-trials
Charl Hill. ?I.C.
Fair And Cool
Generally fair zzd a Utile
cooler today. m&t in tie up
per :cs. Saturday generally
lair aaJ cool. '
275Ut A
Basketball Send-Off
A seJ-Cif fcr tie basket all
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Cared chad Asdltsriaa todiy
at 12:53 wtra tic Tar Heels
mill be UaTbj fcr Xisiruk.
Texru aJ thtxr gase riti
Vas&rtnt. Tt trim wul t
stayisg ia tie Capital Park
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! 1
75 Years of Editorial Freedom
Volume 75, Number 70
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8. 1967
Founded Febnjarv 23.
1:
sraeli Calls MM-ISa.
.9
n
IE
te"n? hit
ST i B I !
'i
f l t
6Be
By STEVE PRICE
of Th9 Daily Tar Hetl Stag
A high-ranking Israeli
economist said Wednesday
chance? for a peace settlement
in the Middle East are better
now than they have been In "in
the past 20 years."
Aharon Kidan, special assis
tant on economic and social af
fairs to Israeli Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol, went on to say
the major obstacle to peace is
the psychological barrier the
Arabs have in refusing to ac
cept the fact that Israel
there to stay."
"Israel is willing now
is
to
5. Vietnam-Long Cease-Fires Out
SAIGON South Vietnam Thursday ruled out any lengthy
cease-fires for Christmas, New Year's and the Buddhist holiday
of Tet unless Communist North Vietnam brightens the prospects
for peace talks.
"We will not extend the truces for the sake of extending the
truces," South Vietnamese Foreign Minister Tran Van Do told
UPI in an interview. "We will not extend the truces for the other
side to intensify the war."
The Viet Cong have said they will observe three-day truces for
Christmas and New Year's and a seven-day truce for Tet the
Vietnamese New Year in late January and early February.
President Nugyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam has responded
to the statement by saying the South Vietnamese armed forces
would observe one-day truces for Christmas and New Year's and
a three day truce for Tet. In a subsequent statement, Thieu said
the truces for Christmas and .New Year's might be two days
each.
Goldberg Reported Ready To Quit
WASHINGTON Arthur J. Goldberg's tenure as ambassador
to the United Nations appeared Thursday to be nearing an end.
Administration sources. disclosed
ho wants to quit.
Goldberg has not, howwer,
and officials said there was
departure would be delayed for
to clear up pending matters.
For some time Goldberg's
becoming restive in the U.N.
latitude he had expected for his
Allied Troops Maul Red Regiment
SAIGON A team of 1,300 American and South Vietnamese
troops Thursday mauled part of a North Vietnamese regiment
seeking food supplies in the second day of heavy fighting on South
Vietnam's rice rich Bong Son Plain 300 miles norht of Saigon.
Field reports said about 1,000 men of the U.S. 1st Cavalry
Division airmobile and 300 South Vietnamese troops had killed
and 300 South
14S North Vietnamese in a force
the Bong Son flats. Allied losses
wounded.
SM!LBf!!fft!!!.
w a stitnotoN Senate and
day on a compromise Social Security bill increasing benefits 13
per cent and raising minimum monthly payments from $44 to
$55. , . , ,
After agreeing on the Social Security provisions substan
tially less than President Johnson requested the conferees
began trying to resolve differences in the welfare portion of the
bill.
But UPI learned that the benefits would be increased 13 pr
cent and minimum monthly payments raised to $55, all to be
financed by broadening the payroll tax base effective Jan. 1, and
increasing the payroll tax January 1, 1967.
Johnson Attends Spellman Funeral
NEW YORK President Johnson led thousands of mourners
of all faiths Thursday as Francis Cardinal Spellman was buried
under the high altar of St. Patrick's Cathedral after a solemn
high pontifical requiem mass concelebrated by 19 Roman
Catholic prelates, including nine carinals.
Three thousand persons stood in rain and drizzle in streets
outside the vast Gothic cathedral, listening over loudspeakers to
the services for the 78-year-old archibishop of New York who died
last Saturday.
140 Booked In Neiv York Protest
NEW YORK Hundreds of antidraft demonstrators were
taken into custody en masse Thursday in a sweeping police
crackdown to prevent an outbreak of Vietnam protests from
marring the visit of President Johnson and Vice President Hubert
H. Humphrey to attend funeral services for Francis Cardinal
Spellman.
Police moved so quickly that not even the vast Manhattan
paddy wagon fleet was able to keep up with the lines of pro
testers waiting to be hauled away to jail. Some of those picked up
charged they were "trapped" by officers.
By the time the President and vice president arrived in the ci
ty at 12:30 p.m. EST, streets were cleared of "Stop The Draft
Week" protesters. Thorough-fares 10 blocks in all directions from
St. Patrick's Cathedral, where the Spellman rites were con
ducted, were cordoned off to prevent any new outbreak of trou
ble. Although about 300 were picked up, only about 140 persons
were booked. The others were released later when the demonstra
tions ended.
work for peace," Kidan said,
"but she i3 also willing to wait
for it."
Speaking before a small
crowd at Ilillel House, the
economist said all the
repercussions of the June war
have not come to light yet, and
that a situation may arise
where a solution of peace is the
lesser of two evils for the
Arab3.
"The Arab countries cannot
stay the way they are now,"
Kidan pointed out. "They have
no economic or political
equilibrium something has to
ftp Daily Jar tjrr I
World News
BRIEFS
By United Prew International
he- has told President Johnson
submitted a formal resignation
always a possibility that his
some time if Johnson asked him
associates have toown he was
Ob, where he did not find the
negotiating skill.
Vietnamese troops had killed
of about 900 dug into positions on
were placed at 11 killed and 56
House negotiators agreed Thurs
give.
"In Egypt the economy has
been ruined because they lost
their foreign income im
mediately after the war. In
Jordan the situation is the
same, only worse."
Winding up a six-week na
tionwide college campus tour
sponsored by the National
Hfflel Foundations, Kidan
outlined three points that
Israel plans to follow in any at
tempts at a peace settlement
They are:
ISRAELI FORCES are going
to remain where they are until
TefflcMini
ID
OF
By WAYNE HURDER
of TTie Daily Tar Htel Staff
Only , about 60 students and
faculty members came to
Memorial Hall Thursday afte
rnoon for a marathon "Teach
in" on the Vietnam War, the
draft and the relation of both
to American society.
The low turnout caused the
Injured
In Wrecl
Two UNC sophomores have
been hospitalized as a result of
a motorcvcle-car collision
Wednesday at the intersection)
of Greenwood Road and N. C.
Highway 54. v
listed in serious condition in
Memorial Hospital is George
v,' re fram Greensboro.
Lafayette sianmon, a
stannton was the driver of the
motorcycle.
iRSey Ashbura Elliot, also a
sophomore from Greensboro,
is listed in satisfactory con
dition. He was a passenger on
the motorcycle.
The two occupants of the car
room of the hospital and
released.
The driver was Linda Jean
Z;:. T V
was Ann Marietta Sullivan, a
sophomore
Conn.
from Watertown,
Students
Chancellor Sitterson
Gets New
C. Knox Massey of Durham,
retired advertising agency ex
ecutive, has been named
special assistant to the
chancellor.
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sit
terson said Massey will join his
staff immediately as a
volunteer, dollar-a-year man.
A member of the .University's
Board of Trustees, Massey will
devote his primary attention to
securing scholarships and en
dowed professorships for the
University.
The Durham man, an alum
nus of .the University, retired
and tenninated the company
he founded, C. Knox Massey
and Associates, Inc., on Oct.
31, after 42 years of business.
Massey was honored on his
40th anniversary with the com
pany for personally supervis
ing and purchasing more
advertising for a single pro
duct than any other agency in
the South.
Massey will continue to live
Free Flicks
Changes Set
Free flicks this weekend 8
in Carroll Han wfll be S
'Soldier an the Rain" on
:& Friday and "The Pumpkin :
& Eater" on Saturday, at 7
g: and 9:30 pjm. S
These movies are not the
: ones originaUy announced, :
j: because they were both
: substituted by the sup-i?
: pliers. :
-M.
a complete, satisfactory peace
settlement is reached.
ISRAEL WANTS direct
negotiations with the Arabs
and is unwilling to let a third
party such as the United Na
tions name the terms of
peace.
PEACE WELL be a
and-take affair." but
"give
Israel will be generous when peace
talks come.
Kidan, who fought in the
Israel war for independence,
said there was no chance for
complete peace until fee Arab
nations recognize Israel.
Tmfmoii
first speaker, political science dissent,
professor Lewis Lipsitz, to "It is vital that their ques
comment that there were so tions be asked for the well
few people because "the war is being of the nation," he said,
one of the worst bores that has Lipsitz told the audience that
befallen) us."' most students on campus have
"Pain is boring, destruction little information on me war.
is coring, ignorance is bor
ing. . . So much so that one
wants to turn away from it,"
he said.
Those who came to the after
noon session of the Teach-in,
scheduled to last from 4 to 11
pjn., heard comments from
two professors and two cam
pus chaplains and saw a film
on life in North Vietnam.
Although the audience was
given an opportunity to reply
to all the speakers, only four
ciwiui uiu 2u ctuu csicy were
in basic agreement with the
speakers.
Presbyterian chaplain Harry
Smith and Baptist Chaplain
Jack HalseU discussed the war
in the lightrof C3iristian'tradi"
tion and beliefs.
Smiffi commented that
churches have remained silent
during the current dissension
over the war, and that this has
usully been 4interpreted as
support of the status quo.
"I would wish the churches
would record their objections
to war when it hurts those not
involved in conducting war
such as Vietnamese civilians,"
he said.
He also called for churches
to uphold the right of all
persons, regardless of their
religions, to be conscientious
objectors.
Halsell spoke, he said, out of
"a distress with the growing
tendency
Ut
to label as traitors
ii , m m
muac wixu ericas i u c l i
Assistant
in Durham and retain an ac
tive interest in the K. M.
Corporation of Durham of
which he is president.
"I am pleased that a loyal
alumnus of the University and
a member of the Board of
Trustees will join us in the
University to work in the area
of his long-time interests,
scholarships and endowed pro
fessorships," said Chancellor
Sitterson. "Knox Massey has
the knowledge, the judgment,
the skills and the information
that will make this close
association with Chapel Hill in
valuable to his alma mater."
A member of the Class of
1925. he cot his start in ad-
vertising on the campus, serv-
mg as business manager oi
student publications and as
advertising manager for
Chapel Hfll businesses. He is a
member of the executive com
mittees of several foundations
as- r
established to enrich the total
educational program at Chapel
H2L
He created the Councii
Massey Scholarship Fund in
1941, in honor of his father and
a long-time business associate,
both of whom were former
students at the University.
Currently, eight students are
receiving financial assistance
from- the fund. He was
chairman of the Universirs
Advisory Committee on Public
Relations from 1955 to 1957.
Massey is past president of
the Durham Chamber of Com
merce and Durham Rotary
Club, and is a director of the
Durham branch of the
Wachovia Bank and Trust Co.
and of the Home Savings and
Loan Association.
Before the war, the basic
ideology of Israel was to have
Peace," he said, "and that of
the Arabs was that they had no
reason for peace.
"Now the Jews still want
peace, but the Arabs still see
themselves as masters of the
area."
Emphasizing that Israel was
billing to wait" for peace
talks, Kidan said peace could
not be pushed. "Political in
itiative is in the hands of the
Arabs and is something they
have, to work out themselves,"
he said.
: 'That's what the purpose of
this the Teach-in) was," he
said, "a chance to learn at this
University."
He said that the worst
outcccne of the war that there
could be would be for the U.S.
to win.
However, he added, "it
would create a very severe
political porblem in the nation
cessfully."
if ' the war ends unsuc-
The solution to this dilemma,
he said, is "to reorient the na
tion to make a peaceful set
tlement possible."
, The most important lesson to
be learned from the war,-according
to Lipstiz; is that the
U.S. is not politically and
morally superior to the rest of
the world.
R
ecent Imiorovemeiits Give
Chase Increased Business
By STEVE KNOWLTON
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Business in Chase Cafeteria
is really picking up well" said
rvm Misn rtrprtn-r f
ttwc;t VnA 3rvi(.P
Thnn:
J
He said that "Chase has
been taking in about $200-$400
daily" since PnHacnan and
Chase Manager Jesse
Carpenter instituted grievance
meetings three weeks ago.
This figure represents a 20
33.3 per cent increase over the
average during the fiscal year
beginning July 1, and "is
usually putting the cafeteria at
or over the break-even roint of
$1,500 per day," Prillaman
said.
The director ssid the
"general . upward trend"
results primarily from im
provements suggested at week
ly meetings with South Cam
pus students and college
masters who offer suggestions
on improving the quality and
appearance of Chase.
Campus Police Reorganized
The Campus police force will
be reorganized, effective Mon-
day, separating the offices of
campus security and campus
traffic control.
Arthur J. Beaumont, chief of
.
Bynum Riggsbee
. . poUce captain
-r T TT !hj ' ' .
'" . -. - v, .
; -" . '- .JTv -- - J i
Presbyterian chaplain
)rmifooe Opened
By
UNC
Upperclass coeds at the
University cf North Carolina at
Greensboro will be able to live
in "open" residence halls next
year that will not have closing
hours.
The decision was made by
UNC-G's student legislature
Wednesday night, and only
awaits approval by the
chancellor.
The legislature also ap
propriated the money to im
Prillaman said at the last
meeting Tuesday, "everyone
there agreed that the overall
quality of Chase's food has
gone up in the last few weeks.
Specific grievances concerning
salads, vegetables, portion
size, attractiveness of
employes, and student specials
have been heard and acted
upon. . '
"The most dramatic change
has probably been the entrees
on student special," he said.
'While they used to be 35 and
40 cent meats, now they are in
the 50-60 cent category."
He said this and the nightly
specials i ncluding the
spaghetti nights have been
the most welcome changes.
Discussed at the meeting
Tuesday night were:
SALES OF cigarettes in
Chase.
CHECK CASHING in Chase
and Lenoir.
MEAL BOOKS offering a
discount for lot tickets.
A PRE-Christmas iuau.
the campus police, will become
University Safety Officer and
Bynum Riggsbee will become
caDtain of campus police, ac-
cording to University Business Riggsbee will be in charge en
manage J. A. Williams. . forcement of traffic regula
The change in structure of tions oa campus, enforcement
the existing campus police of criminal laws on campus
department was announced and other University property,
Thursday following the recom-
mendation of a special com
mittee, appointed by Chan
cellor J. Carlyle Sitterson to
study the safety situation on
campus and the problems of
enforcing laws and traffic
regulations.
The committee noted in its
report the need for "placing
additional emphasis on preven-
ting damage to property and
injury to persons and, at the
same time, to continue its
poncing activities at a high
leveL"
Beaumont, as, safety officer,
win oversee the inspection of
all buildings for fire hazards
and the operation of safety
clinics, and will act as Mason
with the State Insurance
I
DTH Staff Phot hu STXVT ADAMS
Harry Smith addresses empty seats
... at teach-in in Memorial Hall yesterday
plement an extension of closing
hours at UNC-G for next
semester. The new closing
hours will be 12 a.m., Monday
Thursday; 1 a.m., Friday and
Sunday; and 2 ajn. on Satur
day. Two of UNOG's new high
rise dormitories will probably
be designated "open" halls for
next year.
These halls can house 1,400
women. If a larger number of
Prillaman said he decided
not to sell cigarettes at Chase
because "because that's
ritfully a concession' of the
Book Exchange and we don't
want to cut in on their business
when it's not in our area of
concern."
The Pine Room still vends
cigarettes, he said, "but that
practice was started years ago
before all these dorm snack
bars were open. Then, the Pine
Room was open and the Y
Building was closed, so this
was the only place open at
night."
He added that cigarettes are
still sold for 25 cents per pack
at the Pine Room. "Prices
haven't gone up very much for
us," he said, "so I don't see
why we should charge the
students more."
He said be had "instituted im
mediately" the practice of
cashing checks for the price of
a meal any day of the week.
He said he was considering the
(Continued on Pare 6)
Department and State Labor
Department in respect to fire
and employment hazards.
As campus police captain,
and investigations as may be
indictated
University authority.
He wffl also oversee the in
vestigation of campus ac
cidents involving University
owned equipment accidents in
volving non-University vehicles
win be investigated by town
police) and assistance to town
ponce wnen requested by
Town of Chapel HilL
the
Both officials wffl be directly
responsible to Director of
Construction and Engineering
AHen Waters.
Beaumont came to the
University as Chief of Campus
PoMce eight years ago upon
retirement from the New York
i I
- J
"1
1L
Yote
girls apply to live in an "open"
hall, other dormitories could
be reclassified as 4topen."
The bill as submitted
stipulated that any sophomore,
junior or senior with parental
permission is eligible to live in
an "open" dormitory. Its
amended -version said that
"women who are 21 or married
do not need parental
permission.
The first amendment pro
posed in the Wednesday night
session said, "All upperclass
residence halls shall b e
designated open halls and not
observe closing hours," but
this amendment was
defeated.
There was little debate prior
A referendum may be held In
the spring to gauge the cam
pus's opinion cf the action.
UNC-G Dean of Women
Rosemary McGee said the
passed measure "was
somewhat of a compromise,
because they restricted it so as
to exclude freshmen."
Dean McGee thinks that
parental feeling will determine
if all upperclass dormitories
wfll be "open" halls in the
future.
She has not met with the
chancellor yet to discuss the
bHl and cannot predict when
his approval, or disapproval,
win be given.
Either night watchmen or
magnetic key cards could be
used to maintain security in
open halls, Dean McGee
She feels that any of the up
perclass dormitories could
possibly be converted into
"open" halls, but she picked as
likely choices the high-rise
dorms or the coed
UNCG's coed dormitory is
divided by wings between men
and women.
City Fire Department.
Riggsbee, a native of Chapel
HOI, has been with the campus
police seven years. Prior to
that he was with the Carrboro
PoHce Department.
r
Arthur Beaumont
etycf"
- jJ