- - v, -1 w 370 cap-i- Bin, c. - "Pete Mullis" See Edits, Page Two Weather Slightly warmer, no rain. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Officers in Graham Memorial . CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Serv ice if Phil Smith Back As UP Chairman; Succeeds Curtis Phil Smith has again taken over as chairman of the University Party. Don- Curtis, the acting chairman of the UP for the sum mer, is not in school this semes ter.. ; Smith , announced his intended resignation in. favor of Curtis May 14. According to . the by-laws of the y party, Smith's .resignation was unofficial because it was never' made in an open meeting before the convention. It was only a public 'announcement "of in tention, Smith said. The temporary , appontment of Curtis would have .expired this fall. Since Curtis will not be back in school this semester, Smith has announced his intention of remaining in his position as chairman of the party. Smith's intended resignation wa sprompted by the "need to continue party policy through the summer," according., to a state ment he issued last spring. "It is senseless," he said then, "for me to set up an organization I won't be working with." He appointed Bon Curtis as party chairman until the, fall elections with the understanding that Curtis would take over the regular duties of chairman at that time. Curtis was Inman Al len's campaign - manager in last spring's elections. Campus Mriefs , RIDERS Riders wanted to Ohio State to share driving and expenses.; Leav ing . early. Friday' afternoon '.antl will return Sunday. Tickets avail able if needed. Contact Richard Za'Us at 968-9091 or Harvey Cap Ian at 968-9025! t CAROLINA SWEETHEARTS There will be a meeting of the Carolina Sweethearts in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial on Wednesday night at 8:15. New Sweetheart selections, and plans for meeting Maryland team at Homecoming will be made. . PLAYMAKERS Student Theatre Workshop, and experimental theatre group, will meet in the Playmakers Theatre today at 4:00 p.m. All interested students invited. SENIOR CABINET New senior class cabinet will meet today at 4 p.m. in Graham Memorial. COSMOPOLITANS First meeting of Cosmopolitan Club in Roland Parker Lounge at Graham Memorial, 4 p.m. Sunday. . AQUAHOL1CS The Carolina Aquaholics -7:30 in Woollen Gym basketball room, concerning all old and new mem bers. . FOLKSINGERS There will be a meeting of everyone interested in folksongs and folksinging at 5 p.m. Thurs day in the Grail Room at Graham Memorial at GM. Listeners and performers invited. - . GLEE CLUB Tryouts for Men's Glee Club will be held this week Interested students contact Dr. Joel Carter, 207 Hill Hall.' A regular rehear sal will be held at 4:15 p.m. Thursday. .. . ...'. -- . - U. N. All students interested in work ing on United Nations Model As sembly invited to organizational meeting 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, second floor Y-Court. . Infirmary Students , in the Infirmary yes terday .were Elizabeth Livings ton, Lynn Thompson, Norma Sue Reid.' Charles Miller, David Satt. James Draghon, Andrew Bobroff , Jamss Henry, James Riy, Lu gece' Raymoad, - duia McGratJi, Nermaa Owens, Wflliam Yett, Richard Gettweiler, David Courts, Geraid McLeod, -John , Jensinp, Hery Anderson, Thongs 1:35. : WyxdeU Merritt, puif Ortfaie,:. larry" Petrea, Tboi34S " - ' - "4 ?!'-., - 5 ' k , "Z ' - " - ' v, , , ' , ; ( . 4 i , '? ? ! .." ; - ' , , i -s '' " si . -V I ' J-? -Tw 4 , - 4'- i h-'l ' t ; - ' - . fe?&S V JAPANESE POLITICIANS Visiting UNC for a 24 hour period are five Japanese women poli ticians on a tour of the United States. Three are members of the Japanese Diet. Pictured with Go-Op, Bus Service Plans Presented At SP Meeting A plan for a student co-op that would not violate the Umstead Act was presented to a Student Party meeting : by two students Monday night. , . . The. plan: proposed by Bill Bates - nd Tally Eddington,: both students in "the. Medical School, calls for the . establishment of a student-run corporation to operate the co-op as a private business off the University, campus. As long as the co-op is operated as a private business it is not in conflict with th eUmstead Act, which prohibits State supported institutions from competing with free enterprise. Cardboard Sets Friday Meeting To Plan Season The UNC Cardboard will meet Friday night to make plans for the fifteenth season of the group that is now the second largest cheering section of its kind in the Two Exhibits Opening Here In Art Halls There will be art exhibits in Chapel Hill this week at the Ack land Art 'Museum, the Morehead Planetarium, and at "Paintings Upstairs" located at 113 West Franklin Street. . On exhibit at the Ackland Art Museum beginning Friday will be paintings by faculty artists from various colleges and universities, sponsored by the American Fed eration of Artists. The paintings of a well known British artist, Geoffrey Jenkin- son are currenuy on exnjoii . the Morehead Planetarium. Hav- ing had a painting hung in the Royal Academy at the age of 21, Jenkinson's paintings are mostly of the modern metropolitan scene. ' At' "Paintings Upstairs" paint ings " and " sculpture will ' be ' on exhibit from 10 to 12:30 this Sat urday. ' - - Paintings -on exhibit are in con temporary art and were selected for exhibition from 150 paintings by Dr. Joseph Sloan of the UNC Art Department. Chapel Hill artists featured are Lynn Deal, Irene Beichart, Barbara Fowler and Betty Bell. " BUSH METINQ CANCELLED ' The IPC rush vspeitiS "tor frethmes erisaJJy ct'eduled. for Thursday $ishif fcas teen re scheduled fa? $9s4& -9t 7 Loan Service Another proposal called for the establishment of a small loan service which would make loans of $10 available to students for two week periods at a flat inter . est rate of 20 cents. A 'similar plan is reportedly being used :by the University of . Chicago. The SP also discussed starting a permanent bus service to Ehring haus and Craig dorrrrttories and possible plans for a comprehen sive study of student opinions of the University and its future. Initial capital of $20,000 would be needed by. the students start ing the corporation, Bates said, country. The meeting will be held at 7 in Roland Parker I in Gra ham Memorial. The Cardboard will put on a ten minute show at the next three home football games. There will be no cardboard section at the Duke game since it will be played on Thanksgiving Day. The group also prints and dis tributes cardboard signs each week bearing slogans .such as 'Slam the Spartans," and Maim Notre Dame." Students working for the Card board are given seats on the 45 yard line, according to its head Tom Lawrence. Annual awards are also given: certificates for. one year's work, . jackets for .2 years, sweaters for three years . and keys or charm bracelets for four years. Hark The Sound Is Featured On t "Ti T J lPW Lf KeCOrti 1 AlV" On October 12 - the U.N.C. Men's Club will begin the sale of a 12 inch, thirty-three rpm re cording called "Hark the .Sound". This record was made by the 1361-62 Glee Club under the di rection of Dr. Joel Carter, and is dedicated to the University cn its 169th Anniversary. It features songs of U. N. C. and contains folk, religious, and secular se lections. The record will be sold by .Glee Club members and .Kemp: for &1.10. It -is being pressed by r.c;a. "-; Songs featured on the recc-rd are:. Hark the Sound, The Old North State, Old Chapel Hill, . The-Lords Prayer, Carolina Vic .tory, The Blue Tail Fly, asd igit otters. - - them is Mrs. Charles Tillett of. Charlotte, a U. S. representative to the United Nations Committee on the Status of Women. . before they, could qualify under State law to sell stock in them selves, as ' a corporation. After that, a starting capital of about. $100,000 would be needed before th ecd-opi could go-info action.: Discount Company . The idea for the co-op came from a company; formed by Bates and Eddington to sell student dis count cards in. Chapel Hill. The company has been, using Kemp's as an office since the Umstead Act prevents it from operating on the campus. The cards sell for $5 each. They are good for a discount of 10 per cent on most items in the 10 par ticipating businesses. NYU Teacher Opens Med Lectures Here Dr. Chandler A. Stetson of New York University will be the first speaker in the ' fourth Medical Sciences Lecture Series at the School of Medicine beginning Saturday. His lecture will be in the Clinic Auditorium . of N. C. Memorial Hospital at 11 a.m. He will speak on. "Isoantigens and Isontibod 'ies." Dr. Stetson is professor and chairman of the Department of Pathology of NYU's School of Medicine. Prior to joining the staff of NYU Medical Center in 1955, he held a two-year research fellowship in pediatrics at the University of Minnesota Medical School and was assistant pro fessor .in preventive medicine at Western Reserve University. -From 1349 to 1951 he was a. visit ing investigator at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research. Dr.' Stetson's current research activities ar ein-the fields of ex- - perimental pathology, irnmnnolo-T gy and .homotransplantation, the transplantation of tissue from .one"" ' to another individual of the same " species. Dri Stetson's lecture is the first of ten such talks, under the, general heading of VThe Immune' Response," to be given each Sat urday through Dec. 8 at UNC School of Medicine. All physicians, medical stu dents, and scientists interested in the field are invited to.attend.' ....3j.....i.i.,1 Yack Pictures Yack class pictures are being taken, this, week only for seniors, third year law . students, and. -f ourth. year C3cal 6tudsfflls. . Dress is a dark tie, dark 1 coat and vHte :shirt for" xnes and black sweater and pearls for senior girls. GOP Candidate To Speak Here Tuesday Night Young Democrats Plan Drive Soon Republican Sixth District Con gressional candidate Blackwell Robinson will speak to the Young Republicans Club Tuesday night at its first meeting of the semes ter, President Buddy 'Broome said yesterday. Robinson will speak at 7:30 in the Law School Courtroom. The. Young Democrats Club will also hold its first meeting Tuesday night at 7:30 in Gerrard Hall. The public is invited to attend both meetings. The main business at the YDC meeting will be plans for the state convention in Greensboro Oct. 11-13. Gov. Sanford and Congressman Horace Kornegay are expected to speak at the Greensboro meeting. The YDC plans to set up tables in Lenoir Hall Monday and Tues day in a drive for new members, ' President George Kornegay said yesterday. Other officers of the club are Millie Richardson, vice president and Fred Rice, treasur er. Broome said the YRC also plans to have Congressman Charles Jonas speak here later this fall. Jonas is now the state's only Republican Congressman. Other officers in the YRC are Carmen Lucas,, first vice-president, Win Sargeant, second vice president, and Mack Armstrong, secretary-treasurer. . Challenges Authority Barnett Refuses " To, Change ''(Standi; JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) Gov. Ross Barnett' persisted in his open defiance of all federal auth ority Tuesday by again refusing to enroll Negro James Meredith in the . University of Mississippi. Barnett's actions Tuesday con stituted one of the most serious challenges to federal authority since the civil war and apparent ly made him liable for arrest. Meredith arrived at 6:33 p.m. EDT at the state office building where Barnett was waiting for him. Meredith was escorted into the building by several federal mar shals before a crowd of more than 1,000. The crowd booed and there were shouts of "Go home nig ger." The Negro student was then taken to the 10th floor where the office of the state college board is located. A cheer went up from the crowd when word was passed that the governor denied Merdith admis sion. Gov. Barnett met Meredith and U. S. attorney John Doar and the U. S. marshals at the door. He declined to accept the federal summons and read to Meredith and the others a proclamation "finally rejecting your Meredith's admission to the University of Mississippi." The proclamation referred to King Promises aign At All TT AlHWailia U - - BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. said Tuesday a "vigorous campaign, will be started this year to en roll Negro students in the Uni versity of Alabama and Auburn University. , ' . The integration leader made th .announcement shortly alter praising the Kennedy ' ftaaims- tration for insisting that Negro James Meredith be aanuuea w - the University ot jvussttww- "In the past other integration It leaders and I have been cngcal p of what we considered lack of H forcefulness by the federal sov I eminent - in- prompting civil m rights." King said, M "gij th action in the.Mere fkdith case has been te Vff administraticn's firmest stand to m. date in enforcing . wxe&w II From. the". beginning, he saidj H- "the government, madeit crysia- I dear :tiai Meredith Wd goto Camp TTft jreie 0 :f Heart Condition; as -Case Gr - Clyde Edward "Pete" Mullis, 47, died at 5 sk.m. yesterday in the North Carolina Memorial Hos pital of heart failure!.' An Associate Professor in the University's Department of Phys ical Education, Mullis had been an outstanding basketball player in his undergraduate days at UNC. A native of Monroe, Mullis at tended Central High School in Charlotte where he compiled an excellent record in athletics. He came to . the University in 1934 and for three years, starred on the varsity basketball teams known as the White Phantoms. Mullis received his B. A. de gree in 1938 and his masters de gree two years later. During World War II, from 1943-46, Mullis served as a con sultant for the United States Air Force in its physical training pro gram for troops in Europe. Dr. Oliver K. Cornwell, chair man of the Department . of Phy sical Education expressed great admiration for Mullis. . "Pete was a sophomore at the University when I came here in 1935 and he had -been with the department ever since. He was a fine basketball player and ex cellent teacher but his greatest Barnett's interposition . order of Sept. 14 which , said that "in or der to prevent violence . . . breach of peace . . . for his own protection . . . and to preserve peace and domestic tranquility, I do hereby deny to you, James H. Meredith, admission to the university. Refuses Notice In Barnett's denying to accept the notice and the summons from the court of appeals, he said "I take the. advice from the attorney general of Mississippi not to ac cept any process or any service." When Barnett appeared, Doar explained to Barnett what he was trying to serve the injunction papers. Then Doar said "We would like to get on now with the business of registration." Barnett replied: "Are you ask ing that he Meredith be enroll ed," Doar replied "Yes." Barn ett said: "In response to you, I have a proclamation." Then the governor read his statement. Barnett was congratulated by numerous people as he came out of the college board office. "What I ask is, how many times do we have to do this?" Barnett said. Just minutes before Meredith appeared at the State Office Building the U. S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals extended the deadline for his registration un til 8 p.m." EDT. . He previously had been ordered to register by 6 p.m. After the brief exchange be tween the federal authorities and Barnett, all turned on their heels and left. When Meredith appeared on the street, the crowd began booing again. A few persons waved Confederate flags. Gov. Sanford Won't In Memorial Gov. Terry Sanford will not speak here Friday night as origi nally scheduled due to a conflict in engagements. Sanford will speak, however, at the Chapel Hill High School gymnasium Fri day at 4:30 p-E1- The -Governor will speak -cn ed ucation in .the. state,' and his speech Is ".part pi a state-wide tour in which -he has been dis cusaing the state's needs in this arei.. ' . ' . ' ' Sanford is meeting here .- over the weekend ' with the Southern - - .vicatiocai Council, :cf - k$i?a43 ' Speak Miillis, 479 Dies strength was as an instructor in our swimming classes for child ren. The University has lost a fine man." Graveside services will be con ducted at Old Chapel Hill Ceme tery Thursday at 2 p.m. The Rev. Thomas P. Thrasher and the Rev. Jacob A. Viverette, both of the Pete I, ' I i ' -J , . - - ' v k v;:: ;;: : i;: -fy , ' ' . - - ft y 1 I ff - i- ' I Z. 4 " t , I If i t . i '' .-..:;....'' ; -rr-v.-.'-. Senior Cabinet Appointees Announced By Pres. Vinroot Members of the Senior Class Cabinet were announced yester day by President Richard Vin root. The Cabinet will meet at least once a month and commit tee chairmen will call additional meetings as necessary. The committees are as follows: Alumni: Charlie Shelton and Betty McDonald, co-chairmen, Ira Berlin, Bill Hoyle, Bruce Greene, Mary Ruth Walters, Brooks Garnett. All-Campus Weekend: Beth Walker, chairman, Jim Dilla- Search Is On For New York 6Fix9 Suspect RALEIGH ( UPI ) Despite an intensive search by New York City . and North Carolina police officials, the whereabouts of a New York City native wanted in connection with the basketball bribes trials here remained un known as the trial date nears. Wanted in North Carolina is Bobby Kraw, described as in his middle 20s and balding, for trial in Wake Superior Court Oct. 15. Kraw was indicted on two counts of bribing basketball play ers, two counts of conspiring to bribe and two counts of conspir ing to offer a bribe. Sixteen oth er men were charged under simi lar indictments. Kraw allegedly, offered bribes to basketball players Terry Litch field and Anton Muehlbauer, both of N. C. State College, on two different instances according to Solicitor Lester Chalmers. Chalmers said two other indict ed men Frank Cordone and Mor ris Hogison may not make the Oct 15 trial date.' He said they .were in Pennsylvania and that .extradition proceedings may - not be completed by Oct.-15. i eat M Chapel of the Cross, will offici ate. Mullis is survived by his form er wife, Carolina R. Mullis; three daughters, Julia Bryce Mullis, 19, Eleanor Lenore Mullis, 18, and Deane Garnett Mullis, 15; and a brother, John G. Mullis of At lanta, Ga. Mullis shaw, Jack Seckler, Richard Vjn root. Publicity: Fred Dashiell and Don Curtis, co-chairmen, David Wysong, Louis Legum, Pas 2 Bradham, Deal McArthur. Lecture-Academic: Nelson Ii--vine, chairman, Diane Reynolds, Gene Record, Diana Dial, Leon Barber. Social: Gail Woodward and Mary Marshall, co-chairmen, Bob Rearden, Jeff Guller. Fall Activities: Larry Brown and Beth Wallace, co-chairmen, Gaston Caperton, Joe Webb, Becky Elmore, Susan Crow, Jean Battle. Senior Week: Judy O'Grady, chairman, Charlie Jonas, Laina Loren, Walter Ratchford, Cecil Collins, Judy Johnson. Gift: Martin Leder, chairman, Sophia Pike, Ben Willis, Howard Holsenbeck. Class Photographer: Richard Zalk. Rescue Ship Catches Fire LONDON LTD The British Broadcast Corporation Tuesday night said it received a report that the Swiss freighter Colerina, carrying 44 survivors from the ditched Flying Tiger airliner, had caught fire. First reports in dicated two persons .were badly burned. The BBC said helicopters were already on the way to the 7,040 ton freighter which is headed to ward Antwerp, Belgium, at an estimated speed of 14 krot. There was no immediate explan ation of how the fire broke out. The EEC quoted the British Air Ministry for its report. But as air ministry spokesman in Lon don said he could net confirm the report which he said apparently came from a ministry source in Scotland. b'. ln'tf ii jl !