Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 1, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
C Library .rials Dept. 32 870 napel Rill. ?J. c. GM Productions GM is opening up the se mester with a wide assortment of shows. For details and pric es, turn to Page 4. 2751-4 69er Meeting There will be a meeting of the 69er staff at 5 p.m. today in Roland Parker 2. GM. All writers should bring their stor ies to the meeting or contact Joe Coltrane at 968-917S. '.To Write Well Is Bitter Than To Rule9 Volume 74, Number 86 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1. 1967 Founded February 23, 1893 Vice President O n TtD of 7r ' f, - I. T " 11111 13 "" rn r-- rT-r!....... -- i - i ttT f w ; -w - - J """ yf "- !- " ' -' - I J ff I '. ? i , . I y.-- , - I ; I 1 Stops nn f-j L - i nr r,,tJ JeiiH"'!- " '''' "" "' T i r V i "... " i..,. . t 1 i i ANOTHER LINE. For those who have stood m line to drop add, to buy books, to eat lunch, to buy basketball tickets now there's another line. This time it's in Y Court, for buying notebooks, pens and pencils. Acutally lines are nothing new Powell Meets Rusk Student Body President Bob Powell and other student lead ers met with Secretary of State Dean Rusk Tuesday, with Powell and Harvard's student government president acting as official spokesmen for the group. Details of the 4 p.m. meet ing could not be published in today's Daily Tar Heel be cause of an early deadline. However, Eric Van Loon, one of Powell's aides, said the meeting most likely took place off-record . anyway, , Powell and Gregory Craig, the Harvard president, were selected as spokesman Mon day night. In other developments: ONE HUNDRED additional student leaders have joined the original group of 100 who signed a Dec. 29 letter to President Johnson in formally protesting U. S. Vietnam pol icy, Powell told reporters. Among the newcomers is the president of Davidson College, Rusk's alma mater.. AT THE MONDAY news conference where Powell, dis cussed the addition of the 100, he said the students are "ter rified" by a growing mood of "increased resistance" among college youth to U. S. Viet nam policy. Powell and his group asked : for administration assurance that the Vietnam war would not be unnecessarily escalat ed: He said he hoped the admin istration would reaffirm "its desire to negotiate a settle ment." Most student protests against Vietnam policy now do .... nrn"!!-. is Jf 1 ' i ... nJJll'M V'' ' v I i f -f.. - ! '"JT-'ST- Vgjwm ' t ' .v - " - - - : ' - " ' - " 1 jf . in . .k . -; . . 4 ' - V. "wws- - m - - ' i ..rf'n Binrvn mi Mini MM flMit KiTii- -"i.il l. l nmMwiMiMK' urtnM'itilMfft-ftrT i riff iTt-ir'f'r- rr n1P:" -T'ir i. CHAPEL HILL'S fourth weekly peace vigil, held one week ago, got too peaceful for at least one of the 200 persons participating. This little fellow, wearing a cowboy outfit, went to sleep on the sidewalk. Today will not involve dramatic acts like draft card burnings, Powell said, But, he continued, there will be "widening non-cooperation at home" should' the Viet nam conflict continue as it has in the past. Few students would refuse military service, he declared, but warned that few would volunteer. Powell said that student dis satisfaction with administra Stud ems To Support Textile :Strik By DON CAMPBELL DTH News Editor Several Carolina students are organizing a group to sup port strikes by the Cone Tex tile Mills workers against sev en Cone plants in the Greens boro area. The students have been in vited by the workers to assist the Cone locals of the Textile Workers Union of America in attaining redress of griev ances. . The support will be in the form of picketing, attending a strike vote meeting,' and meet ing with the workers to dis cuss their grievances. The Students and Faculty for Cone Workers Rights, led by Chuck and Ann Schunior, will have a booth in Y Court during the week to provide in formation about the union. Buttons, bumper stickers and literature will be avail to Y Court. Did you ever try to and cheese on rye? tion policy is "much more widespread" than he believed when he helped draft the Dec. 29 letter. The letter said that more students than ever will seek to avoid military service if the gap between their opin ions and the administration's is not narrowed. Powell's group yesterday was not the only one in Wash ington protesting the war, the Associated Press reported. Org jfi amzing.- .(brromp .JL able at the booth. Proceeds from the sale of buttons and stickers will be donated to the workers' strike fund, Schunior said. ' Schunior said yesterday that the National Labor Relations Board has issued a complaint against the Cone Management for refusing to bargain in good faith, as well as for intimi dating workers to prevent their joining the union and for unlawfully firing nine work ers: It is therefore legal, Schun ior claims, according to the National Labor Relations Act, for the Cone workers to strike. Organization of the group wil lcontinue throughout this week, Schunior said. Cone workers and a TWUA organizer will meet with stu dents and faculty at Wesley Hall on Thursday afternoon to discuss the situation and an swer questions. be the fifth vigil in as many weeks while a similar protest in Durham will go into its third week today. DTH Photo by Ernest H. Robl cash a check or buy a ham DTH Photo by Mike McGowan Two thousand persons, later joined by 1,000 others, demon strated quietly in front of the White House. Among the protesters were clergymen of the Protestant, Catholic and Jewish faiths. The picketing, in which at least 200 members of the American Council of Christian Churches participated, lasted about one hour. On s Sunday at 5; 30; there will be a meeting at ,Y Court for students who are inter- (Continued on Page 6) Classes- Starting In Residences By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer Classes are starting in the residence halls this week for the first time in Carolina's history. Student Book Co-op Sales End Today Today wil be the last chance for students to bring their books to the Student Co op to be sold. The Co-op will continue to sell books for the remainder of this week. As of 2:30 p.m. yesterday, the Co-op had sold $4,000 worth of books. About 2700 books had been handled at the Co-op by Monday night. Don Duskie, chairman of the Student Co-op Committee, feels that the Co-op's success has qualified it to be a permanent service: "At this point it is safe to say that the Co-op is here to stay at Carolina. The student body has enthusiastically sup ported it and made its suc cess possible. "The service provided by the Co-op is another example of the Student Government's continuing concern with the in dividual student on the cam pus. "I feel that the students at Carolina have emerged into a new era of- co-operation. They have now seem that by working together they can save money. The Book Co-op is pro bably only the first step on the road to better prices for the student." The Book Co-op is located in the Naval Armory, and is open from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. I JMf To Answer Questions Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey will participate in a panel discussion here March 1 in Memorial Hall. Robin West, head of the Car olina Forum,, which invited Humphrey, said two students and two faculty members would be on the panel. West said that quite likely one of the persons to take part in the discussion will be Student Body President B o b Powell, a strong critic of Ad- ministration Vietnam policy. The Forum head, a junior from Unionville, Pa., said Humphrey will not give a speech. West said the panel discus sion format would allow Hum phrey to be "more candid." West will moderate the dis cussion, expected to last about an hour. Humphrey is expected to meet with the Carolina Poli tical Union while in Chapel Hill. Arriving in North Carolina February 28, the Viee.JPresi dent will speak to a lmr's ' group , in Raleigh where he will ' spend the nightbefore coming here. . , rr. West said Gov. Moore "and the state's two senators asked him to come to UNC. West says t No definite the Forum had more than- a year to bring Humphrey here. Jo definite time has oeen set for Humphrey's UNC ap pearance, although it probab ly wjll take place in the early afternoon. . West says the Forum has also invited Senate .-Majority Leader Mike Mansfield to ap pear. No definite date has been set, but, according to West, Mansfield has express- Two classes and a seminar discussion group are being conducted on an experimen tal basis as part of the resi dential college program being instituted at Carolina. Dr. John Semonche will hold his Modern Civilization 2class Tuesday and Thurs day at noon in the Griffith House (8th floor) social room of Morrison. The second floor of Gran ville West will house an Eng lish 21A class taught by Dr. James Devereux from 4 to 5:15 Tuesday and Thursday. Dr. Kenneth Reckford will hold a small discussion group as part of a larger class of Classics 32. The dozen stu dents will meet at the Facul ty Club near Morehead Col lege Thursday afternoons. Of 22 students of Semon che's class, 2 are coeds. Sev en of Devereux's English class are women. This is the first time that women students habe been al lowed on the living floors of a residence hall on a regular basis. The two classes were held yesterday in the regular class rooms to straighten out place of classes and clerical prob lems connected with the new program. They will meet in the residence, halls for the first time tomorrow. Reckford's classics seminar will convene for the first time Thursday afternoon. Administrators stress that these classes are experimen tal, li these three show posi tive results, classes in the living-learning concept idea of the residence college will be increased next fall. These classes are in part the outgrowth of the Amherst convention at the University of Massachusetts last Novem ber. The governors of eight of nine residence colleges. Dean (Continued on Pagre 4) 11 cpeak. On C LA Lo, Vice President Humphrey ed "a definite interest". . in coming. George Wallace, segre gationist governor of Alabama, has been asked to come here, but has not formally accepted an invitation. Campus Dr. Rahman To Teach A native of Pakistan and ex pert on Asian affairs, Dr. Abu Taueb Rafigur Rahman, will teach a course of "Back grounds in International Con flict: Asia" at UNC this month. The course will be non-credit and no exam will be giv en. ' Dr. Rahman is a professor of Public Administration at the Rural Development Acad emy, Cumilla, Pakistan. The course will pay special attention to: a survey of the re action . of Asian countries to the Vietnam war, current is sues and problems surround ing the conflict, various peace moves, and prospects of a peaceful settlement. The course will be taught on Tuesday nights from 7:30 to 9:30 from February 7 to April 11. Application for enrollment should be made to UNC Ex tension Division, 209 Aberna thy Hall. y Mrs. Burris Wins Mrs. Marilyn Burris, UNC graduate music student, was selected Singer - of - the Year from contestants representing every region of the U n i t e d States at the National Asso ciation of Teachers of Singing Conference held recently in Washington, D. C. Mrs. Burris, an Albemarle native, is a lyric soprano and the voice student of Dr. Wil ton Mason, acting chairman of the Department. She is an ac tive member of the Opera Theatre group he directs. 1 : J ' ..v """" zTZ,m HERE WE GO . . . again. It's called drop-add. for those of you who haven't been through it. This is how it looked yesterday in the basement of Hanes Hall. That's how it looked Monday, and that's how it will look today and tomorrow. After that, people will mostly drop, without adding. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan Vietnam Of N. Y. Senator Jacob Javits of New York, one of the prime con tenders for the 1968 GOP vice presidential nomination, will discuss the Reoublican Par ty's future in the South Mon day. Javits, a liberal Republican, will soeak at 8 p.m. in Memo rial Hall under the sponsor shiD of the Carolina Forum. Javits will hold p brief press conference at the Raleigh-Durham Airport Monday after noon before coming to Chapel HiH. Briefs She attended the national contest as regional winner from the Southeastern Divis ion of NATS. Besides her award, she received a check for $1,000. Mrs. Burris will be presented throughout the nation in a con cert tour and will appear in a solo recital at next year's an nual NATS convention in Chi cago. She has also been invit ed to audition for the New York City Opera. Art Exhibit Entries Entries are now being ac cepted at the Schol of Public Health for its 1967 Art Exhibi tion to be judged February 11. A purchase prize of up to $400 will be awarded the win ning piece. About 50 artists have al ready entered works the art show is open to all practicing artists in North Carolina and adjoining states. John Brady, Owen Lewis, and William Tazewell will comprise the judging team. Brady is a painter, teacher and art dealer from Blowing Rock, and operates the John Brady School of Art and Gal lery there. Art critic and collector of Chapel Hill, Lewis is a Mark Ethridge Fellow of the South ern Regional Educational Board working in the field of arts at UNC. Tazewell, also an art critic and collector at UNC, is on leave of absence as associate editor and art editor of the Norfolk-Virginian-Pilot. . v , - f I 4... t !- .. S f -. w A i - J 1 ? J i Is Topic Senator The senator's appearance in Chapel Hill will be the first stop on a nation-wide tour which will test his suDoort for the 1968 vice presidential race. The son of immigrant par ents, Javits was born in a New York lower east side tenement in 1904. He attended night classes at Columbia Uni versity and was graduated J? f Sen. Jacob Javits from New York University Law School in 1926. His political career- began in 1932 when he joined the Ivy Republican Club in Man hattan's 18th Congressional District. He was active in 1937 and 1940 in the reform move ment of Mayor Fiorello La Guardla. He first ran for public of fice in 1946 as the Republican Liberal for the House of Rep resentatives in New York's traditionally Democratic 21st District. He was elected the first Republican representa tive from that district since 1923, and was re-elected three times. After eight years in Con gress, he ran for Attorney General of New York State in 1954 and defeated Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr. (Democratic -Liberal candidate )by a plural ity of 172,899 votes making him the only Republican on the state ticket to win that year. In 1956 he was elected Unit ed States Senator, defeating Mayor Robert Wagner (Democratic-Liberal) by a plurality of 458,774; carrying all but four of the state's 62 counties. Senator Javits was re-elected to a second term in the U. S. Senate in 1962, defeating James B. Donovan, the Democratic-Liberal candidate, by a plurality of 983,0y4 votes. Not only was he the biggest win ner in the nation in the 1962 elections, but he accomplished the unprecedented feat of car rying New York City by 137, 409 votes the first candidate in modern times to win a majority of votes in the city while running alone on a Re publican ticket. Javits was also chairman of John V. Lindsay's success ful campaign for mayor of New York City in 1965. During his service in t h e House of Representatives, he was a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee. In the Senate, he is ranking Republican on the Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, and a member of the Judici ary, Government Operations, and the Select Committee on Small Business. He is also ranking Republican senator on the Joint Economic Commit tee. He has been chairman for seven years of the Economic Committee of the NATO Par liamentarians' Conference, and is now chairman of a Special Committee on the Economic Development of Less - Devel oped NATO Nations and Rap porteur of the Political Com mittee of NATO. Javits is best known in his legislative career for his work in civil rights, civil liberties, health, education and welfare, and foreign economic policy. He has been active also in legislation dealing with hous ing, transportation, immigra tion, labor, travel, small busi ness and the arts.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1966, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75