U.ll.c: Library Serials D?pt, ,37 Weather HARRY LLOYD See Edits, Page Two II Clear skies with tempera- J H tures in the SO's. j Seventy Year Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1963 UPI Wire Sfrnc. Lawler Calls On Students To Stop Demonstrations By MIKE PUTZEL Student Body President-Elect Mike Lawler called a meeting of twenty student leaders last night to try to stop a predicted "unau thorized demonstration," and called for "students, rather than adminis trative action" in student affairs. Lawler, said that the planned demonstration against the new three-man room policy threatened to turn into a mass "panty raid." Pi Kappa Phi Chapter Here Nation's Best The UNC chapter of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity has received notice that it has been rated number one in the latest of the national fraterni ties' ratings. Carolina's Kappa chapter has had a perfect 400 rating for the 62-63 school year. The national rating is based on membership, scholarship, financial policies, chapter news papers and reports to the national fraternity. Fraternity president Bill Ramsey attributed the national rating to had work by the local chapter and the planning and guidance given by the chapter advisor, the late J. Boyd Flynn, stricken by a heart attack March 2. The locai chapter has in three years grown from a house of seven brothers to its present brotherhood of .thirty-one. In the fall of 1962, the Carolina chapter was presented with the Theron A. Houser Award for being the "most improved" chapter in the nation. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS i : : ., . j ' ' Kennedy Wants Russians Out ...WASHINGTON (UPI) President Kennedy said Wednesday there, are roughly 12,000 to 13,000 Russian troops still in Cuba and he wants more' of them pulled out. He said about 1,000 have left since last reported on the touchy situa tion two weeks ago. At the same time he told anti-Castro refugees who want to liberate their homeland they would de better to join the U. S. Army for train ing than conduct internationally dangerous hit-and-run raids on Cuba. The President said that budget cuts proposed by former President pwight D. Eisenhower would plunge the country into an economic decline and thwart efforts to overtake Russia in space. Firing back at his White House predecessor, the President said he did not want to duplicate the recession-ridden final years of the Eisen hower administration. He also regarded cooly Eisenhower's long-time attitude toward space programs. Gregory Arrested In Mississippi GREENWOOD, Miss. (UPI) Police broke up a voter registration march led by Dick Gregory Wednesday and arrested all 20 of the Negro participants but not the nationally known comic. Gregory immediately announced he was cancelling all of his night club engagements and would remain in this delta community to "fight this thing until the government sends in troops." V Coach Sensed Tip To Alabama ATLANTA (UPI) Georgia football coach Johnny Griffith said he saw nothing during the controversial 1962 Georgia-Alabama game to indicate Alabama had learned Georgia's secrets, documents in an investigation of the game showed Wednesday. But Griffith said after looking at films of the game he did "have a feeling" the Alabama team had prior knowledge of Georgia's-7 opera tions.. The Georgia coach's recollections of the game were included in testimony given to Attorney General Eugene Cook who was investigat ing a published report that former Georgia Athletic Director Wallace Butts gave secrets to Alabama coach Paul Bear Bryant. n i v " 4 ! A . ? vO-W "i. -v S Lw KENAN STADIUM Construction workers digging the founda tions for the eddilico to Kenan Stadium ran into a layer of rock last week and had to bLast Above, a workman places the dynamite. Such action he said might seriously damage UNC's hopes for a new stu de union and ether appropriation bills now being considered by the General Assembly. ; Lawler also told the students that ; student autonomy is at stake and 1 that they must take responsibility i for their own actions or the admin I istration will not look favorably on the students in the present negotia ' tions regarding the apartment rule auj the Beat Dook Parade, i 1 "Do not participate in any dem i castration tonight," said Lawler. j ' It's not worth sacrificing the union lor a panty raid." William Long, dean of Men sent orders yesterday afternoon to all dorm aavisors to try and stop the cemonstraton. He told them to have uorm meetings called by the dorm Carmichael Speaks Katherine Kennedy Carmichael, UNC Dean of Women, will address the UNC Faculty Club at its lunch eon meeting on Tuesday, April 9, at the UNC Faculty Club. "An American Professor in Viet Nam" is the title of Dean Car michael's address. Dean Carmichael returned from Viet Nam in August after spend ing a year there as Smith-Mundt Visiting Professor in the ' Univer sity of Saigon's Faculty of Let ters. Previous grants awaded to Dean Carmichael include a Fulbright Lectureship in English and Ameri can Literature at the Philippine Normal College in Manila in 1952. Dean Carmichael is a M.A. and Ph.D. graduate of Vanderbilt Uni versity and became UNC's Dean of Women in 1946. presidents and to take action to see that the raids were stopped. Long stated in his memorandum that students- are required to carry draft cards at all times and that advisors could apprehend demon strators by calling for identifica t:on cards or getting a police officer to do so. Lawier, who went to see eDan Long immediately after his meeting with student leaders, told the dean that he felt that the conduct of stu dents outside the classroom should handle the impending riot. Long agreed and said that he would call off the dorm meetings and let students handle the situa tion in their own way. Lawler said that he had already sent several students down ' to the lower and upper quads to talk to dorm officers and other students who might be able to stop any demonstration. Campus Briefs HONOR SYSTEM COMMISSION The. Honor System Commission will hold a compulsory meeting to day at five o'clock in Roland Park er 2 of GM. NAACP MEETING The NAACP will meet tonight at 8:30 in 205 Alumni. WESLEY HOUSE SUPPER The Wesley Foundation will have a supper Friday night at six o'clock at the Wesley House, 214 Pittsboro St. Reservations must be made by 2 p.m. Friday. LOST r A 15)64 W. C. class rinff. with initials N.C.P. was lost recently. Finder contact Carol Pittard at 968-9134. ENGLISH CLUB UNC English Professor will ad dress the English Club on "The Ritual and the Non-Ritualist," a criticism of Elizabethan drama Friday night at eight o'clock in the Faculty Club lounge. SPRING LECTURE SERIES Rabbi Joseph H. Levine will de liver the last lecture in the Spring Sabbath Series on "The Jewish View of God and Its Meaning For Modern Man" Friday evening. LOST A gold link bracelet, with one blue charm, was lost recently. Finder contact Bette Hutchins at 121 Cobb for a $5 reward. IDC BANQUET Outgoing IDC President Ralph Mosley urges all dorm presidents who have not done so to notify him about the Awards Banquet to be held Sunday night. He needs to know how many of the incoming and outgoing dorm officers will at tend. Mosley can be reached at 968-9055. COMBO PARTY An all-campus combo party, fea turing Rufus King and the Night Owls, will be held Friday, April 5, (Continued on Page 3) t - V : ,. " - , U "t'-f "! '"V f - ; 7 f r - ! y ' 'n f ' . ' I- i ' ? -' ' IDC MEETING The IDC will hold an impor tant meeting of all old and new dorm presidents and represen tatives tonight at 7 in 104 Gard ner IlalL IDC president Jerry Good yes terday urged all members to be present at the meeting as the duties and responsibilities of dorm presidents and representa tives m cases of student demon strations will be discussed. Sales Start Today On New Quarterly The Spring issue of "The Carolina Quarterly," the University literary magazine, will go oh sale today at Lenoir Hall and the bookstores around town. Editor Louis. Bourne describes the magazine- as "one of the largest issues we have pub lished and one of the best. - "The fiction in this issue is stronger than that of the Winter issue, in some measure due to a long story by Leon Rooko whose work has appeared in The Noble Savage, Reflections, and else where," Bourne said. "We haven't always had an easy time getting good short stories for the magazine, for although we re ceive a good deal of material from around the country, much of it turns, out to be offal since "we haven't got a lot of money to pay cut and most writers who think they've got a masterpiece on their hands will send it to The New Yorker and the like, in hopes of a nice pecuniary cut. "What they don't know is that such magazines are shoveling the manuscripts back into the mail box as fast as they can." Bourne said The Quarterly has fared much better with fiction this time, however. "All of the stories," he . said, "are entertaining, all of them show literary talent, and some of them are wholly successful like Ian T. MacMillan's story about two brothers' reactions to their Cliest Misses Goal But Gets $4000 In Gifts "Even though we didn't reach our goal of $6,000, we consider this year's Campus Chest Drive an over-all success." This was the word yesterday from Jack Sechler, Campus Chest co-chairman, on the event's total of over $4,000. "The Campus Chest Carnival lost about 20 rides because of the rain," he said. "The organizations that sponsored them had other things planned for the weekend following the original date set for the Carnival and couldn't come down to set them up." The booths took in about 85 of the $650 cleared by the Carnival Attendance was set at about 3,000 by co-chairman Jim Riley. The Chest cleared a total of about $-1,400: $650 was made at the auc tion. $650 at the Carnival and about $3,100 came from solicita tions. Sechler, speaking for the Cam pus Chest, extended his thanks to "all the organizations that partici pated in any of the three phases of the Campus Chest Drive. Co-chairmen for next years Campus Chest are 'Betty. Ward and Henry Morgan. Recounts Held In Treasnirei R ace i s mother's reaction to their father's funeral. Not as difficult as it sounds just very clever with nice touches of fraternal, lambent hu mor." Bourne described the poetry in this issue as "exquisite. There is no other word to describe it. ;We feel comfortable in saying we're publishing verse which is about as good as that of any lit erary magazine in the country. Take for example the March 30, 1963 issue of Saturday Review. There are two poems in that issue: George Cuomo's and David Cornel De Jong's. Both Cuomo and DeJong have appeared previously in The Carolina Quarterly, and in the lat est issue we have three poems by DeJong and a review of his lat est book of verse." Bourne said The Quarterly has "always had a po tentially fine poetry market, but past editors have made hasty judg ment, placing work of true merit next to stuff that would really seem embarrassing to us. "The standard of editors in the past is not always those of present editors," Bourne added, and we feel we've been more careful this year, not selecting anything for publication until it's been thor oughly read and explicated. "The good poets are in it for art anyway, and since they don't get paid much around the country, they publish in magazines they think have fine taste and will publish oth er quality poems with theirs. We re getting marvelous re turns. And every once in a while a miracle occurs: some - sensitive soul : that - we've never heard" "of sends us the one piece about which there can be no doubt. Witness Lu cien Stryk's "Persian Suite" in the Spring issue an eloquent Yeat sian evocation and affirmation of a past culture and much more be sides." LOST A diamond dinner ring and a gold class ring, with inscription "Barton School, Jacksonville, Fla. and initials "L.C.B." was lost re cently. Finder contact Gayle Rag land at the ADPi house for a re ward. WUNC RADIO, 91.5 FM Schedule for Thursday evening: 6:00 The Dinner Hour Sibelius: Symphony No. 2 Harris: Sonatina 6:55 News Summary 7:00 Carolina Roundtable 8:00 Masterwork Bartok: Divertimento for String Orchsetra Debussy: Prelude to the After noon of a Faun Schoenberg: Variaions fort Orchestra Srauss, R.: Also Sprach Zara thustar Stravinski : Divertimento ' 'Le Baiser de la Fee" 10:00 Ten O'clock Report 10:15 Hillside Jazz with Frost Banon 10:55 News Summary Si if - - :, -J I- ! y f i i i- a ii" if m i i ' ' A And Legislature f r ' - sr" " ir it Mi Chad Mitchell Trio Trio One Highlight Of Coming 'Jubilee 9 The week of April 26, 27, and 28, has been set for JUBILEE, the Graham Memorial-s ponsorcd spring week-end. Featured attrac tions will be The Four Preps, and the t Chad-Mitchell Trio.:. The schedule for JUBILEE is as follows: Friday at 6:30, 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. the free flick will be "Butterfield 8." Friday at 8 p.m.'derella," which they sang in the on the lawn at Graham Memorial movie "Gidget." By mid-summer there will be a concert by the of 1961. when their smash album. "FOUR PREPS," followed by a THE FOUR PREPS ON CAM combo party with the "Jades." j PUS, became a national best-seller, Saturday there will be a lawn it was apparent that the Preps concert from 2 to 5 p.m. with 'had matriculated to college and the 'Migrants, the Duke Ambassa - dors and the Harlequins, and the UNC Men's Glee Club. Five combo parties playing from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Graham Mem-jwith the CHAD MITCHELL TRIO orial, Steele . Hall parking lot, thewiU feature mus;c as we1 as Planetarium parking lot, Acklandi popular music. The trio draws its parking lot, and Y-Court will high-j material from virtually every pos light Saturday night. Some of the sibe source other folksingers, the combos are the ' Delmomoos,"j Library of Congress, field record "Catalinas," "Trojans," and the in- Manhattan niht club revues. "Checkmates." "The Buccaneer," starring Yul Brynner, will be Sat urday's free flick. Sunday afternoon there will be a carillon concert by Jack Hill j nightclub engagements include the at 1:30, then at 2:30 the "CHAD: gjue Angel, Palmer House, Edge MITCHELL TRIO" will perform. watcr ach Hotel, Padded Cell, m a lawn concert. 1 Crescendo, and many others. The JUBILEE week-end will end,Their record albums include THE with the Sunday Cinema, "Two aUD MITCHELL TRIO AT THE Women," starring Sophia Ten- BVTTER END, and MIGHTY DAY Sunday night there will also be a;ON CAMPUS, both on KAPP rec Petit Musicale production in the GM Lounge with Iain Hamilton. "The Four Preps" began re- cording for Capitol Records in; 1957, and their recording of "26' Miles" sold over a million copies 5 r J & V y x ' 1 '" t - V- - - V ! i - '' t 1 i ' - - - r -l4,' li -i in 1953. "Big Man" almost over took "26 Miles" and helped The Preps snag recognition as "Most - i Promising Vocal Group" of 1953 in the Cash Box Magazine poll. Other hits by' The , Four Preps include "Down by Lhe Station," "IBig Surprise," "Lazy Summer Night," "Got a Girl," and "Cin- 1 adult audiences. Their college ap- , pearances have taken them to ev ery state of the union. Sunday afternoon's lawn concert etc. They have appeared on tele vision on the Pat Boone, the Bell Telephone Hour, Bob Newhart, To day, and Peggy Lee shows. Their ords, and THE CHAD MITCHELL TRIO ARRIVES, on the Colpix 1ahfl1 The entire week-end will be free to all students and their dates. It ' i 4, . . . and a "dyramite mat' is 1ta ered fcito the fousdation prevent the explosion from throwing rocks out of the area. Ttea, the wires are connected to the detonator .and the blast is set off . leavisg rubble. Ptcta by Jim Wall-are. S.P. Holds Majority In Legislature By JOEL BULKEY The Elections Board yesterday began recounting ballots for rep resentatives to Lhe National Stu dent Association NSA ) , Summon Congress and treasurer of the student body. Also being recounted are votes for seats in Student Legislature from Dorm Men's 3 and a position on the Men's Council from Judicial District 1. Unofficial returns now show the Student Party leading with 25 seats in the race for control of Student Legislature. The Univer sity Party controls 23 seats, with one seat being held by an in dependent and one seat still un decided. At press time last night r.o new figures were available. Unofficial results from Tuesday's campus elections show Inmar: Al len (UP), Kellis Parker SP. Pete Wales (UP) and Phil Baddour (SP) as winners in the NSA race. iBaddour received 1,323 votes, only 15 more than John Uifelder (UP) for the fourth position. Vote totals show Allen with 2,444; Par ker with 2,172; Wales 1,930; Vir ginia Carnes (UP) with 1,696, Vance Barron (SP) with 1,625; and Neal Jackson (SP) with 1,416. Student Party candidate Dick Akers leads UP nominee Gerald Thornton by 79 votes, 2-036-1,907 for the treasurer's spot. Final Results In official results announced yes terday Mike Lawler (SP) polled 2,502 -votes to .1,743 for Larry Mc Devitt (UP) in the presidential race; Bob Spearman (UP) collect ed 2,811 and Dick Ellis (SP) 1,331 for the vice-presidency; while Bonnie Hoyle (SP) netted 1,856 to Sara Broadhurst's (UP) total of 1.524. Nancy Culler defeated Sherry Rottman, 467-412, for the posi tion of chairman of the Women's Residence Council. In the race for the editorship of the Daily Tar Heel, winners Dave Ethridge and Gary Blanchard, running as co-editors, totaled 2,502 votes. Opponents Chris Farran and Harry Lloyd amassed 1,222 and 411 votes, respectively according to the official results. Senior Class Officers Charlie Shaffer, unopposed can didate for president of the senior class, heads the slate of officers for next year. Woody Harrison (SP) defeated Richard Barrett (UP), 577-532( for the vice-presidency; Sue Drennan (UP) was un opposed for secretary; Mai Le savoy (SP) topped Mickey Blackwell (UP), 572-519, for treasurer; and Joan Haley (UP) edged Bambi Ansley (SP), 576-526, for social chairman. STUDENT LEGISLATURE All new student legislature repre sentatives should attend tonight's SL session at 7 p.m. on the fourth floor of New East. i i v r i k s V