U.n.C. Library Serials Dspt, Box 370 Chaps 1 Hill, n.c. Reds At UNC? See Edits, Page Two Ik Weather Typical October Doubtful. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Officers in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Servic MAKING WAY FOR PARKING LOT . . l . . .... vvfL. : J WW 1$ ii A wrecking crew began this week the demo lition of this house at 136 E. Rosemary St. An adjoining house at 140 E. Rosemary will also be razed, and a town parking lot built in the lots. Women's Council To Oppose Mandatory Open Trial Plan By MIKE ROBINSON The Women's Honor Council said in a statement yesterday to the Daily Tar Heel that they oppose a mandatory open trial system. Their statement was in reply to Men's Honor Council Chairman Walter Dellinger who has called for student honor trials to be open to two representatives of the DTH Under present rules, students ac cused of honor council offenses can request an open trial, but it is op tional. Most students do: not use this privilege ' - ' , Bev , Hanes , - chairman - of the Women's Honor Council, said the honor council system would be come based on fear and threats if trials became open. Right And Wrong "Avoidance of a penalty." she said, "would become a student's the conduct codes. His conception of right and wrong and his re spect for the trust placed in him! should be the guides for his ac tions." The Women's Council statement i High Point Wins Debate High Point College won a debate here yesterday which was proba bly the first intercollegiate meet of the season, according to UNC team members. The UNC Debate Squad sponsored the invitational debate which was attended by High Point and Chowan Colleges. This year's national debate topic was used: Resolved: that the non- Communist nations of the world form an economic community. The affirmative and negative teams from each school participated in two rounds of debate. The affirmative team from High Point won a silver bowl with a high score of 82. The two prizes for the top speakers were silver ash trays. Mike Pierce and Jerry Proffitt of the High Point affirm ative, each with 41 points, were awarded silver ash trays. John Stone and Sara Jackson of the affirmative, and Dave Sentelle and Barry Hyman of the negative represented UNC TORONTO EXCHANGE Applications for the Toronto Exchange delegation must be returned to the GM Information Desk by 6 p.m. Tuesday. Inter views for the 24-inember group will be held Wednesday through Friday. Appointments for these .cinn mav also be made at the GM Desk. The Toronto Exchange pro- n-am, now ia its fourth year, features a weekend visit here in November, by students from the University of Toronto and a re turn trip to Canada by Tar Heels in January. Each visit consi&ts of meet ings; discussions, and informal Ecctel events designed to fur ther understanding and aware ness of student life, and ; prob Iesis in the two countries. ?''.. 1j said a student should not be put on public display for the entire campus to criticize. Dellinger's proposal would not reveal the name of an accused or convicted student. I ne Council continued to say that an open trial would give con trol of the Honor System to the DTH. . Council Statement The council proposed that a gen- eral statement of the violation and the verdict be submitted to the DTH. But. no reporters would be at the trial, unless requested by the defendant. . ... This statement would, the Counr r? Campus MONOGRAM CLUB All Monogram Club members wishing to sit together at the Maryland game should bring their athletic pass cards to the Mono gram Clubroom between 2 and 3:30 D.m. Monday. Passes win oe exchanged for tickets and returned Wednesday at 2 p.m. MUSICIANS All persons connected with music who desire to have their names in the Directory of Musicians should contact P. O. Box 408, Chap el Hill. Persons listed last year do not need to re-apply. SKETCH CLASS An evening sketch class is being started at the Ackland Art Center for both beginning artists and oth ers. The group will meet on Wed nesday nights from 7-9. SWIMMERS Swimming practice will start Monday. Freshmen should meet at Woollen Gym at 3:30 and varsity candidates at 4:30. DENTAL DAMES The Dental Dames will hold their first meeting of the year at the Victory Village Nursery, Tues day, October 9, at 8:00 p.m. All dental wives are invited. ' - PEACE CORPS I The YM-YWCA International Affairs Committee will sponsor a drop-in for the Peace Corps trainees Sunday afternoon from 4-6 in the main lounge of Graham Memorial. The public is invited. HOMECOMING QUEEN All organizations twishing to sponsor a candidate tor Homecom ing Queen should leave names of contestants at the Information Desk in Graham Memorial. There is no limit on the number of can didates per organization. A $3 fee will be charged for each. CAVTNG-CLIMBING CLUB The Caving-Climbing. Club will hold its first meeting Tuesday night at 7 in S02 Woollen Gym. Membership is open to all, coeds included. ....' BRIDGE LESSONS Bridge lesaoas for beginners in duplicate bridge will begin Thurs day at 7:30 on Roland Parker Lounge ia Graham Memorial. it ' . ' ! f I ft i - f i -fin t "-'tifii l iMTii"! II Mil IMlIlt The Office of Student Affairs ruled last year that students could not live in the two houses because of "poor sanitation." Photo by Jim Wallace. cil contends, serve to inform the student body of the Council's work, but not encroach upon the "right" of a defendant to have his identity protected.- ' Deninger said open trials would allmv students and faculty mem bers to determine how well the Councils are fulfilling their func tion. iiis , proposal will require an amendment to the student consti- tution. It is expected to become an issue in November's campus elec- tions. (The complete text of the Wom en's Council statement will appear on Tuesday's editorial page.) i Briefs i RESIDENCE COUNCIL There will be a meeting of the Women's Residence Council Tues day at 6:45 p.m. in the Grail Room in Graham Memorial. All dorm presidents, dormitory junior repre sentatives, and sonrity house mana gers are required to attend. AKPsi RUSH Alpha Kappa Psi business frat ernity, 214 E. Rosemary St, will hold rush on Monday through Wed nesday nights from 7:30-9:30. All students interested in the fields of business, economics, industrial re lations and related majors are invited. GLEE CLUB Tryouts for the Men's Glee Club are still open. First tenors are es pecially needed. Contact Dr. Joel Carter in 207 Hill Hall. OVERFLOW CROWD HE ARS WEAVERS i -ft x.- m.- s .-tin . . : I ' ' ; ? ' ; ; An overflow crowd of more than 2200 persons turned out .Fri day night to see the Weavers. Graham Memorial head Howard Henry saM the doors to Mesaorial Hall were closed at 7:30-and . estimated that the folk sieging Only One Loyalty Oath Required Of Professors By MIKE PUTZEL There is no loyalty oath require ment for faculty or student em ployees of the University other than a pledge of allegiance to the North Carolina Constitution and the Constitution of the United States, an otiiciai universiy spokesman told the DTH today. Questions relating to member ship in the Communist Party, which were placed on the appli cation blanks for prospective UNC employees, were deleted about two years ago by Chancellor William Aycock. The questions, one of which was, Are you now, or have you been any time in the past, a member of or in any wise connected with either the Communist party or with any organization or association controlled to your knowledge by Communists?", was placed on the applications in 1949. The only oath required of Uni versity employees, at present, was instituted by action of the Board of Trustees, June 7, 1941, according to DTH files it reads as follows: "I do solemnly swear (or af firm) that I will suPDort the Con stitution of the United States: so help me, God. "I do solemnly and sincerely swear (or affirm) that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to the State of North Carolina and to the constitutional powers and authorities which are or may be established for the government thereof; and that I will endeavor to support, maintain, and defend the constitution of said state, not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States, to the best of my knowledge and ability; so help me, uod. The same oath is required of all state employees before : they can be payed by the state, Aycock said. GOES . ON AIR, , ,, . , WUNC-FM goes on the air Mon day, for its tenth year of broad casting, and its second year as a maximum power station. With the increase to 50,000 watt power last winter, the station now offers coverage of the entire cen tral portion of North Carolina, to gether with some parts of Vir ginia and South Carolina. Located at 91.5 on the dial, WUNC-FM can be picked up within a 100-mile radi us of Chapel Hill. Broadcast tune is from 6 p.m. to 11 p.m. The station is operated entirely by students. It offers music, news and dramatic programs from the ,BB, Canadian Broadcasting Corpo ration, French Broadcasting Sys tem and other domestic and for eign networks. Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yester day were Sara Ruse, Gali Mur dock, Parmis Ershal, Barbara Frank, Harvey Wolin, George El lison, Miles Maclntyre, William Satterfield, Anold Wengrow, George Maier, Allen Jones, William Hicks, Yennan Reddy, Fries Shaffner, An drew Bobroff, James Ray. 1 'J - V 'jr group would have drawn 4000 jte""! v. ' "L TfciiiiM-t " pi uri rr j ;."a- .r,r,r,. wWj?-'aasi Leg ion Into Communist Activity Two Chosen To Positions In Nursing Organizations Two department chairmen in the School of Public Health have been chosen to high posts in American nursing cirles. Mrs. Margaret Dolan, chairman of the Department of Public Health Nursing, has been elected president of the American Nurses' Associa tion, the professional organization for registered nurses. She will serve a two year term. Dr. Bernard G. Greenberg, chair man of the Department of Biosta tistics, has been given a two-year appointment as chairman of the Nursing Study Section, Division of Research Grants, U. S. Public Health Service. Mrs. Dolan, who took office in May, will lead the 170,000 mem bers of the ANA and will preside over all board of director's meet ings during her terms as president. She has also been chosen to President Kennedy's Advisory Committee on Health Resources and. is the only woman on the twelve-member group. She was recently honored at the Georgetown University. Alumni As sociation's annual John Carroll Award Dinner at Rochester, N. Y., by being named one of five recip ients of the University's yearly recognition award. Mrs. Dolan is a native of Lilling ton and has served as president of Students " Give FBI Account Of Walker's Part In Riot Two UNC students who were in Oxford, Miss, during last Sunday's riot have given the FBI state ments on Maj. Gen. Edwin Walk er's part in the disturbances. Ford Rowan and Mike Putzel, told an FBI investigator that they heard Walker's speech and saw him lead students in a march to ward the Federal marshalls. Row an and Putzel were part of the seven-man Daily Tar Heel report ing staff in Oxford. They have volunteered to testify against Walker if necessary. The former army general has been charged with insurrection against government authority. Other students interviewed by the FBI Friday were DTH co-Editor Jim Clotfelter! Managing Edi tor Wayne King; News Editor Bill Wuamett; and staff members Neill Clark and George La Monte. li ,21 aoditoriam it Oiera irer an r"a nn andbout SOOrsons heard the Jim -Wallace ft V. ii t at"4 IV-: " 1 St", f 4 )0 "-.T i ' ry V f J " j I- 7"' i i Leftist Groups Cited Post Asks the N. C . Nurses' Association and as second vice-president and chair man of the Committee on Legisla tion of the ANA. Dr. Greenberg, in his new post, will be chairman of the committee which reviews applications for re search grants in nursing from the Public Health Service. He and his committee will visit nursing re search facilities throughout the GREENBERG An FBI spokesman in Charlotte the Justice Department wanted to know "why they went down and what they saw." The investigator talked to each student individually. Clotteiter said He asked us if we had gone to Ole Miss to 'fight... for either side for CORE NAACP or the White Citizens Council and Klan. "We told him we went only to report the news and to get a bet- the co-editor said. Clotfelter told the FBI that he saw Mississippi state troopers leave the campus after the riots were under way. King, Clark and he reported seeing large numbers of troopers' car parked near an off-campus restaurant while the fighting - was going on between marshalls and students. i. i hi of that capacity on the campus. side of Memorial Hall, concert from the lawn-Photo by if I MHIMMMHIMihiiA "li i --".jj , - 4iilllHMIII 1 '"WHf ' h M If Ml II I ll 1 I ll Inquiry United States and make recom mendations for the disposition of research funds. A native of New York, he came to UNC in 1949. He is a research scientist as well as a teacher and has published numerous articles on biostatistics and medical science. He is co-editor of a new book entitled "Contributions to Order Statistics." MRS. DOLAN State troopers stood by while a newsman's car was wrecked, King told the investigator. Several other incidents were reported by other Tar Heel reporters who were ques tioned. Rowan and Putzel told the in vestigators they heard Gen. Walk ker praise the student for "pro testing" the admission of Mere dith. The general told the crowd they had been "sold out" by the state police director. The UNC students said Walker had urged against violence in his speech to the crowd, but had ask ed for "continued protest." Walker was doing nothing to incite violence when he saw him later Sunday night, Wuamett told told the investigator. Clotfelter said an Associated Press report that he had seen the Walker incident was mistaken. The FBI spokesman in Charlotte said the interviews were ordered by the Justice Department. He emphasized that neither the FBI nor the Justice Department saw anything wrong in the students being in Mississippi. k k No Investigation Planned At USC COLUMBIA, S. C. (UPI) The FBI said Saturday it was doubt ful that its agents would question four University of South Carolina student newsmen who went to re port on the situation at Oxford, Miss., this week. Their stories were published in "The Gamecock" Friday and told of troops, streets lined with used tear gas shells, and the plight of Ole Miss students. They said their car was search ed eight times by federal authori ties. University Dean of Men George Tcmlin denied reports that the trip to Mississippi led to disciplinary action against the students. He said the matter was under study Several University of North Car olina sfaidents were questioned by 1 the FBI after a similar trip. Col. Roy all Introduced Resolution By MIKE ROBINSON Chapel Hill Post No. 6 of the American Legion wants an inves tigation of Communist activities on the UNC campus, the Daily Tar Heel learned yesterday. A resolution endorsing an inves tigation was passed by the Post at its meeting Wednesday night. The resolution was introduced by Col. Henry Royall, a retired Army officer now living in Chapel Hill. He is originally from Johnston County. Col. Royall, chairmen of the Post's Americanism Committee, cited the formation of leftist orient ed clubs at the University as a reason for the proposed investi gation. It is not quite clear who would conduct the investigation. Col. Royall refused comment yester day, but said a formal announce ment would be released next week. The resolution was also endorsed two weeks ago at the 16th District meeting of the American Legion at Schley. Col. Royall introduced the same resolution at the district meeting. Chapel Hill members predicted the resolution will get state-wide Legion approval. They praised Royall's "extensive and detailed inquiry into this problem." Legion members generally feel that an investigation into Com munist activities will not be harm ful to the University's reputation. They stress that an investigation, in itself, does not mean there are extensive Communist activities, on campus. A spokesman for the local chap ter of the Daughters of the Ameri can Kevomtion sam sne was not aware of any communist activi ties on the UNC campus. She also commented that the local chapter does not "interest itself with such matters, as does the national DAR.' Two campus groups the Pro gressive Labor Club and the New Left are the most likely targets of the Legion resolution. The New Left is presently sponsoring a seminar in Marxian economics. The instructor for the seminar, Dudy Edwards, said when it was started that he would make the course as objective as possible. Edwards, a law school student, said he could not comment on the Legion's resolution until he has iirther information. President Friday and Chancel lor Aycock also refused to com ment. Hodges New Book Goes On Display In Wilson Library An exhibit featuring Secretary of Commerce Luther Hodges' new book went on display here this week in Wilson Library, according to William S. Powell, librarian of the North Carolina Collection. The exhibit, Powell said, is in observance of the Oct. 6 publica tion date by the UNC Press of Hodges' "Businessman in the State house." In the book, the Carolina grad uate and former Tar Heel govern or talks about his six-year exper ience as chief executive of North Carolina. Also remaining on display "for about three weeks," Powell said, are two other exhibits featuring a collection of "University Keep sakes" and Thomas Wolfe's "Look Homeward, Angel." Among the "keensakes" are: Dr. Elisha Mitchell's watch that stop ped ticking the hour he lost his life in 1857 while exploring Eastern America's highest peak Mt. Mit chell; and a bell used to assemble classes at UNC "in the old days." The Wolfe display is composed of Danish, Italian, French, British and Japanese editions cf "Lock Homeward, Angertogether with a copy autographed by the famous Tar Heel writer in 1337. - - i

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