tJ.T.C. Library Serials Dspt. Box 870 Chapel Hill, B.C. Carter Case See Edits, Page Two Weather Clearing and cool, high in the 50's. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1962 Complete UP I Wire Service Trustees Propose Revamping Programs At WC, N.C. State At the meeting of the Consolidat ed University of North Carolina Board of Trustees .Monday, a move, admitting male undergraduates to was proposed to turn Woman's Col- Woman's College and of allowing lege and State College into The! State College to expand into the us of the two branches of the Uni-, 15. Since no community college versity would have . the effect of ; is contemplated for this area, the University must respond by ex- University of North Carolina at Greensboro and at Raleigh. This move was backed by Con liberal arts field. "The proposed statutory defini tion would have our campuses solidated University President VVil- function, in fact, as one university liam C. Friday, who delivered a carrying out university-type activi speech before the board in which! ties on a cooperative basis," Fri he discussed the proposed changes, j day stated. Another issue discussed at the! "If the statutory- provision is meeting was the Pearsall Study j made, the undergraduate program of the possibility of admitting' in liberal arts, fine arts, and the Charlotte College into the Univers- sciences must be expanded and ity of North Carolina. No decision has been reached by the group, but progress was cited. In line with these and other prob lems of the University, a mass meeting has been called in Char lotte by the trustees of UNC, NC State, and WCUNC alumnae to dis cuss higher education in North Carolina. The proposed changes in the stat- made accessible to men and wom en on our three campuses." Male undergraduates are not currently admitted to Woman's College, and State College cannot currently award the liberal arts degree. Friday said that in the Greens boro, High Point and Winston Sal em areas there will be 3500 high school graduates each year by Art Theatre pens With 'Jules & Jim Durham's shuttered Rialto Thea- Wave with "Four Hundred Blows." r eatures mat win oe unique tre will re-open tonight under the new management of Maggie Dent, former secretary of the YWCA here at UNC. The theatre, which is being run under a strict art- house policy, is believed to be the first such theatre in the South to be patterned on the New York art theatres. Among tonight's highlights will be the introductory remarks of W'alter Spearman, Professor of with the Rialto according to Miss Dent, include program .notes on the films being shown, continuous exhibitions of paintings by artists in North Carolina and elsewhere; a lobby area replacing the conces sion stand so that patrons may have coffee and read the latest (British and American film period icals; special programs of imagi natively made films for children Journalism and a board member on weekends, and presentation of of the Chapel Hill Film Society, talented performers and creative There will also be a- exhibit of paintings by James Harrill of Lin colnton! , ' "f.-; . -Premiering the 'new theatre to- "night will be a short currently run- nine in New York, "The Dream of .Wild Horses" and a feature com edy "Jules and Jim" directed by Francois Truffaut, starring Jeanne (Moreau, Henri Serre and Oskar Werner. The feature has ibeen ac claimed by European and . Ameri can critics who hail Truffaut as a 'major' creative film director. He introduced the French New film makers with their work. The Rialto will specialize in first-run foreign and independently produced films, artistically made shorts and revivals of old favorites of the Twenties and early Thir ties, as well as the pictures con sidered classics and landmarks of the motion picture. Forthcoming films include Jules Dassin's "Phae dra," starring Melina Mercouri; "Last Year at Marienbad," "La iNotte, "Cleo from 5 , to 7, "L'Avventura," "The Island," and "Shoot the Piano Player panuing its undergraduate pro gram on the Greensboro campus to meet the need. "Finally, if we are to be one University, it will be essential that we have a common name for the three units, such as the Universi ty of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, the University of North Carolina at Raleigh, and the University of North Carolina at Greensboro," he said. He said that if the trustees feel that the proposed definition and new name are essential, statutory action must be taken. He feels the General Assembly will have to en act these changes prior to action by the trustees President Friday also made it clear that he feels the proposed changes must be made before any expansion of the University to oth er areas. This statement was apparently directed straight at the proposal of admitting Charlotte College into the University. The Pearsall study of Charlotte College was without decision in its report to the trustees meeting. Re porting for the committee, chair man Tom Pearsall said: "We must determine confidently what the University's responsibill ties are in this respect. The prin ciple, is clear. The State University must make its resources accessi ble, must make them effective in the life of the state. "But there are questions of means, of criteria for determining the best and justifiable locations, of conservations and standards, which still must be answered.'.' - . The "higher, education" meeting at Charlotte on November 20 will discuss these questions of expan sion and consolidation, among oth ers, in an effort to inform friends of the University of the scope and challenge of supporting education in North Carolina. Facts of higher education in the state, from the public schools through the university system, will be discussed, with emphases on the role of the University of North Carolina. UNC Chancellor William B. Ay cock will be the principal speak .Hlolman succeeds Hearc .Be an Of G raduate FATS, MOMS FEATURED AT GERMANS .'.VMVW A " "1 ''v.-.v:--.:--:-:.:'.:-If" v ' v w ' y I1 f. himtffrinarififtn wmniiilifi 1 1 The German Club will present Fats Domino and Jackie "Moms" Mabley for the fall concert this Friday. Fats is considered to be one of the greatest exponents of rock and roll, a type of music which he says evolved from Dixieland jazz fifteen years ago, but which was referred to as "rhythm and blues." Fats has scored success as a live' perform er and as a recording artist, hav- s' I s r ' M " " - - ; mmm ?tmf.!;;iA':?s. y: ,::;:-:'f.';:.:, . : -:K,,::i::-.::-.-.: u-;.:". -s-y- : its - , ' , t , " - it ' ' , , 4r & JY ' ' f is', Vv iff- Yj nnnnnn.mii -iWftmii.i nwi ..i ..,, ,..,.. .,.CT cJrioo. Effective Feh Next Year ruarv ing sold over ten million records in the last three years alone. "Moms", a female comedy mon ologist, has been playing top night clubs in the nation, her most recent billing being at the Playboy in Chi cago. Her humor involves current politics and the comic irony found in inter-racial relations and every day living. Her husky voice, coupl ed with a lively and seasoned vo cabulary, assures an entertaining performance. Speal By BOB JONES Carey Mc -Williams, who debat ed Dr. Russell Kirk here last night on the topic "How Much Freedom in Academic Freedom?", told something of his past activities in politics and gave some of his views on important campus orga nizations in an informal interview yesterday in the Carolina Inn. Mr. McWilliams, curently a Po- ier Eves litical Science ' 1 instructor vat- Ob erlin College, began working for the Democratic Party as a high school student in Merced County, California where he. did precinct work. At the University of Cali fornia he received both his under graduate degree and M.A. in Po litical Science was active in the Young Democratic State Central Student lole On Academic Freedom aneMsts Clash On Question By JOHN GOCVS "The purpose of a state support ed institution is to educate, not to indoctrinate," said W. W. Taylor, Raleigh attorney and a former member of the North Carolina Gen eral Assembly in a panel discus sion yesterday at Carroll Hall on "Radidal Movements in Chapel Hill." be a place where differing view points can be presented," answer ed Al Lowenstein, instructor of social Studies at North Carolina State Colege and author of "Bru tal Mandate." "Students who form an organiza tion should not object to the facul ty or administration knowing about that organization," said Mr. Her bert Bradshaw, Associate Editor of the Durham Herald. Taylor said that the college cam pus is not a place of refuge. "There is nothing sacred about the term 'academic freedom for it's also subject to the rules of society. Academic freedom must operate within reasonable bounds." Taylor charged administrators with too often forgetting those "In a free society there must - x : 6 1 i til , tfSf ' ' X V mam ill K I twinge f- jf SIX, s 14 "S. 4 v 't- -4; r i -4 4 Y 4S4 & -4 i J, 1 i 44 44 Y" 4 A? $ T !tj4f 4 4 " 4 i jx;4 -3 y 4 ? ' -K4-4 v. J ! 1 ' i;jt4l . tr,. -'- ..4 .4 . 44.':4V-: -r--iv4''-- 4 .: . ... t - 4 4 4 L 'ff ' PANEL "Radical Movements in Chapel HU1" was the topic of this panel discussion sponsored byy the UNC National Student Association Com mittee yesterday afternoon in Carroll Hall. Shown (1.. to r.) are: Al Lowenstein, instructor at N. C. State; Harry DeLung, UNC NSA Co ordinator; Chuck Wyre, moderator; W. W. Tay lor, Raleigh attorney; and Herbert Bradshaw, Associate Editor of the Durham Herald. Photo by Jim Wallace who pay their salaries, the tax payers. "The public was shocked when they were told of the Com munist influence in UNC," stated Taylor. Taylor went on to say that since UNC was the property of the North Carolina tax-payers, the university should fulfill the wishes of the public in expelling Communists from Chapel Hil Lowenstein said that the Uni versity should be a place where dissent can flourish. "The way to stop Communists is to let them have freedom of speech," Lowenstein claimed, "for every time they speak they make enemies." Lowenstein said that Communists should be alowed to use Univer sity buildings for their speeches, citing the case of the Communist who gained free publicity and drew a large crowd by speaking on the street after being refused the use of a University building. He continued, saying that we are no better than the Communists, who grant freedom of speech to no one but members of the Party, when we say, "Everyone is iree to speak at our University except Communists." Bradshaw quoted Jefferson's statement that "The government governs best that governs least" in saying that University students should be governed not so much by rules but by the standards of "gentlemanly conduct." "There must be a basis of mutual under standing and mutual concern." : Answering the critics of his newspaper's (Durham Herald) coverage of the American Legion's charge of Communist infiltration at UNC, Bradshaw said that it is the responsibility of the press to inform readers on matters of pub lic concern. Taylor charged the instructors at UNC of encouraging Communism here, and he said that was the reason there was so much Com munist activity in Chapel Hill and not at Duke or Wake Forest. Committee -and " was' Campus Co ordinator for Stevenson in the 1952 Presidential election. Through his connections with SLATE, a lib eral .student political action group at Berkley, he was instrumental in organizing the 1960 student dem onstrations in San Francisco again st HUAC. At his interview yesterday Mr. Williams stated, in response to a C. Hugh Holman, Kenan Profes sor of English, was named yester day as Dean of the Graduate School to succeed Dean Alexander Heard who wil become chancellor of Vanderbilt University effective February 1, 1963. Chancellor William B. Aycock announced the appointment follow ing approval by the board of trus tees' executive committee and President William C. Friday. Prof. Holman, whose speciality is American Literature, is former acting dean of the College of Arts and sciences at Chapel Hill. He was chairman of the Department of English from 1957 to 1962. and chairman of the Division of Hu manities of the University from L959 to 1962. He was appointed a Kenan Professor of English in 1959. He has been the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the UNC Press since I960. In his presentation to the trus ees Chancellor Aycock said of Professor Holman: Dr. Holman has brilliantly established himself as a teacher, scholar, and administrator. His strong reputation as teacher of un- aergraduates is, if possible, sur passed by his success as an instruc tor and director of graduate studies in American literature. His scholarship is prolific and excel lent. As of July, 1962, his fifth book is in page proof. His twenty- three book reviews and forty-three learned articles, ranging from notes to essay-length studies, have appeared in scholarly journals and collections. He is recognized Campus Briefs ACADEMIC AFFAIRS There will be a meeting of the Academic Affairs Committee this afternoon at 5 p.m. in the Wood house Room of GM. Members are urged to be prompt WRITER-IN-RESIDENCE There will be a meeting of all students interested in the writer- in-residence project tomorrow at 7 p.m. in the YMCA office. JUDICIAL COMMITTEE The Judicial Committee will meet at 4 p.m. this afternoon in Roland Parker 111. FINANCE COMMITTEE . There will be an important meet ing Of the Finance Committee to day at 4 p.m. on the 2nd floor of GM. Anyone wishing to discuss bills now in committee must be present. SOPHOMORE CABINET AND COMMITTEES Anyone interested in serving in the Sophomore Class Cabinet or on one of the six committees, should report to Roland Parker 1 in GM Thursday or Friday between 3 and 5 p.m. tomorrow night at 8 p.m in the Woodhouse Lounge for G.M. for those members who are going to be here for the game. question on the function of student I roygnout tfte worid as an au eovernmpnt , that fh hurnncA nflthority on' American fiction; Thomas student ffovernmpnt i tum-fnW ft Wolfe is one of his prime studies. nrirnarv ma i: tn train ct.irinfc - noiman s consiaeraoie aa- to accept civic . responsibility. In (ministratiye ability demonstrated similar to small town politics, the University, has been shown .again j - ,ri j ,;(u riui 1119 nuiiiuuiu uuiica jicil.. Jiu ' c-f.f Jthe local situation. In particular. o um aeut i BU:ii te has dcar comprenensiori of the J i T a T ,.1U. first importance of graduate stud- viuucx ucvciup juucai luiofii- ies t(j existence 0f this insU- " . , , , tution as a university. voueeinms me useiuimess oura- A natiyc of Cross Anchori S C leinuies as an rniporupi pan uuhe h 4g years old received the tiu.us me m. m-nuudno B.S. degree at Presbyterian Col- i-ia.iuu ciC "uau'c lege in South Carolina in 1936, mey are .siuaenx organizations, he majored in chemistry, which are independent of the ad- He received thc rh.D. de2ree in ministration, aiso tney neip main- CAROLINA WOMEN'S COUNCIL There will not be a meeting of the Carolina Women's Council today. FLU SHOTS Flu shots are being given at tht Infirmary from 9-11:30 a.m. and from 2-5 p.m., Monday-Friday. NAACP There will be a meeting of the NAACP tomorrow night at 8:30 in room 205 Alumni Building. tain a diversity as opposed to the mass society of dormitory life where it is hard for the student to assert his individuality." Another of his major points con cerning fraternities was that they are founded on a formal ethic de voted to a whole series of meals and purposes. This he feels is lacking in American society as a whole. Mc Williams added, 'We gain our unity as a society and a culture only in a round-about way by the identification that comes from a common enemy. Even the Russians aren't so bad off in this respect. English at Chapel Hill in 1940. REWARD OFFERED A blue lady's wallet contain ing valuable papers and items of sentimental value was taken from a car parked in front of the Playmakers Theatre San- day night. The wallet contained a square gold Turkish coin which the owner would particularly like to recover. Anyone having information about the wallet or its contents is asked to call the DTH office, 942-2138, any after noon after 3 p.m., or Mrs. Rosa lind Benedict at 942-1033. A re ward is offered. Peace Corps Trainees I Into Last Week Of UNC YlOY e Peace Corps trainees on campus are now in their 10th and last week of educational training . aim- PH1LOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM ed at preparing mem ior wsra Dr. Erwin Straus, Research Con- r . sultant to the V. A. Hospital, Lex-. f .. efir, ington, Ky and 1 Professor jjjr of Psychiatry the s fore in Caracaus in Kentucky Medical Center, win speak tomorrow night at 8 p.m. on "Psychiatry and Philosophy'' in the Faculty Lounge in Morehead Planetarium. . IDC There will be a meeting of the IDC tonight at 7 p.m. on the 4th floor of New East. UNC CARDBOARD iAll members of the Cardboard are urged to come by the office this week to help in preparing stunts for the Duke game. The of fice will be open all day. It is re quested that all members who are planning on attending the game turn in their passbooks by b p.m middle December. The 33 men and women, ranging in ages from 20 to 58, have been attending classes beginning at 7:30 a.m. and running through 9:30 p. m., with breaks for meals. "It's hard to average more than five and a half to six hours sleep a night, including some study," A dark-haired Californian miss corroborated him saying, "It's im possible to get everything done." The majority of the trainees feel that the real chance for relieving the day's tension comes during the late afternoon hour from 5 to 6 p.m. when they have a class in physical training. Here they re lease mental strain in sports, cal isthenics, and tumbling with even some judo and rope climbing. The group in training includes two married couples. One of the wives carried a round pillow with her to classes to catch cat-naps be tween sessions. The other wife, Gretchen War wick, is the youngest member of tv,0 rfav's schedule. "We the group at 20 years, bhe and feel frustrated because we would her husband, Robert, were mar- like to do all we can and we don't have the time," said another young man who has worked as a newspaperman and knows the challenges of deadlines. A vigor ous outdoorsman said, "Nobody 11 ,-w,V .if. all tVlO ried in June and foresee no prob lems as marital members of the project. "We seem to meet our problems together, and I think, if anything, it's a better way to go through the program," said Robert, tne participants in tne group a have high praise for the education al program they have had at the University. "It is beautifully sche duled," said Edmond Major Mietz ner, who has worked as a high school teacher. "I don't know how well tl.3 Peace Corps was organ ized with universities in regard to the courses, hours, plans, and purposes of the courses, until I became a member of this pro gram," he said. The director of this whirlwind project has been UNC Professor of political science Federico G. Gil. Prof. Gil is also the director of the University's Institute of Lat in American Studies. His many contracts with newspapermen, educators and scholars, ard ex perts on Latin American affairs have provided the trainees with a round of well-informed visiting lec turers. The teaching staff for the pro gram has consisted of staff mem bers from 20 departments and tomorrowV There will be a meeting assignmeiits they, give us here." Despite the many class hours, schools of the University.