i I U.M.C. Library Serial.3 Dept. Bo Ch lxh$?ar$JnW 275H The Publications Board will hold interviews tonight for those seeking the P a b Board endorsement for Daily Tar Heel editor. Also to be interviewed will be candi dates for Course Evaluation Booklet editor. The meeting is at 8 p.m. on the second floor of GM; Af7 KnrT SL Meeting yy There will be a special session of Student Legisla ture tonight at 7:30. Reappor tionment will be considered. ZD) The South9 s Largest College N etc s paper Volume 74, Number 104 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 I li J mm s jh m Jiravi SP Does Not Pick VP Man 4 Hours of Debates Hold Up SP Actions Bob Travis, administrative aide to Student Body Presi dent Bob Powell, Monday night defeated David Kiel for the Student Party nomination for president of the student body. The tally was 264 for Travis to 173 for Kiel. Travis, calling for educa tional reforms, said he favored the extension of the class cut system, a reading week Just prior to examinations, em phasis on out - of - classroom learning through experimental method, and a study of the merits of required courses in General College. He also called for a reform of the campus code to limit The second session will not be held tonight because of a special legislative meeting. enforcement to violations which occur only on campus. He further advocated more liberal handling of student welfare and aid programs, parucuiariy concermng wage increases for students on stu- dent aid. He called for the establish ing of a committee to investi gate the University Food Ser vice and to check the quality of food. Travis asked that a study of student stresses be conducted folllowing the sui cide in Morrison before exams. He said that he would try to personally visit every member of the General Assembly to represent the feelings and positions of UNC students. Travis has also served as the Director of the Dept. of Administration, legislative lia son for the executive branch of Student Government, and as Chairman of the Audit Board. . The DTH deadline prohibit ed further coverage of the SP convention. Complete results will appear tomorrow. UNC To Send Two Delegates To Model UN From April 5-8, UNC will send two delegations to the annual model United Nations meeting, held this year at East Carolina College. " Eight colleges and univer sities from Virginia, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina and South Carolina will send dele gations. The delegations will repre sent Great Britain and either Mexico or Syria. There will be four people on each dele gation plus any observers who wish to attend the meeting. During the session, resolu tions will be proposed by the delegations from the various countries, debated and then voted on. Several outstanding speak ers will address the assembly. Interviews for the delegate positions will be held Wednes day and Thursday from 2:30 4:00 in Roland Parker Lounge III in Graham Memorial. Preferably, applicants should have some background in international affairs, al- though this is not a require ment. The appointments will be announced at the end of the week. The expenses for the three day trip will cost about $15 for a delegate including reg istration, room and board, and $13 for an observer. Once the delegations have been selected, the partici pants will begm research on the countries they will be rep resenting. Last year, the conference was held at Duke. 0- N - , ' X-' . ....... - T - v" --of.. " C H. ' x i . Conventions have a way of either draff nn forever or are happeiied'at the SP and the latter at the UP. However, both r More Than 200 Sign Up For Experimental College Several additional courses will be off ered in the Experi mental College program. The new courses are: How to Learn a Language: Applied linguistics for begin ning language students; par ticularly for those having dif ficulty learning a language. The class will meet under Dr. Clay Monday from 2 to 4 p.m. at 101A Swain Annex. The Physics of Music and Musical Instruments: The na ture of sound as a physical phenomenon. It will be taught by Prof. L. Slifkin Thursday, March 2 at 7:30 p.m. Guerilla Warfare: Its His tory and Practice: Understand ing the principles of guerilla war and how it is fought. Richard Cooper will teach the course, and suggested the meeting time as Wednesday night at 7, but this can be ar ranged to suit the participants. A course on J. D. Salinger's works will be taught by Max Steele, UNCs writer in resi- It t?--q - - sv " 1 V ! i U " ( c?l J ' i ' "T '"" " "" t i ' - 1 ." -31 i " - . -c' And it rained for forty days and forty nights . . . Well, not really, but it did seem that way yesterday. By the way, was that really Noah's Ark in the middle of Y-Coort? It said Navy, anyway. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan TED iiray happenlsg at Carol&ia. They over In no time. The former dence. In addition to the four new courses, there are two changes of location and one addition for the original courses. Dr. Jay Rosenberg's cuorse on the Concept of the Experi mental College will be held from 2-5 p.m. on Saturday, not 7-9 p.m. on Saturday as printed in the catalogue. Edwin Kuehn's Attempts at Comparative Mythology to meet Thursday from 7-9 p.m., will meet in the Kappa Kap pa Gamma sorority house on 302 Pittsboro St., instead of 319 Wilson. Dariyl Powell'p American lerican vS Thought Between 1865 1900 will meet in 315 Library instead of the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. First meeting will be on Wednesday, March 1 from 7-9. Robert Collier announced that his New Materials in Sculpture class will have its first meeting in B-16 Ackland at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 21. la of them had many things in . which was nnliticlrintr It seeniMl what was going on but everybody had something to say 6 J J J Chancellor i ecniests - By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer The money requested by UNC at Chapel Hill for the next biennium 'would give us the plant for the year 1975," Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter son said yesterday. This is the projected date of maximum student enroll ment, "about 18,000," the UNC Oral Ban - Argument Set Today GREENSBORO (AP( Fi- nal oral arguments in a suit to test the constitutionality of North Carolina's amended Speaker Ban Law will be heard Tuesday morning in U. S. Middle District Court in Greensboro. The suit has been brought by a group of University of North Carolina students. Their lawyers have been al lotted 45 minutes to argue their case. A similar period has been allotted lawyers for the state. Judges who will hear the arguments and subsequently issue a decision are Clement P. Haynsworth of the 4th U. S. Circuit Court of Ap peals; Edwin M. Stanley of Middle District Court; and Alrno nL. Butler of U. S. Eastern District Court. The suit was filed by the students after UNC Chancel lor J. Carlyle Sitterson re fused to allow Herbert Ap theker and Frank Wilkinson to speak on the Chapel Hill campus last spring. Aptheker is director of the American Institute of Marxist Studies in New York. Wilkin is executive director of a committee which seeks to abolish the House Commit . tee on Un-American Activi ties. The state law, passed in 1963, barred Communists and persons pleading the Fifth Amendment in loyalty cases from speaking on campuses of state-supported institutions. The General Assembly, at a special session in 1965, amended the law, giving trus tees control over speakers. Trustees later delegated au thority in the matter to chan cellors of the branches. university eceive common. Not the least of that nn one knew eiacdv Says '67 Look - To The Future chancellor said, "assuming community colleges develop the way they ought to." Sitterson added that this date is pending upon facts known at this time. 'There is no way I can know now what will happen in the next four years to alter the situation." The chancellor is "both pleased and very disappoint ed" with the recommenda tions made last week by Gov ernor Moore concerning ap propriations for the Universi ty for the years 1967-69. The University requested about $50,000,000 from the state in capital improvements, salary raises, and operation al expenses, but the Gover nor recommended "consider ably less than we requested," said Sitterson. Sittersnn stressed that the proposals are not binding to the General Assembly. "We are still most hopeful that we wil be able to get more than the Governor rec- ommended when we take our case to the Joint Appropria- tions Committee," the chan- cellor said. In capital improvements, the chancellor is "very pleas- ed and nappy" with Moore's recommetndations for: j-- fcV J FRED WARING and his Pennsylvanians will be appearing at Cannichael at 8 p.m. on Feb. 27. Tickets are being sold at the GM Information desk, at $3 for reserved seats, $2.50 for reserved section, and $2 tickets are half-price with I.D. V abort U. Bet thti Ge way pzZSct is. If tite nattaal parties can't get together completely, how can students? Budget A new social science build ing costing an estimated $3.5 million. A chemistry building esti mated at $4.3 million; A new business administra tion building costing $1.5 mil lion; Appropriation suggestions of over $300,000 for athletic fields and tennis courts. Of the total cost, the state usually pays about two dol- lars for every dollar from oth- er sources, particularly federal funds. However, there were numer ous specific projects which the Governor did not recommend. Among them were: A dramatic arts building, which would nave housed both a tneatre stage ana an expen- mental stage. "I ' feel that such a theatre is central" Sit- terson said, "both to the Urn versity community and to the arts departments." Studios in the Ackland art center for artists. In the last few years "there has been a tremendous development in art." he s"1- Carolina needs studios for students to work in. The Ackland Art Center is now totally financed by pri- vate funds. for general admission. Student cards. ? 7" chancellor Sitterson NSA Will Return CIA-Backed Grant By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer The National Student Asso ciation voted Saturday to re turn the unused portion of a financial grant to a CIA-spon sored foundation, an nsA representative said Sunday Eric Van Loon, chairman of the NSAS Legai and Fi- mmce Committee, said his committee voted to send back t0 the Youth and Student Af- fairs Foundation "all that's left of a $28,000 grant." How much of the grant re mains is not known. "The grant was for a year," Van Loon said, "and five to six months have elapsed. I would therefore guess that about half of the $28,000 has been spent. All that is left will be sent back to the (Youth and Student Affairs) foundation." Van Loon, returning from an emergency session of the NSA's National" Advisory Board, refuted the story that the NSA was secretly trying to maintain association with the CIA. That story," he said, "was an absolute, complete fabrication of a UPI report er. "I was extremely surprised that the UPI ran the story," Van Loon said. He said that he met the UPI reporter and described him as "very young, in his early twenties, totally "mod" complete with boots, long hair, cordury pants, and double-breasted pea coat" Very few of the NSA mem bers knew of the ties with the CIA, Van Loon reported. "In the past, only the pres ident an d the International Affairs vice president, and perhaps one or two staff dl Dunivant Gets VP Selection Purdv Gets UP Nod In 1 Hour Meeting By CAROL WONSAVAGE DTH Staff Writer The University Party nomi nated by pcclaimatkm Bill Purdy for student body presi- , dent and Noel Dunivant for vice president at the U.P. convention last night in Car roll Hall. Also nominated by a cclai ill ation were Gail Poe, secretary, and Hugh Saxton, treasurer. Two candidates were nomi nated from the floor for sen ior class president, secretary, and social chairman. Don McPhaul won the presi dential nomination over Bill Wood by a vote of 178-90; Susan Dockerage won secre tarial nomination over Jenny Sue Kirkland, 147 to 121; and Susan Spiller took the social chairman nomination by re count from Fran Dayvault, 138 to 131. Billy Travis won senior class vice presidential nomination and Charles Silver the treasur er's, both by acclaimation. The convention also nomi nated NSA representatives Tom Manley, Karen Gibbon, Kenneth Day, and Bill Souther land. Nomination for Carolina Athletic Association represen tative was postponed until next convention meeting. In his acceptance speech, candidate Bill Purdy said, "The University Party will focus on the problems of the University to see that some thing gets done,, not who gets . credit for it." V He said that the student government should see educa tion as its primary responsi bility. He hopes to see pro vision made for independent study for credit, an organized tutorial program, and recom mend that drop add be com pleted in one place on campus. Purdy added that the U.P. hopes to see the expansion of the residence college system and will support the growing residence college radio sys tem. members have known that the CIA was supplying NSA' with funds," he said. Van Loon denied that he had any knowledge of the CIA's involvement: "I heard of it only hours before I boarded a p 1 a n e for the emergency session in Wash ington." "To my knowlege, no mem ber of either the National Supervisory Board or the Legal and Finance Commit tee for the last 15 years has been aware of it," he said. "The number of those who knew was kept to as small a number as possible" to re duce the chances of the story getting out. The origins of the involve ment are uncertain, he said. "I suspect it began inno cently enough in the early '50's," Van Loon said, "with, students looking for support' for travel abroad. Later, stu dents were required to sub mit to CIA backed organiza tions reports of the overseas transactions. "It evolved that the CIA was supplying up to 80 per cent of all NSA funds," he said. He added that the pres sures on top NSA officials were tremendous, "with offi cers having to lie to the rest of the staff about where the money was coming from. They had to live on two dif ferent levels both as under cover agents and as students in the Association." Rather than being disillu sioned with what has occured. Van Loon said that he had "a real sense of confidence in knowing that the NSA is pulling together to make the Association even stronger and more effective than it had been in the past."