Serials 2pt, Eox 870. chaps i ntirruTcT 1 Considerable cloudiness with cooler temperatures and ;j a chance of showers. 4 Shotgun Marriase See Edits, Page Two Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 1963 UPI Wire Service Court Says Georgia Assembly May Cause Unit Elections -Illegal ent Increase Of R $40 WASHINGTON (UPD The Su - preme Court declared Monday that Georgia's county unit election system- is unconstitutional because, it discriminates unfairly against city dwellers in favor of rural College Voids SG In Rights Squabble 'A tignt lor a student bill of rights at Pheiffer College last week resulted in a takeover of student government responsibilities by the college administration. Student body officers at the small Methodist College 30 miles north east of Charlotte had earlier de clared themselves inactive in pro test against what they railed slow action by Pheiffer President J. Lem Stokes on approval of a bill of student rights and responsibili ties. Stokes then dissolved the stu dent government Wednesday and reactivated it Thursday with ad ministrative officers in control un til new elections could be called. There are two basic areas of disagreement on the bill of rights, former student body president Lar ry Crumbly said yesterday. Compromise seems remote, Crumbly said, on an administration speaker ban, which allows it prior censorship of speakers. The students had asked the ad ministration to establish set poli cies on speakers so that any speak. er could be heard whose topic con formed to these previously stated policies. Crumbley also said there was conflict over a clause protecting tudentSwagainst arbitrary. actionJ toy -the administration andor the faculty. Blue Law Backer Speaks To Demos State Senator John R. Jordan, who introduced a Blue Law bill in the General Assembly last week, will speak to the Young Demo crats tonight at 7:30 in Gcrrard Hall. His topic will be the "Role of the Democratic Party in North Carolina." Jordan, who has already announ ced he will be a candidate for lieutenant governor in 1964, is also expected to speak on some of the issues he will raise in that cam paign. Jordan's Blue Law bill would put a statewide -ban on the Sunday sale of specified objects to be named in the law. His bill would not allow local option on the law as a 1961 law did. The 1961 Blue Law was over ruled in the State Supreme Court last year because its prohibition of the sale of specified objects was held to be uncertain and arbitrary by the Court. Chapel Hill had approved the law under the local option clause, but its passage caused the resig Academic Tour Sponsored Bv Consolidated University Dr. Ernest Heal of N. C. State. College has room for 135 persons on an" 8-week academic tour of Europe next summer. He will meet with interested ju niors, seniors, graduate students or teaching faculty or members of their families in , Roland Parker Lounges II and HI Thursday night at 7:30 p.m. Dr. Beal is chairman of a com mittee recently set up by Consoli dated University President William Friday to plan a combination academic-pleasure tour. Transportation to Frankfurt, Ger many, will be by jet from Raleigh Durham on July 13. . , Though a knowledge of German is not prerequisite, as the first three weeks will be spent study ing in German-conducted classes. The fallowing four weeks will be devoted to the arts, history and political economics of Europe and Germany in classes conducted in English. During thee first seven weeks,! , voters. The vote was 8-1 with Justice John M. Harlan dissenting. For the majority, Justice Wil liam O. Douglas said that the unit system violates the 14th Dr. Stokes said last week that most of the rights asked for are already covered by administrative practices. He said the delay in action on the statement was caus ed by the necessity of consulting with the faculty and trustees on the matter. The statement of rights was first presented to Stokes last fall. The bill of rights asked for closely resembles one endorsed by the National Student Association. Stokes dissolved the student erning inactivity of the organia tion. Crumbley said the officers had . gone inactive under instruc tion from the Student Senate Council Gives One Probation Verdict One student was placed on defin ite probation and two others were found not guilty in recent Men's Honor Council cases. A student was found guilty of copying a classmates homework and was placed on definite proba tion for two full academic semes ters while receiving an automatic F in the course. 3uia-deendants were IfoiuKiihot guilty of lying to an" investigator in connection with an IDC case. nation of several merchants from the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Association which had backed its passage. Senator Jordan, a native of Win ston, is a 1942 graduate of UNC and a 1943 graduate of the Law (Continued on page 3) -4-1 SEN. JOHN R. JORDAN the students may live with Ger man families and study at either Bonn, Heidelberg, Mein, Gottingen or Munich universities. The final week will be spent in Munich, with excursions to Inns brook, Austria, and Saleburg and a one-day hike to the foot of the Alps. There will also be travel in con nection with the classwork, plus a trip on the Rhine the day prior to departure. Return will be by jet on September 7. Tentative cost for the trip is $650, which will include transpor tation, meals, lodging, texts and fees. It is possible that some term arrangements can be established for payment, with $75 down and the balance with interest payable over a two-year period. Juniors, seniors, graduate stu dents, teaching faculty and their immediate families at the three branches of the Consolidated Uni versity are eligible for the tour. amendment's equal protection clause. une person, one vote mus prevail, Douglas said. He commented: "If a state in a statewide election weighted the male vote more heavily than the female vote or the white vote more heavily than the Negro vote, none could sucessfully contend that dis crimination was allowable. 'How then can one person be given twice or ten times the voting power of another person in statewide election merely because he lives in a rural area or be cause he lives in the smallest rural county?" Under the Georgia system, elec tion winners are not determined by popular vote. Instead, each county is assigned a number of unit votes, ranging from 40 for Fulton county which includes -At lanta to two for Echols county, which has the smallest population Tne candidate winning the most county units is elected. The system was challenged by James O'Hear Sanders, a retired Atlanta businessman who claimed it weighted the voting power of those in the rural counties at the expense of the heavily populated ones. (Maryland and Mississippi also have unit system election laws on their books but in the latter state, it is rarely used. Georgia did not use the unit sys tem in last November's balloting because, its constitutionality had been challenged in the courts. A three-judge federal court had ruled against the procedures and had suggested possible remedies Permits Lost With Failure ttfikisler1 Approximately 15 students have had their car privileges terminated for the year, and approximately 60 students, have had their University Registrations cancelled and have been required to pay the $5.00 re instatement fee due to failure to register their automobiles or fail ure to display their automobile registration stickers. "A thorough check for unregis tered automobiles is planned for the near future," Bill Harriss of the Dean of Men's office said yes terday. According to Harriss, there has been some confusion over the fact that a student who brings a car to campus has 48 hours to register it. Several freshmen have brought cars to the campus, he said, and felt that it was legal as long as they did not keep them 48 hours; this is a misinterpretation of the regulation. Any student eligible to have a car at the University of North Carolina has 48 hours in which to register it. Students that, are ineligible to have an automo bile are not covered under this provision. Freshmen who are found to have unregistered cars, Harriss stated, are subject to having their auto mobile privileges terminated thru their sophomore year in addition to paying the $5.00 fee for rein statement. GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIPS HONOLULU The East-West Cen ter is offering American graduate scholarships for the school year beginning in September, the Cen ter evaluation officer has announ ced. A total of 100 scholarships is available. A scholarship provides all expenses for approximately two years of study and academic trav el. Initial graduate work is done at the University of Hawaii with which East-West Center maintains affiliations. This is followed, as a rule, by field study in the Asian country or countries most import ant to the student's individual work, The East-West Center combines academic or technical advance ment with an opportunity for stu dents to gain mutual respect for widely varying cultural beliefs and customs. Scholarship applications and in formation may be obtained by writ ing to the Evaluations Officer, East-West Center, University of Hawaii, Honolulu 14, Hawaii. AVUNC RADIO. 91.5 FM Schedule for Tuesday 6:00 Th e Dinner Hour 6:5S News Summary 7:00 Democracy in America 7:30World of the Mind 3:00 Artist in Performance 10:00 Tea O Clock Repcrt 1 YWCA OFFICERS Donna Bailey (right) turns over the presi dent's gavel of the YWC A lo Lucy Kennerly who will take over the post fiext week. Also elected as officers for this year were Laurie Clark, vice president; Becky Jo. Green, secretary; Gayle Metts, treasurer; Sally Rawlings, membership chairman; Charlotte Whe Iand, religious emphasis .chairman, Dee Johnson, freshman coordina tor; and Belty Ward, executive coordinator, Interviews for Y cab inet positions will be held today, through Thursday at the Y from 2-5 p.m. Photo by Jim Wallace Di-Phi Considers i SG Value Tonight By HUBERT HAWKINS A strange and controversial res olution will be debated by the Di-f" Phi tonight, beginning at 7:30 p.m.t in the Di-Phi chamber on the third floor of New .West. . The resolution, as submitted to the Ways and Means Committee by IiR RfvstiA Student Government. The text of the resolution is as follows: WHEREAS: Student Government was conceived as a grand design for the general degeneration of Am erican youth into narrow-minded, short-sighted bureaucrats, and WHEREAS: The communists launched this design in order to Campus Briefs FRATERNITY OFFICERS The DTH is in the process of collecting a complete list of fra ternity officers elected for the 1963-64 school year. Fraternities desiring publication of their new officers are requested to submit a list to the DTH office on the second floor of GM as soon as possible. CARNIVAL COMMITTEE The Campus Chest Carnival Committee will meet today at five o'clock in the Y. FRESHMAN COUNSELORS Interviews for freshman woman counselors will be held today through Thursday, from 3:30-6 p.m. daily in GM. All interested stu dents can pick up applications at the information desk in GM and sign up for interviews there. OUTING CLUB The Outing Club will meet to night at seven o'clock in 302 Wool len Gym. CWC BIDS Bids for Saturday night's CWC spring semi-formal dance, which will feature the Duke Ambassador band, are now on sale in the wom en's dorms. The cost is $.50 per couple for the dance which will be held in Woollen Gym. Two o'clock late permissions have been granted for those attending the dance. DI-PHI The Di-Phi will meet tonight at 7:30 p.m., third floor New West. A special executive session will follow. FOUND A wallet belonging McMillan was found Ronnie Midgett, 402 (963-6266). to Paul D Monday by Severin St. ELECTIONS BOARD The Elections Board will meet Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. the Woodhouse Room of GM. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM Dr. Oliver LeBlanc of UNC will discuss "The Transport of Elec tions in Organic Crystals" in Wed ced's cieetiss of lie Physics Col- mold Americans into their image of the petty bourgeoisie, thus mak- America ripe for a takeover, and h WHEREAS: This design is ap proaching fruition as student gov ernment becomes more and more entrenched as a "worthwhile" and institution for the . de- velopment of "good American citr iens," and WHEREAS: The evidence for the coming takeover is clear in the narrow interests," apathy toward greater, issues, lack of intellectual aliveness, physical softness, and sexual impotency of the American student, and (Continued on Page 3) as loquium at 4 p.m. Phillips Hall in room 265, AMPHOTEROTHEN SOCIETY The Amphoterothen Society will meet Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room of GAL WRC MEETING The WRC will meet at 6:30 p.m. tonight in the Grail Room of GM. The . WRC Constitution and rules will be under consideration. ORDER OF THE OLD WELL The Order of the Old Well will will meet today in. Roland Parker 3 of M at two o'clock. CANDIDATES' MEETING All candidates for spring elec tions must attend the compulsory candidates meeting Wednesday at 9:00 p.m. in Howell Hall unless they have been excused by Polly Hastings. Failure to attend the meeting or to have an excused will result in disqualification of the candidate un less he contacts the Chairman of the Elections Board and pays a $5.00 fine within 48 hours. - CONCERT SERIES TICKETS Tickets for next year's "The Friends Of The College" concert Series in Raleigh, which will in clude performances by The Royal Failharmonic Orchestra, The Hun garian Symphony and Van Cliburn, are now available. Students interested in obtaining tickets for the seven-concert se ries should contact either Anne Queen, at the YWCA office, or Harry Day, at 102 Joyner immed iately. Ticket sales will end soon and post-campaign memberships will not be available. The cost is $7 for the series. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SPEAKER Geith A. Plimmer of London will give a public lecture on "The Healing Power of Divine Love" this evemnsr at eisht o'clock EJlat tVio rVntral Civir Ceritpr in Durham- Mr. Plimmer, a mem ber of the Christian Science Board of Lectureship will speak under the sponsorship of the First Church of Christ, Scientist of Durham- .(Continued on page .3) By BOB SAMSOT Dorm residents here may face a $40 increase in room rent next year if the Joint Appropriations Committee of the State Legisla ture, which meets today in Raleigh, Printers May Lose Payments In NYC NEW YORK (UPD Union Chief Elmer Brown denounced the strik ing printers rejection of a new contract in the 101-day-old New York newspaper blackout Monday and raised the possibility of with drawing strike benefits if the print ers fau to come to terms witn publishers in a few days. There was little possibility of the blackout ending before next week at the earliest. Brown, president of the Interna tional Typographical Union (ITU), was plainly irritated because ITU Local 6 turned thumbs down by a narrow margin Sunday on what he described as a "fair settlement" with the publishers. Publishers and printers reopened negotiations. "I wouldn't make any book on the printers' getting a better offer from the publishers," Brown said. He stressed that the international union was reluctant to flex its muscles and force the local to end the dispute, although it is em powered to do so. He said internal "pressure" to end the strike was building. Brown met with the executive committee of the ITU Monday and said the committee had reached agreements on three "big points ' whether to cut off strike benefits, whether to order a referendum, or whether to. order a larger member ship " meeting "Id "vote' T thepro- posed contract. "We are withholding making an announcement regarding our de. cisions for a couple of days, Brown said. "We do not want to put additional pressure on the local union until they have an opportuni ty to make an attempt to negotiate an improved contract." , However, Brown made it plain that both he and leaders of other newspaper unions thought the pos sibility of a better contract was unlikely. Strike leader Bertram A. Powers, president of Local 6, was not pres Wilson Recipient D For Marshall Scholar A General George C Marshall Scholarship for advanced study in British universities and col leges has been awarded to a UNC senior, Fred Anderson of Ruther fordton. The Marshall Aid Commemora tion Commission in London an nounced through the British Am bassador in Washington, D. C, the names of 24 American stu dents who have been awarded two-year scholarships in England, in memory of General George C. Marshall, United States Military Chief of Staff in World War II and author of the Marshall' Plan for Aid to European and other nations. Anderson will study at Exeter College, Oxford University, and will study and travel also in other institutions. He will major in jurisprudence, history and philo sophy of law. : . One previous UNC student studL ed in England under a Marshall Scholarship. He is Lloyd E. Ber ry of Houston, Texas, who was graduated in English here in 1958. The Marshall Scholarships may be renewed one year after the regular two-year scholarship. An derson was named as a recipient of a Woodrow Wilson grant last week, but has turned it down. Anderson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Anderson of Ruther fordton. He is a Morehead Schol ar, a member of the Order of Golden Fleece, the Grail and the Order of the Old WelL He was in the freshman and sophomore honors program and now is reading for history honors. He is secretary of Phi Beta Kap pa. By special arrangement in the University, Anderson is permit ted to pursue an entirely inde pendent curriculum. He attends no classes and takes no examina tion Isffad. be re4d cd does not approve the Consolidated i Universitys' appropriation requests! for capital improvements for the 1963-64 year. Appropriations for a new student union and an addition to the heat- ent at the executive council dis cussion. Brown said that he had been unable to contact Powers by telephone. A spokesman for the ITU local said Powers had no immediate comment. The next step, the spokesman said, would be for Pow ers and union negotiators to report to the publishers on the rejection. He said this meeting would be held as soon as possible. Negotiations on new contracts continued between the publishers and other newspaper unions. The! photoengravers threatened to go on strike if an agreement was not reached quickly. The printers vote to reject the proposed contract Sunday was 1,621 to 1,557 a margin of 64 votes. There are 11,000 members in the local, including 1,500 retired print ers .eligible to vote. Only 3,178 did so Sunday. If the local does not take action within a couple of days, Brown said the international union would "direct" the next move possibly order a referendum and set a dead line for withdrawal of strike bene fits. "The proposals should have been adoDted." Brown said. "I told them that. The executive council considered the assessment program of the ITU in which all members in the nation are . assessed 3 per p pay-'fur-the-New York-j strike. "Pressures are mounting up on us. We feel there is some justifica tion for the pressures coming from those who are paying the assess ments. And our contracts tell us that practically all other unions consider it (the tentative agree ment) a fair settlement. They think it's not possible to get a bet ter contract at this time." The publishers and union nego tiators had agreed on a weekly package increase of $12.63, includ ing an immediate pay raise of $4 and another $4 in the second year. writes for graduate credit under direction of three faculty mem bers in English, in languages and in history. Anderson was chairman of the International Students Board on the campus here and organized the first tour exchange whereby a student from University of Poi v ' i Fred Anderson Of ing plant and steam-piping center will also be considered, according to A. H. Shepard, business officer and treasurer of the Consolidated University. So far the committee has ap proved the requests to build these new buildings, on a 100 per cent self-liquidating basis, but has not appropriated any funds for them yet. "Although these improvements are necessary, if the current 100 per cent self-liquidating terms re main in effect it may result in too great an increase in student expense," Shepard said yesterday. He added, "We do not want to price students out of the Univer sity by setting ability to pay as an attendance criterion. " Today the University will ask that new dormitories be limited to one, instead of two as origin ally requested, but with the orig inal request of $1,272,000. Under this proposal a new men's dorm with an increased capacity of 925 students, and a women's dorm would be created from an old men's dorm. The project would be on a 50 per cent self-hquidat- ing basis. The full cost of a new two-mil lion dollar student center and half the cost, at $690,000, of the heat ing plant addition will also be asked. The total appropriations for capital improvements requested for UNC will be $3,962,000. The committee could reach a number of decisions on these re quests. It could approve them, put them in the form of a bond issue, or decide not to do anything about them. Shepard said, "H the commit tee ignores the requests, there would be a decision as to whether or not the present plans would go into effect. He said that the re quests are needed, but that the University would not want to keep qualified students away because of: financial matters, which might ocur-if -plans iemainoa-the-pre ent self-liquidating oasis. Also included in today's propos als for UNC are requests for a new physical science building. PUBLICATIONS BOARD ENDORSEMENTS The Publications Board yester day announced its endorsement of all three announced candidates for the editorship of the Daily Tar Heel. These candidates in clude: Chris Farran, Harry Lloyd and Garry Blanchard and Dave Ethridge (as co-editors). tiers, France, will come to Chapel Hill, and a UNC student will go to Poitiers. Last year he won the senior class essay on "The Uni versity and Its Meaning." He was a political intern last sum mer in Washington, serving on the staff of the late Congressman Clem Miller of California. 4 Rutherfordton ecline i