Carial:: Dept. Box 370 Chap.l Hill.OVEIlSY An article on the editorial page discusses whether con troversial speakers should appear on campus. CALENDAR What's going on around campus today and in the fu ture, Check the campus cal endar. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1963 UPI Wire Service C ""N: World News In Brief GOP Seeks Death f Loan WASHINGTON (UPI) House Republican leaders agreed Mon day to try .to scuttle a student loan feature of President Ken nedy's program of federal aid for inedical education. The GOP Policy Committee voted to wage a floor fight Tues day in an attempt to knock out the $61 million loan feature pro vision but took no stand on the lest of the measure. The admin 'istration bill would authorize a $175 million program for con structing and rehabilitating medi cal and other "health profession" schools. John W. Byrnes, Wis., refused to predict whether the GOP drive could attract enough votes to eliminate the loan feature. But he said that if the attempt was unsuccessful, there would be "considerable opposition" to the whole bill from Republicans. Some traditional friends of aid-to-education, including both Dem ocrats and Republicans, have al ready indicated that they are dissatisfied with the bill. They feel it should be part of a general bill to assist all colleges. Manned Flights Set CAPE CANAVERAL A crucial "mating" of two machines at "spaceport U.S.A." and a satellite chot from behind the Iron Curtain Monday indicated American and possibly Russia will launch new manned flights into space within a few weeks. At Cape Canaveral,, a bell shaped space capsule named "Faith-7" was installed atop a silvery Atlas booster rocket to carry U. S. Astronaut L. Gordon I Cooper, Jr. on this nation's long-! Post Writes To Explain Its Stand NEW YORK (UPI) The Satur day Evening Post, commenting editorially on the reaction to the story in its March 23 issue which opened football's Wally Butts-Pau Bryant telephone case, said Mon day, "we believe that anyone who rigs a football game should be exposed." "If another story of similar na ture should come our way in the future, we will not hesitate to pursue the same course we took with this one: track it down, sat isfy ourselves that we have the truth and then publish it," the Post said. In the March 23rd story, writ ten by Frank Graham Jr., the Post reported that Butts, then athletic director of the University of Geor gia, gave Georgia football secrets to football coach Paul Bryant of the University of Alabama in a telephone conversation in advance of the Georgia-Alabama game of Sept. 22, 1(J62. Alabama, a 17-point favorite, won the game, 35-0. Butts and Bryant have denied the accusation and have filed libel suits against the Post. The Post said Monday it "first received a report that a college football game had been fixed" in Februarv. The report was that George Burnett, an "obscure At-k lanta insurance man," had acci dentally overheard the Butts-Bryant conversation. Burnett, the Post said, "swore he had heard Wally Butts giving Bear Bryant signifi cant Georgia football secrets." eorSLiiizeci Interview dates and duties of student government committees in a new reorganized system were announced yesterday by student body president-elect Mike Lawler. Interviews will be held daily, from 2-5 p.m., for a week be ginning Thursday, April 25. Applicants must sign up for in terviews with the secretary in the student government offices, second floor, GM, and fill out an application blank. Those accepted will be notified the following week. The following is a list of SG committees for which interviews will be held: CAMPUS AFFAIRS BOARD concerns itself with the area of Proposal est orbital flight, next month. . The Soviet Union launched a new satellite called "Cosmos-15" into orbit around earth. The moon let was unmanned, but observers in Moscow believed it might be in preparation for a space, flight by a new Russian Cosmonaut-possi-bly a woman But on both sides of the world, the exact dates ' for the next manned space ventures remained unknown. Informed sources said "around May 14" was the most likely time for the launching of Cooper on a flight that, if all goes well, would take him 22 times around I he globe in 34 hours. King Goes On Trial . BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Southern integration leader, and some 20 other Negroes today went on trial on a contempt; of court charge stemming from, a " racial protest march on Good Friday. King's attorneys filed a -motion Lo dissolve and vacate the injunc tion but Circuit Court William Jenkins overruled the attempt. Attorney Arthur Shores argued that if the order was dissolved there would be no need for the con tempt hearing. However, Jenkins said "the only thing before this court is wheth er these respondents were served with the injunction and whether or not they violated it." I He agreed to a motion to post pone for two weeks' a hearing on the second ground on which the city seeks to cite for contempt. The first witness for uie city ..as W. J. Haley, chief inspector for the Birmingham police depart ment. He described the Good, Fri day and , Easter protest - marches, the first led by King and the sec ond by his brother. . , , pj hsuMjttZ'' ' i 4 - Villi Flails I $ ' -.v ,x -' x f 1 j!f -ww ' 3 Jjijr Dr. Linker (r.) And George Rosental ' Photo by Jim Wallace Rosental Presented Janus Scholarship George Rosental, a junior from "Rocky Mount, was awarded the Robert White Linker Scholar ship by the Society of Janus in ceremonies in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial Monday night. The $150 award is named for the distinguished professor of Romance Languages - who was largely responsible for the found ing of the Interdormitory Coun cil. The society bases its decision on the individual's proven capac ity in the areas of scholarship, service, and determination. Q student problems on campus. In vestigations and studies are made of various areas of concern at the suggestion of the student body president, Student Legislature, members of the committe or in terested students. CODIUNICATIONS COMMIT TEE informs the campus and the state of the activities of the UNC student government. Particular attention is paid to, publicizing positions open, new programs, and important activities of all SG branches. . CO-OP committee, established under the executive branch of student government, to continue an investigation into the. pos- 1 ' ' ' . f til' jr, K , - ' ' . - i; t , - . i '. - K 4 Inauguration OfSG Officers Is Tonight By JOEL BULKLEY The inauguration of new student government officials and the elec tion of Student Legislature officers for next year will highlight to night's opening session of the 35th Assembly of SL. The meeting, which is open to all students, will be held beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the SL chamber on the fourth floor of New East. Whitney Durand, chairman of the Constitutional Council, will admin ister oaths of office to new mem bers of the Men's and Women's Honor Councils and members of executive branch of student gov ernment. Student body vice-president and legislature speaker Bob i Spearman will administer the oath to the 50 members of legislature. Officers to be installed include Mike Lawler as student body presi dent, Bob Spearman as vice-president, Bonnie Hoyle as secretary and Dick Akers as treasurer. Rosental has been a student leislator for two years, has serv ed as chairman of the Finance Committee of Student Legisla ture, and has been president of the Sophomore class and Craige dormitory. He attended State Student Legislature. His name will be engraved on a permanent plaque which is dis played in Graham Memorial. The Society of Janus is an hon orary society which recognizes faculty students, and administra tive officials who have contrib uted significantly to the improve ment of dormitory life. sibility of establishing - some form of Student Co - operative here. ACADEMIC AFFAIRS com mittee evaluates courses and academic procedures at Caro lina. Results of these studies provide a basis for recommend ing improvements to the appro priate offices concerned. UNIVERSITY ABROAD com mittee, another newly establish ed sub-committee under the Academic. . Affairs Committee, set up for the purpose of inves tigating the possibility of estab lishing a branch of Carolina in some foreign country. ORIENTATION REFORMS i 1 v- fits J I- -fj Fire Parking Tickets . . . bad news for drivers Large scale battles are anticipat ' ed when SL members begin consid eration of the election of the four legislative committee chairmen, j Committees involved are finance, judicial, rules and ways and means. The Student Party holds 25 seats, the University Party 24 with one independent representative. Other SL officers to be named tonight a speaker pro-tem, a par limentarian, a sergeant-at-arms, a clerk, and a file clerk. Student body president Mike Law ler is expected to give a brief out-1 line of his legislative program. Other business to be considered will be the election of two members each to the. Graham Memorial Board of Directors and the Pub-1 lications Board. The first major piece of Iegisla ton facing SL will be the 1963-64 Student government budget which is now under consideration by the Finance Committee. String Group Recording Is Successful Another distinctive product rep resenting North Carolina and the University has come out of Chapel Hill this season and is now enjoy ing good circulation, not only in the state but throughout the coun try. It is a fine recording by the North Carolina String Quartet, and it has been produced by Music For Children, Inc., an all-community organization of Chapel Hill, in commemoration of the Quartet's twelfth season. In the years since its founding at the University, North Carolina's String Quartet, whose members are Edgar Alden, Dorothy Alden, Jean Heard, and Mary Gray Clarke, has achieved high artistry and a place among the distinguished mu sical ensembles of the country, playing in many other states as well as in North Carolina. The idea for a permanent record of this artistry impressed Music For Chil dren, Inc., which had sponsored many of the Quartet's school con certs From the large variety of musi cal literature performed by the Quartet it was decided to select for Side One of the record the one Debussy Quartet, g minor, opus 10, one of the finest examples of French impressionism, and for Side Two the Bartok Quarter No. 2, opus 17, a fully mature work employing characteristic, rhythmic and melodic, ideas from the com poser's native Hungary. The recording may be purchas ed for $2.75 at Kemp's, the Country Store and Pace's. nn Announced For Student Committee committee, another, new sub-committee, under the Academic Af fairs committee which will look into the orientation program here and make suggestions for improv ing it in order to make Orientation a more meaningful program. NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLAR SHIP committee, works to bring National Merit Scholarship final ists and semi-finalists to Caro lina to show them what the Uni versity has to" offer. , An expan sion of this program to include other scholarship winners and out standing students is now being considered. CAROLINA FORUM coordinates the prefieatatioa of speakers who TTri By MICKEY BLACKWELL Some 125 students are on the verge of having their cars sent home because they are ap proaching the five-ticket limit on illegal parking, according to Bill Harriss, Assistant to the Dean of Men. Harriss said that his office had sent home only 20 cars so far but "when a student gets five tickets his car goes heme." Harriss said there was ample space for students to park their cars. "The space might not be convenient, but it's there just the same." He said that Craige parking 21 Americans Get Release From Cuba Six Make Trip To South America HOMESTEAD A I R FORCE BASE, Fla. (UPI) Twenty-one Americans held prisoner in Cuba flew to treedom here today and six more went to South America, apparently clearing Fidel Castro's dungeons of American citizens. New York attorney James B. Donovan, who arranged the re lease of the Americans and flew here with them, said three Ameri cans - and three Americans of Cu ban birth chose to go to South America when they were released. This was not immediately ex plained, and these men were not identified here. One of the 21 who arrived at this airbase south of Miami was ill identified as Richard Allen Pecor arc, 30. He was taken off the plane first, and the others walked off under their own power. - Donovan, the red - faced New Yorker who has arranged the re lease of some 6,000 Americans, Cuban-Americans and their depend ants in the past year, was last off the plane. He announced before leaving Ha vana that he had also arranged for 1,000 more Cuban - American refugees to come to the United States this week by boat, prob ably on Wednesday. Austin F. Young of Miami, an American adventurer who helped Castro in the beginning of his fight against former dictator Fulencio Batista, wras the "long-termer" of the group which arrived at this base south of Miami. He had been in jail only six days short of four years, and originally was con demned to die. "I'm very glad to be back," Young said. The Pan American Wrorld Air ways DC6B carrying the men and Donovan landed at this air base south of Miami at 11:33 a.m., Donovan, who arranged the release of Cuban invasion prisoners in December, was in Havana over the weekend to complete the ar rangements. The men had been held in a variety of prisons around Castro's island, but most of them were in the prison at the Isle of Pines, about 40 miles off the southern coast of Cuba Cuba's "Devil's Island." McKENNA TO SPEAK Award-winning novelist Richard McKenna will address Men and Women Orientation Counselors at a required first meeting tonight at 8 in Memorial Hall. McKenna, author of Harper a ward winning "Sand Pebbles" will discuss "Academics." are sponsored by student govern ment It sponsors outstanding speakers to discuss topics of cur rent interest each year. Next year the last lecture series will be incorporated in the Forum. Campus Committee of the NA TIONAL STUDENT ASSOCIA TION, coordinates activities of UNC for the exchange of ideas and programs with other Ameri can colleges and universities. Ca rolina has been a leading prtici pant among the 400 member schools. INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS BOARD, furthers better relation ships between foreign , students and the student community. It Several Have Reached Ticket Limit Rights lot isn't being used to the cap acity and neither is the Ram Varsity Parking Lot. "Several students failed to register their cars and even aft er doing so, many of them failed to apply the registration sticker to the car windshield. "A student must display the sticker on his car within 24 hours or it is considered a vi olation and will be dealt with ac cordingly," Harriss said. Unregistered Cars Prior to the Easter vacation period, he said, his office ticket ed 110 cars in the fraternity areas. He said most of their owners were guilty of not regis L Editor Two Attend Conference At Academy Brick Oettinger and Stuart Eizen stat will represent UNC at the Naval Academy Foreign Affairs Conference, to be held in Annapolis tomorrow through Saturday of this week. Students from approximate ly 60 colleges and universities will attend the conference. Oettinger, a junior from Chapel Hill, and Eizenstat, a junior from Atlanta, Ga., were selected by a faculty-student committee compos ed of Student Body President-elect Mike Lawler, political science pro fessor S. Shapard Jones, and Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael. Both delegates are in the Political Science Honors program. The topic of this year's confer ence is "Problems of U. S. For eign Policy in Southeast Asia". Delegates will attempt to analyze forces which shape and effect the execution of U. S. policy in South east Asia, and will make recom mendations concerning effective ness of this policy. Infirmary Students in the infirmary yes terday were Nancy Carol Alford, Kathleen Gentry, Robert Johnson, Joseph Lea, Robert Cromartie, John Davis, Daniel Galvis, Don ald King, John Howie, Byron Bow man, Guy Crampton and Paul Seaton. promotes the exchange of ideas and cultures, and administers the Goettingen and NSA scholarships. CONSOLIDATED UNIVERSITY STUDENT COUNCIL, composed of members from Woman's Col lege, NC State, and Carolina, this organization meets to discuss mu tual problems and to plan inter compus activities such as Con solidated University Day. STATE AFFAIRS committee, represents UNC interests and promotes the standing of the Uni versity through publicity and per sonal contact with special atten tion paid to the advancements of our personal interest through leg islative appropriations. The com mittee is cow espandiag. to place V )v v. rA f ,- 4 ' 's x 1 .Endangered tering their cars. "The standard procedure when a student fails to register his car is for the Dean's office to cancel his University registration and charge him a 5-dollar re-enrollment fee," Harriss said. A total of 150 students have been notified about failing to register their cars. The students were either fined 5-dolIars or asked to send their cars home. Harriss said the rules for prop er car registration will be strict ly enforced from new on. His office plans to check the Bell Tower Parking Lot and the Craige dormitory parking lot in the near future for car registra - -a '' A i Clotfelter wins writing award Clotfelter Wins Hearst Edit Award James H. Clot felter, UNC junior and immediate past co-editor of the Daily Tar Heel, has been announced as win ner of a $200 fellowship from the William Randolph Hearst Founda tion Journalism Awards Program for collegiate journalists. Clotfelter, a native of Atlanta, Ga., will be awarded the fellowship for an editorial he wrote on the race riots at the University of Mississippi in October, 1962, when he was serving as co-editor. Peace Union Secretary Set For Talk Here On Thursday "Neither Red Nor Dead" will be the topic of a Thursday night Gerrard Hall lecture by Peter Al len, national field secretary of the Student Union, Pat Cusick, local SPU chairman, announced Monday. Allen, who lives in Chicago at the SPU National Office, will speak at 8 p.m. A member of the SPU National Council and the Steering Committee, he was regional secre tary of both the Chicago and New York Regions of SPU and, last fall, 'was campaign manager for Sid Lens,, a peace candidate for Con increased emphasis on our image to the state at large. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S STAFF, is responsible for inves tigating all reported violations of the campus and honor codes and advising and protecting the rights of the defendants. They present all cases to the Councils under the direction of the Attorney Gener al. HONOR SYSTEM COMMIS SION, studies the functions of the honor system and recommends improvements. It is also respon sible for presenting our system to new students, other student governments, and to high schools throughout the state. ELECTIONS BOARD, conducts tion. Dean of men William LonfT said that only in special circum stances will a freshman be al lowed to keep a car on campus. He said that if a freshman were caught with a car that had not been registered, he would not be allowed to bring his car back until his Junior year. Long also said that if a stu dent failed to comply with the ruling on car registration, or if he refuses to send it home, then he could be suspended from school. He said however that suet drastic action has not been tak en and he "hopes it won't be." Discipline Discussion To Re Held Handling Of Morals Crises Is Topic Student leaders, representatives of the University administration and members of the Faculty Commit tee on Student Discipline will meet informally this afternoon in Dean of Student Affairs Charles Hen derson's office to discuss "both general and specific concerns in the area of student conduct." Dean Henderson yesterday barred reporters from the meeting, but added that a statement may be re leased after the discussion. Student body president-elect Mike Lawler has announced that he will report and comment on today's meeting at his press conference Wednesday. 1 Dean Henderson, in granting Lawler 's request for the joint meeting, suggested last week "that in order to proceed in an orderly fashion, the floor be given first to the students, then to the admin istration and finally to the facul ty." He added that after this a general discussion might follow. Lawler had ureed. in a letter to Dean Henderson, that an informal meeting be held to "establish a more constructive direction toward the solution of certain problems in the area of student discipline, particularly a substantive clarifi cation of 'morals cases' and the procedures of adjudicating such 'cases.' " Student leaders expected to at tend today's meeting are Diane iBlanton, chairman of the WRC; Whitney Durand, chairman of the Men's Council; Bev Haynes, chair man of the Women's Council; Bob Spearman, vice-president-elect and Lawler. Faculty members will in clude Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael, Dean of Men William Long and Dean Henderson. gress in the 5th Congressional Dis trict of Illinois. Lens was defeated. John Dunne, a member of the local SPU steering committee, said Allen's talk would deal primarily with the "unilateral initiatives ap proach," an alternative to the pre sent East-West situation. , "The unilateral initiatives ap proach," Dunne continued, "was devised by Dr. Charles Osgood, president of the American Psycho logical Association. The lecture is open to students, faculty, and townspeople. every all-campus election, and rules in cases of protest. Con siderable effort is required for the planning and admi metering of each election. STUDENT CREDIT COMMIS SION, works to improve relations between students and downtown merchants. One of the commis sion's biggest jobs is the hand ling of bad checks. STUDENT AUDIT BOAP-D. su pervises the activities of the Stu dent Activities Fund office. It investigates the accounts of va rious campus organiztions and L generally responsible for handling some two million dollars per year, through the student activities fuaj office.