U.II.c. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chance Show11 Increasing cloudiness and cold today with chance cf sleet or snow late in the day. Highs in the 30s. Sabbath Services Sabbath Ere serriefs wI3 be ttli st IOfl Hesse at 7::) p.m. this errsirs:. Joel c n it-" E it y Irad tae services. 76 Years of Editerid Freedom Volume 75, Number 107 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1SC3 Founded February 3." l? Key Appp vLjftn It r p (ED(R(D By RICK GRAY of Th Daily Tar Heel Staff The Student Legislature Thursday night passed, with no opposing vote, the propos ed drug policy calling for a faculty - student - adminisra tion judicial board to deal with tate By RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Governor Dan K. Moore said Thursday that it was his opi nion that the state should not appeal the federal court decision declaring that the speaker ban is un constitutional. In voicing his opinion. Moore 1 " ' r-Hi - X Duke Demonstrator Found Guilty DURHAM, N.C. Louis H. (Hutch) Traver, Duke sophomore charged with interfering with a Marine recruiting team on the university campus, was found guilty Thursday by a faculty coun cil. The council had been especially appointed to hear the case against Traver which resulted from a campus incident last week. Traver was charged specifically with violating the recent ad ministrative ruling of Duke President Douglas Knight governing student conduct during campus demonstrations. Traver and a freshman coed, Karlana Carpen were accused of blocking the door where the Marine team was working. Traver is . from Morrisville, Pa., and Miss Carpen from Rocky Hill, N.J. Traver was notified of the council action by letter Thursday. The letter said he was placed on disciplinary probation. That means he could be suspended or expelled from Duke should he become involved in a similar action again. The council Tuesday night cleared Miss Carpen of a similar charge. Traver was given 48 hours to appeal the decision. Marines Grab Part Of Hue Citadel HUE U.S. Marines raised the American flag over the southeast corner of Hue's Citadel Thursday, then fought their way west where another flag flew the Viet Cong banner. "Dammit, I'd like to get that thing down," said Brig. Gen. Foster N.C. Lahue, commander of American Leathernecks in Hue. Attacking as U.S. jets dropped bombs and napalm on the Communists ahead of them, Lahue's Marines captured the southeaster corner of the Citadel in the 23rd day of the savage battle for once4)eautiful Hue. The old imperial city, a walled fortress lying between the southeast and southwest corners of the Citadel, was still in Com munist hands. The tattered red and blue Viet Cong flag still flew as it has for more than three weeks. By taking the southeast corner, the Marines also secured the northern end of the Hguyen Hoang Bridge across the Perfume River running parallel to the south Citadel wall. President Requests Urban Aid AUSTIN, lex. Warning "there is no time to lose," Presi dent Johnson Thursday asked Congress to approve a multi-billion-dollar program of public housing and private incentives to rebuild the nation's cities. It could cost, over the decade in which Johnson wants to build 26 million new housing units and take steps against poverty and despair, up to $35 billion m public Johnson set the 26 million new and was relying on private them. The government, with the help of industry, would do the rest. The price tag on the program was hard to pin down. The cost of new legislation adcompanying the Presidential message was estimated at $6.3 billion for new authorizations. But the total cost of the plan, as far as it is spelled out in the message, is adtually v . lmi; Jit. it i" i .... - $10.4 billion, with overall estimates of just the 10-year housing goal running as nign as $35 billion. The $10.4 billion figure represents the $6.3 billion in new authorization requests plus money from existing allied programs already approved by Congress. Soviets Charge Lack Of Protection MOSCOW The soviet government said Thursday that U.S. authorities were to blame for the bombing of the Russian Embassy in Washington Wednesday because they did not act after threats had been made against the embassy. Through its official newspaper, Izvestia, the Kremlin said the embassy has sought and failed to get protection after receiving threats. President Jonnson even received an anonymous letter two weeks ago threatening the embassy, Izvestia added. For these reasons, it said blame for the bombing "lies on the American side." An article written by Izvestia's Washington bureau said four anonymous telephone calls after the predawn bombing "threatened the embassy with new acts of sabotage." "This criminal act was possible only because the American authorities ignored elementary obligations to ensure the in violability and security of the Soviet Embassy," Izvestia said "American official organs can by no means confine themselves to expressions of regret." the "illicit and improper use of certain drugs." Introduced and spoken for by representative Tom Benton, the drug policy calls for a board of two students, two faculty members and Dean of Student Affairs C. 0. Cathey Appeal9 JL. . JL rid himself of the albatross that former Student Body President Paul Dickson said Tuesday had been "around his neck since the day he came in to office." Political observers across the state have been predicting, all week that the state would Zfy Oail (Tar ffrri Vtarlcl News BRIEFS By United Prett International and prviate funds. housing units as a national goal enterprise to build 20 million of as chairman. The board would be the judicial body responsible for all cases involving the use or illicit possession of - drugs (cannibis. amphetamines, bar bituates, opiates, and ballu cinogenics, for example) by not appeal the court decision fofseveral reasons. The most often mentioned reason was the fact that com munists and other con troversial persons are emo tional issues and the speaker ban has . been around for so long that all emotion on the subject has died out. Moore's statement said it is his "hope that the trustees and administration of the Universi ty will adopt reasonable rules and regulations within the framework of this opinion con cerning . the appearance of visiting speakers. . ." He added, speakers should be permitted to appear "in such a manner as to serve the educational purposes of the in stitution and not the purposes of the enemies of our free society. The Campuses should not be exploited as convenient outlets of discord and strife." The Governor said that he had reached the decision to recommend that the trustees not appeal the courts declara tion that the ban js un constitutional because it is "vague" after conferring with BTH Murks 75 Today is the 75th anniversary of The Daily 3 Tar Heel. -. t M An anniversary su plement to the Tar Heel is included in this issue, commemorating 75 years of ijij editorial freedom and relating 75 years of antics ! and agony. g The past is planning to converge on the :$ Carolina campus this weekend in the personages of past Tar Heel editors and staff members. Men who have since become famous will gather again to remember the college newspaper of g which they were once a part. Why By LARRY KEITH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The North Carolina-Davidson basketball controversy, largely avoiaea Dy ine. one while engineered by the other, came to a head Thursday afternoon in a column by Charlotte News sports editor Ronald Green. Asking "Why don't Davidson and UNC play?" Green wrote, "It looks like a natural" since they are "two of the biggest basketball schools in the coun try." Green concluded that "North Carolina does not want to play Davidson. The incumbent doesn't want to debate the challenger." The Davidson side was presented by basketball Coach Lefty Driesell, who told Green, nn w omen i rustees visi By RICK GRAY , The Daily Tar Heel staff Ten of the 11 women members of the Board of Trustees of the University will be on campus Monday and Tuesday to "see Carolina through the eyes , of the coeds." The visit is being sponsored by the Women's - Residence council and Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. The WRC has had a committee organized since the fall to organize the visit, and a complete two-day program has been arranged, mcluding an open luncheon Tuesday. The luncheon, open to all women students, will be from one to 2:30 Tuesday afternoon m Lenoir Hall, and a students of the University. It was pointed out by Benton that the policy would net be confined to. student use on campus, but would also cover student offenses off campus and outside the Chapel Hill vicinity. Deputy Atty. Gen. Ralph Moody , and consulting attorney William T. Joyner. 1 There still remains" some question as to whether the 1969 session of the General Assembly will try to draft a constitutional speaker ban law. . However, observers in Raleigh feel that, since there is already a law on the state books prohibiting the use of state-owned buildings "for the purpose of advocating, , ad vising or teaching a doctrine that the government of the United States, the State of North Carolina or any political subdivision thereof should be overthrown by force, violence or any other unlawful means," no new ban will b e formulated. Another strong reason for not appealing the ' decision or drafting a new law is the fact that the state has already spent more money on the ban in the court case and the special legislative session that amended the original law than most people ; throughout the state think it is worth. mw;ot:::.o.. B "We offered to play North Carolina a home and home series, playing our home game at Charlotte with each team keeping its home receipts. We've also offered to play a single game in Charlotte or Greensboro and split the receipts. That was the proposal I made to Dean Smith." Driesell, who not long ago said the third-ranked Tar Heels (21-1) were "overrated" and who heartily cheered against UNC in the recent N o r t h-South Doubleheader game with South Carolina, ad ded: "Dean wrote baek that he wasn't interested in my pro posal but that he would play one game at Chapel Hill and give us a $2,000 guarantee. I wrote back that if he was in- terested in guarantees, I would discussion will follow. ' The purpose of the luncheon and the entire visit, according to Heather Ness of the Dean of Women's office, is to allow the Carolina coeds to talk to the trustees about how they feel about the University and the problems of coed life here. The trustees will be staying in the women's residence halls, one trustee in each hall with the exception of Alderman and Granville. These two dorms were excluded because there are only 5 ten trustees and 12 coed residence halls. Women in all dorms except Alderman and Granville have early closing hours of Monday night for the meetings with the trustees. ... The policy calls for treat- I ment of the first offense as a medical matter to be handled by the student health service. Second offenders would be turned over to the proper state, local or federal authori ties. Benton added to his argu ment for the policy's adoption that this would be the first time that the administration has asked students to sit on a board comprised of admin istration and faculty members. The basic assertion of the policy, Bention said, is "the illicit . and improper use of certain drugs, . . . is incom patible with personal welfare and the pursuit of academic excellence and will 'not be tol erated by the University." Benton continued, "the Uni versity has no choice in this matter and must formulate a policy under federal and state laws, and it must take action. The University has both the legal right and the legal duty to do so." " The discussion also stressed that drug offenses, when this new policy goes into effect, will not be considered honor code offenses. Students will be under no obligation under the honor code or the campus code Benton said, to report any offender under this policy. Dean of Men James O. Can i sler told an open meeting of legislators on the policy Wed- - nesday that it was a prepara : tion for the future. - Cansler said, "we have no serious drug problem now, but we must be prepared ahead of time. We dont want to get caught in a red hot situation with the public hue and cry against us and have no poli- cy C ampiis NAACP ByTODD COHEN of The Daily Tar Heel staff "The Negro vote in 19S8 will go for Johnson," according to Kelly Alexander, Jr., President of the UNC chapter of the Na- tional Association for the Advancement of Colored Peo ple. Alexander's remark, made during a discussion of the UNC Young Democrat's Club, on the Negro in the '68 Election was based on the assumption that give him $10,000 to play in Charlotte." He concluded, "Both teams could make some money outof this thing. There is no doubt in my mind that we could sell out the Coliseum charging $10 a head if we wanted to. That's the main reason we want to play them, the money. Another is that we like to play good basketball teams and they usually have one." Smith reacted to the column in an interview with The Tar Heel late y e s t e r d a y af ternoon. "First of all," he said, "I don't want to g2t into any sort of verbal battle with Davidson. There are some very good reasons why they aren't on our schedule. "A primary one is that they rejected our standard, offer, which is $2,000 for a game at Chapel Hill." M pyiiihan By TODD COHEN The Daily Tar Heel Staff Dr. Patrick Moynihan, former Assistant Secretary of Labor, will speak here March 22 on "Change and Stability In American Cities." The talk, to be given in Howell Hall at 8 p.m., will be sponsored by the ' YMCA and the . Center for Urban and Regional Studies. - Dr. Moynihan, Professor of Education and Urban Politics at the Harvard , School of Education, is well known for a report he wrote in 19S5 dealing with trends of disintegration of UN9 Flags "of the two parties, it is the Democratic that will move the Negro into the mainstream." The Voting Rights Act, the Poverty Program, and a 15 increase in the appointments of Negroes to top government posts are evidence of the Democrats' willingness to act positively for the Negro, Alex ander says. The Republicans are basically unknown on this count, he feels. Smith pointed out that next year's schedule leaves very lit tle room for the Wildcat team, which is ranked 17th in the na tion and has lost twice to Vanderbilt, once to Duke and once to West Virginia. "Because we don't want to have the reputation of being a 'provincial team,' a reputation that might hurt our nationwide recruiting program, we try to schedule - teams from all over. "Next year we play Prin ceton,. Kentucky, Vanderbilt and Oregon as well as participating in the Holiday Festival in New York. UCLA is also entered in that field. "Right now we think it unwise to limit ourselves to just area schools. We already play Wake Forest, Duke and N.C. State. By p 1 a y i n g Davidson we would not only limit ourselves to another 6mH - To Lecture. On Cities the Negro family and the serious social problem these trends may cause. His argument claimed that measures were needed to lessen the unemployment rate among Negro males. A high unemployment, he said, would - lead to a breakdown in the structure of the Negro family. Moynihan didn't claim the findings of his report to be fact, ,. but recommended that the government investigate ine problems to see if they were true. . Should the go vernment derive similar findings, Moynihan recommended that it - -t i j ., ii i. ! U t - i V J r Flags unfurl vp and down Franklin Street as Chapel Hill celebrates George Washington's being born. These particular flags were the ones being flown Thursday in front of the Post Of fice, which normally flys a flag no matter whose birthday it is, and another which hung from a lamp post on Franklin. JL 11 7 Leader Predicts According to the NAACP leader; Dr. Reginald Hawkins, Negro candidate for governor of North Carolina, will affect the '68 election mainly in the interest and increased registration he causes. "The interest generated by Hawkms' progressive ideas, as far as North Carolina is con cerned, will have a long range affect in increasing the power of the vote in the Preidential election," Alexander says. He estimates that Hawkins tmy? OS North Carolina team but we would also lose the opportunity of playing a big national power from another part of the coun try." Smith took issue with Driesell's seeming major in terest in money. "Money should never be the most important thing in in tercollegiate athletics," h e said. "I know that at North Carolina I've never been pressured into having to in crease the athletic budget." Smith reiterated North Carolina's basic position. "Our usual offer was re jected," he said. "We are pleased with the schedules we have been able to draw up because we realize the value of national exposure." Smith did not rule out the possiblity of playing the Wildcats sometime, in the future, however. attempt to portunities, to absorb create more op private or public, the unemployed .Negroes. ' : Otherwise, these men would abandon their families, he believed. No concrete result, other than a widespread controversy, has been triggered by the report. Moynihan is Director of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University. . He was appointed Assistant United States Secretary of Labor in 19S3 by President Kennedy. 9 will receive 50 of the North Carolina Negro vote. Alexander feels that in the future Congress will have to react differently than last year to riots if it expects to receive Negro support in the elec tion. "Last year they reacted like a grade-school kindergarten," he says. "Their reaction was overkill." "It's all up to Congress. It has all the power to use resources; we just have the votes," he warns. Alexander agrees that Black Power is "the establishment of racial pride, identity, purpose, and direction in order to . secure economic, political, social and cultural power and influence for the black peoples in America" as defined by the National Student Associatin. However he opposes the NSA's endorsement cf Black Power as the "unification of all black peopleh in America for their liberation by any means possible." "Law-and-order is the only way you can get things done and still keep what you've already accomplished," h e feels. He would support the NSA statement if the phrase "whatever means necessary" were substituted by "legal means." Alexander also says that ac tive black Power supporters comprise only 15 of the Negro Community. "Moderate leaders have still held on to the conventional methods of bringing about change. The NAACP is still the main civil rights organiza tion," he says. Commenting on intergrated housing, Alexander expressed his preference for a quota system rather than freedom of choice. "The only way to break down segregation is by attack ing its roots," he feels. He favors a quota system because "ideas change when you get to see the other guy as a human." .Alexander sees this method as forcing those whites and Negroes to live together who would not voluntarily do so. All-white and all-black com munities should be integrated, he believes. Alexander feels that Negro Vietnam veterans "will contribute more stability to the community." "They have more faith in the democratic process," he explains.

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