1966 Trustees' Speaker Rules
'Continued from Page 1)
mlheJTl0r 3 reqUGSt for reservation of a
a) Name of tg the Mwing information:
Xr organization
s)eakerBl08raPhiCal information abo the proposed
i c) Request for a date and place of meeting.
70n eiPt of the afeove information,, the
Chancellor shall refer the proposed invitation to a
joint student-faculty standing committee on visiting
speakers for advice. He may consult such others as
he deems advisable.
; 4. The Chancellor shall then determine whether or
not the invitation is approved.
Once a speaker affected by G.S. 116-199 and 200 has
been invited and his acceptance received, his appear
ance on the campus shall be governed by these reg
ulations: 1. AH statutes of the State relating to speakers
and use of facilities for speaking purposes are to be
obeyed.
2. Student attendance at campuswide occasions
is not compulsory. on the campus
doesreXt disapprove of the
speakers or what is said by them.
4. As a further precaution and to assure free and
open discussion as essential to the safeguarding of
free institutions, each Chancellor, when confer
it appropriate, will require any or all of the follow-
inga) That a meeting be chaired by an officer of the
University or a ranking member of the faculty; - -
b) That speakers at the meeting be subject to
questions from the audience: f
c) That the opportunity be provided at the meet
ing or Ser to present speakers of different points of
The Chancellor shall keep the President informed
of the application of these regulations covering the
mvUation to and the appearance of visiting speakers
affected by G.S. 116-199 and 200.
NO HERN?
' Three scruples equal one
dram in apothecaries' weight.
Speaker Ban History
(Continued from Paee 4
ary who has since testified before congression
al committees on the nature of communism.
Leonard Patterson, another witness, is a
speaker for the John Birch Society and a
former American Communist. He is the autho
or of "The Revolution Begins."
Dr. and Mrs. Harry A. Overstreet, who
will also offer depostions, are noted anti
communists. Overstreet, who is 91 years old,
is the author of many anti-communist books.
GRAHAM'S THOUGHTS
In a commencement speech here last June,
former Consolidated University President and
U. S. Senator Dr. Frank Porter Graham told
graduating seniors, "The student leaders, in
stead of resorting to sit-ins, resorted to sit
tings of the highest court, in accordance with
due process of law and their faith in the
courts.
"In a situation in which leaders on both
sides are believers in and are committed to
the American Bill of Rights," Graham said,
"the need now is not for taking hostile sides
but rather the need is for clarification by the
highest courts of the relevancy of the princi
ples of the Bill of Rights, to whose side all
sides may rally on a reconciling common
ground."
riealth Workers Needed Badly
WASHINGTON (UPD-The
nation must attract 10.000 re
cruits a month to the field of
health services over the next
10 years, the U. S. Depart
ment of Labor reports.
The critical need for health
service workers is underscor
ed in "Training Health Serv
ice Workers." a report re
leased bv Secretary of Labor
W. Willard Wirtz and John
W. Gardner. Secretary of the
Department of Health, Edu
cation and Welfare.
Use the Classifieds
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