there is $15 million pending from the federal government for con struction of medical facilities. In the past year the federal government and other federal sources approved research grants of over $10 million to UNC, and $6 million of it went Darkness Precedes Dawn In 6 Joy In The Morning' Ed. Note MGM's "Joy In The Morning," based on the novel by Chapel Hill author Betty Smith, world pre miered Wednesday night at the Carolina Theater. By TOM CLARK DTII Staff Writer "Joy In The Morning" is a warm, moving story of two kids in love. But it's not all that simple. You put the hubby in college and the slum-bred wife in a new environment, take away all the money and throw in a little parental opposition for good measure, and you have the makings for "Joy All Day Long." Richard Chamberlain plays the endearing Carl Brown, a law student at a small midwestern university. Every thing is going well for the industrious scholar until he falls in love with wistful, naive 18-year-old Annie McGairy (Yvette Mimieux), from Brooklyn. He takes her to college where they are married by a justice of the peace. Dear Annie is befuddled by the norms and protocol of the campus. But her innocence carries her through. When the Dean (Sidney Blackmer) catches her eaves dropping on classes in an effort to better herself, he is so impressed with her sincerity and sweetness that he secretly arranges -for her to join the class. Carl runs amuck with the university too. Because of his marriage, he loses his loan. His father, convinced that the marriage has ruined his son's career tries vainly to make him ' get an annulment, then cuts off his allow ance. Trying to keep hubby in school, Annie takes a job babysitting for Mrs. Karter (Joan Tetzel), a widow who keeps company with a married man. Carl is scandalized. He is also jealous of Annie's friendship with the lonely and effeminant owner of a local flower shop (Donald Davis). Though "Joy in the Morning" is rather meloncholic at moments, and the perpetual puppy-loving gets a bit sticky, it is all held together beautifully by the outstand ing performances of Richard Chamberlain and Yvette Mimieux. Chamberlain catches the character of Carl with the simpleness and determination that only he could do. Yevette has a few minor flaws in her role but most of the time is excellent. The entire cast gives them good support. No one but a die-hard cynic could dislike "Joy in the Morning." J -L 4i, towards UNC medical institu tions. Dean of Health Affairs Dr. Henry Clark said yesterday that the operating budget for UNC medical institutions was $20 million a year. Nash said Monday that fed eral support would not be withheld, however, unless dis crimination was found in the institution and steps were not tafcen to comply with the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Clark said it would be dif ficult to determine the exact amount of federal support for this year which might be in jeopardy, because grants were made on a per case basis. He said the usual practice is for the federal government to match what the state or other sources puts up. i, tnent Group 35 Attend Organization Meeting Here By DAVID ROTH MAN DTII Staff Writer "The last thing Students for a Democratic bociety wants is to see people picket with out knowing what they're picketing for. Action is essen tial, but discussion must come first." This statement was made by Jim McCorkel, one of the two temporary co - chairmen of the UNC - SDS, which met Wednesday night m Gerrard Hail. Some 35 people attended the organizational meeting." Gary Waller is the other temporary co - chairman." Waller and McCorkel, both graduate students in sociology, said they were not officially speaking for SDS at UNC since their positions as offi cers were not permanent. They said they had recent ly discussed with James Gard ner, Timothy Ray, Norwood Pratt and FSM leader Steve Weissman the formation of a UNC - SDS chapter. Waller said a "Dr. Strange love" trend is evident in American society. Realizing this, he said, students across the nation will "challenge the establishment's control." , "Don't dismiss these stu dents as communists," he said, "even if you feel more secure that way." "Totalitarianism," he said, "may be present in govern ments in the center as well as those leaning to the left or the right." Shelley Blum, head of the Duke SDS chapter and SDS regional coordinator, said that SDS "differs from groups like ADA because it's not part of the liberal establishment." Liberals, Blum said, "win elections by handing out tilings. But radicals go from door to door to get things done." Blum said that both liberals and radicals are active with in SDS. "SDS," said McCorkel, "is not a Red - baiting organiza tion. Our only membership re striction is that people be gen uinely interested in a demo cratic solution to society's problems." McCorkel admitted that SDS lets communists become mem bers. "But," he said, 'in theory we also allow the Birchers to join. We're look ing for people interested in free discussion, not just those with the proper political la bel." "Local SDS chapters," Mc Corkel said, "pay attention to whatever most concerns them. It might be poverty; it might be the situation in Viet Nam; it might even be unfair dorm restrictions." Blum said his organization at times had rece:ved grants up to $5,000. James Gardner, who unsuc cessfully attempted to organ ize a Free Speech Movement here, listed more than 20 mat ters he said might interest UNC - SDS members. Among these are: 'The Speaker Ban Law and related problems of aca demic freedom in relationship to the Board of Trustees, the Legislature, and the rest of the state power structure. "Research and discussion leading to radical critiques of methodologies, goals and pro cedures within various aca demic disciplines. "Chapel Hill and Orange County political action. "Vict Nam and the Do minican Republic. "Liason with national and international radical - liberal student movements." Waller and McCorkel sug gested as one of the UNC chapter's first projects the selection of a delegation to at tend the national SDS con gress this summer. Timothy Ray announced at the Gerrard meeting the cre ation of Students fcr Teachers, an ad hoc group he feels SDS should support. Ray expressed concern over the Department of English's supposed "publish or perish" policy, which he considers re sponsible for the release of Dr. William Goodykoontz.