J J Sap y Box 870 Cftapsl atu. H.c. CHAPEL HLL, NORTH "CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1963 United Press International Service r i iV i I ! M II f I -i dire By OSCAR FRALEY NEW YORK UPI); Johnny Podres reached eight years into the past Thursday to prove again his mastery over the New York Yankees with a 4-1 triumph that gave the battling Los Angeles Dodgers their second straight World Series victory. . On the heels of Sandy Koufax brilliant opening game triumph, the 30-year-old Podres once again showed the Yankees the class and courage with which he beat them in 1955 to sweep the Dod gers to their first world cham pionship. His blue-gray shirt soaked with the perspiration of determination and labor, one of the last of the Old Dodgers of subway series days lived up to the press-agent glitter of their new movieland home by pitching his way out of three jams. He couldn't quite make it all YDC Member Drive Will Continue The UNC Young Democratic Club began a campus-wide mem bership drive Thursday with a goal of signing up 500 or more students for what promises to be one of the club's most active years. Important primary contests this spring, including the gubernatori al primary, will set the stage for the elections of 1964. The UNC club will be active in all phases of political activity, according to a spokesman. Plans are being made to have the various Democratic candi dates for Governor appear on the campus during the year under YDC sponsorship to speak on the issues which will decide who the next North Carolina Governor will be. YDC membersMp booths " will operate today, Saturday and Mon day at Lenoir Hall, Y Court and in downtown Chapel Hill. The Lenoir Hall booth will be staffed from 11 a.m. through 1:30 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m.; Y Court from 8:45 a.m. through 12:45 p.m. and the downtown booth from 11:30 a.m. through 1 p.m. and from 4 through 6:30 p.m. Co-ordinators of the member ship drive are undergraduates John McMillan and Same Himes of the ATO House. SG INTERVIEWS Student Body President Mike Lawler announced Thursday that interviews for limited positions on student government commit tees will be conducted next week. He especially urged freshmen and transfer students to apply. Lawler said interested students should sign up at the SG offices, 210 GM, from 2 to 5 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday. Five-minute interviews will be held Tuesday through Thursday from 2 to 5 p.m. Dick Ellis, Bob Spearman and Mike Lawler will conduct the interviews. What Bleachers?? By MAT FRIEDMAN The great bleacher mystery ap pears to have been solved. Only there wasn't any mystery in the first place, except how the whole thing started. It all began last April, when the old bleachers were taken out of Kenan Stadium. The Univer sity, in standard procedure, put them up for sale to North Caro lina's high schools and some were sold. Things were still quite peaceful. In late August, however. Chap el Hill High School expressed an interest in renting or buying the old seats because 1000 were need ed in its football stadium. But the price was too high and be sides the leftover bleachers were being used by the University on Navy Field and at the swimming pool. And that was that, or so it appeared. Then someone (and no one in Chapel Hill seems to know who) accused the University of having treated the High School unfairly. He or she, or they) said that the bleachers should have been offered for less or just given to the High School. Anyway, whoever it was didn t seem to be very familiar with laws regarding North Carolina state property. "Chapel Hill High never com plained to us about the matter," says Chuck Erickson, the athletic director who seems to get blamed whenever there is no one else .Dodg 9 the way. The last time he was only 23. The eight years had taken their toll and the strength and stamina weren't quite there to finish it up. Gets Thunderous Ovation But blond Johnny got them to within two outs of this coveted second victory before Hector Lo pez touched him for a double. The stakes were too big for a sentimental gamble although Podres had given up only six hits to that point. So Johnny walked to the dress ing room in a thundering storm of cheers and relief ace Ron Perranoski came in with a fresh left arm to give up a hit which lost the shutout but went .on to clinch the win. It also hung the defeat on fire balling young Al Downing, who was touched for seven hits and three runs in five innings by those supposedly weak Dodger 'A Shot By HUGH STEVENS (This is the first of a three-part series on the history and back ground of the controversial speak er "gag law" passed this sum mer by the N. C. General Assem bly.) June 25 dawned as a bright and beautiful Tuesday in Chapel Hill the type of day one tradi tionally likes to associate with the placid quadrangles and wea thered bricks on the Carolina campus. A gentle but humid breeze stirred the leaves of Davie Poplar, still the main attraction after 170 years. In his office, Consolidated Uni versity President William C. Fri- day began a typical summer day. In Raleigh, another of the Con solidated University's campuses,' basiced in sun.: Down the"- street and around the corner, the members of the 1963 N. C. Gen- - eral Assembly were thinking ' about going home, for adjourn ment was imminent, despite the fact that redisricting had not yet been considered. Then, shortly before noon, a call went out from the new State House to President Friday in Chapel Hill. A resolution had just been introduced in the House of Representatives, and one of the biggest and most controver sial stories of 1963 had begun. By nightfall, the sunny day would become gray and dreary in the minds and hearts of many who love the University, and the gentle breeze would fan a bon fire of tension and anger. Thirty-one minutes after the phone rang in Friday's office, he charged up the State House steps with Dean Fred Weaver in tow. Joe Doster, writing in the Char lotte Observer three days later, said Friday "looked as if he had just been shot in the stomach." Friday and Weaver had rushed to Raleigh in an attempt to halt passage of a bill that would out law speakers on the campuses around to blame. "When the seats were put up for sale in April, very few people showed much interest. Chapel Hill High didn't show any until late Aug ust. I don't know what the dis pute is all about. You simply can't give away state property. They put you in jail for that." ' Superintendent of Schools How ard Thompson confirmed this. So did the High School's football coach, Robert Culton. "The University has always been very good to us," says Cul ton. "When one of our boys is in jured, the UNC trainers have al ways been glad to help out. If we need a piece of equipment they have always been happy to lend it to us. When old equip ment is put up for sale, we al ways get first crack at it. "This whole thing seems to have been built up out of propor tion. We've always had a won derful relationship with the Uni versity and I would hate to see it change." "When the bleachers were put up for sale," says Dr. Thompson, "we turned them down because the price was too high. It was a standard state sale. As far as I know, that's all there is to it." And as far as DTH knows, he's right. Oh, and by the way, if anyone happens to come across 1000 cheap bleachers anywhere, call up Chapel Hill High and let them know. They still need them, ers bats including a home run by former Yankee Moose Skowron in the fourth inning. The Yankees were distressed in defeat before a cheering throng of 66,455 spectators because they gave up two runs in the first in ning on three hits, including a gift double, and a stolen base. Also in the third inning right fielder Roger Maris suffered a muscle bruise of the left arm when he crashed into the right field fence. But standout of the day was Podres, who three times pitched himself out of jams before he had to hand the ball to Perranoski. The Yankees ran at him in the second inning when, with one out, Elston Howard singled off second baseman Dick Tracewski's glove and Joe Pepitone drew a walk. But Johnny reared back like that kid of 1955 and fanned both Clete Boyer and Downing. They were chewing away at Speaker Ban: Part I In The Stomach' of state-supported schools who were known Communists or sus pected of being Communists. They were too late. The resolution had already been rushed through both houses of the legislature, with the help of secrecy, apathy, and pre-ad-journment nonchalance. The atmosphere inside the State House at the time of the resolu tion's passage was definitely not that of the typical deliberative body. In their efforts to abandon Raleigh to the critics and com mentators, legislators had al ready packed their bags and cleared their desks for the "trip home. ; The normal .rules of pro cedure had been suspended, and bills of a local nature were being introduced 'during the -lull, thus avoiding the- often fatal trip to the'XienTaaCTCommltteer: In their eagerness to adjourn, many of the delegates considered the legislation before them care lessly hurrying from one issue to another, joking with partisan friends and foes alike, reading and signing letters at their desks. It was the sort of situation that House Speaker Clifton Blue term ed the danger period of the legis lature. "When you can't get their at tention, when tempers start get ting short and they are not alert, it is time to go home," he said. Into the din and excitement came Rep. Phillip Godwin of Gates County with his resolution to ban known Communists, Fifth Amendment pleaders, and others from the college campuses. Hie bill was co-sponsored by Rep. Ned Delemar of Pamlico County. Godwin asked for the usual sus pension of the rules so that his resolution could be considered without being sent to committee. Most resolutions, duly routine and insignificant, are handled in this manner whatever their subjects. Whoever paid attention to God winand apparently there were few either did not grasp the im portance of his action or were un successful in finding anyone else who really cared. There were some, however, who acted, and still others would come to the fore later. Opposi tion, though, was weak and wide spread. One man who tried to stop the bill was Rep. Paul Story, who called it unconstitutional. But his efforts were in vain, and the bill quickly passed the House with only a smattering of opposition. Godwin then headed for the Senate chamber with the bill, and arrived to find debate going on. He talked to presiding of ficer Clarence Stone while the talk continued. When the debate ended, Senator Garland Morris of Montgomery County called for a suspension of the rules so the bill could be considered in the Senate. The issue was swiftly read, even more swiftly called to a vote, and passed over a few stringent objections from the floor. Senators Lunsford Crew, Rob ert Morgan, and Perry Martin objected to the bill's introduc tion for a variety of reasons. Generally, they agreed that the bill had implications not readily apparent in a simple reading. No one, however, seemed to have a copy for study. Still others tried to get the at tention of the chair, but Stone pounded them into silence with his gavel. Sen. Luther Hamilton attempt ed to protest the action, but he was informed that he would need a two-thirds majority to over Continee Yank Mastery 9 4 him again in the sixth with two out when Tom Tresh singled to left and with Mickey Mantle menacing Podres at the plate Johnny missed a pickoff attempt for the first error of the series and Tresh galloped on to second base. Pitches To Mantle Podres and the Dodgers showed questionable courage there by pitching to Mantle with first base open. They might have rued it, too, when Mantle lofted a long drive to left field which Willie Davis took at the 430 foot mark. But it was the big third out for which Podres had been looking and, as long as it was, it count ed. Then, in the seventh, those frus trated Yankees had their hopes raised again as Lopez led off with a ground rule double when the ball bounced into the right field stands. But Podres held them ride the chair. Hamilton was reluctant to make a further at tempt, and the issue was quieted for the day. The University officials were stunned. They lamented the swift action that had given them no opportunity to be heard, and de clared that the matter was "in jurious and unnecessary." They said they would encourage the University trustees, scheduled to . meet July 8, to seek repeal of the law. The one sincere effort against the bill failed on Wednesday. An . effort to bring the bill back from " the Enrolling Office for recon sideration lost on a 25-19 stand ing vote in the Senate.' ' Opponents of the measure in both the Senate" and the House irom the- passage of the resolu-i tion. Thirteen Senators and 14 Representatives went on the leg islative records in opposition to the law as dangerous to free speech and a slap at the state's higher education system, especial ly the Consolidated University. (Tomorrow the reaction of the citizens of North Carolina will be highlighted in the sec ond part of the series). Machine Wins Out In Totalling UNC Enrollment By PETE IVEY A mechanical brain won out over the human brain in total ling the 1963 Fall enrollment here. Announcements last week that 10,704 students are enrolled prov ed today to be incorrect. The real total is 10,887, or 183 more than first reckoned. IBM equipment used in the University's Central Records Of fice has produced figures which necessitate upward revision- of registration totals. f The error happened when reg istration personnel, hastening to get the total after the registra tion decline, did not wait for the electronic equipment to complete its computations. The mistake was in subtract ing from the Graduate School total the registration from the School of . Public Health. Owing to a change in submitting totals from professional schools, fig ures had been subtracted, in one instance, rather than added. ; Ray Strong, Director of Cen tral Records, got on the phone and obtained totals from deans of several professional schools, but did not take into account the new way of submitting totals from the schools. , That's where the slip-up occurred. Haste was the culprit. In jus tice to Ray Strong, it ought to be said that he was being sub jected to extreme pressures from state newspaper reporters, by the University News Bureau, Chapel Hill Weekly, the Daily Tar Heel and others to hurry up with the enrollment figures on the largest registration in' Caro lina's history. Knowing that it would take several days for tbe IBM equip ment to give enrollment break downs statistics by schools and departments, classes, sex and other categories Strong did the calculations with pencil and paper and by consultation with deans of schools. there as the next three hitters Howard, Pepitone and Boyer all flied out to left field. Even a partisan Yankee crowd was cheering for him as they : went into the ninth. Podres got . Mantle on a fly to deep left but then Lopez reached him for a second straight double. It was a tired Johnny now, the flannel shirt clinging to his chest ' and . back; and Perranoski was brought on to save it for him. Ellie Howard touched Perranoski for a single which scored Lopez, but then Pepitone forced Howard ; and Boyer went down on strikes Jx wind it up-and send the Dod gers home to Los Angeles where the best of seven game series resumes Saturday win ners of two games and losers of none. - The Dodgers jumped into their j i to 0 lead in the first inning with V three hits and the aid of that leaky Yankee defense. Private Enterprise No As PEACE MARCHER Bradford Lyttle, coordina- the post office in protest of the "loyalty oath tor of the Committee for Non-Violent Action's peace type speaker ban now 'in effect here," according march from Quebec to Guantanamo speaks on the to Lyttle. The dark streaks above Lyttle's head post office steps last night before a group of about are the result of several eggs that were thrown 150 persons. The speech was given in front of at him during the speech. Photo by Jim Wallace ISO Attend 'Peace Rally9 A 35 year-old leader of the Quebec Guantanamo March for Peace Thursday night called on University students to do what they can to "get rid of the loyal ty oath-type speaker ban now in effect here." Bradford Lyttle, coordinator of the Committee for Non-Violent Action - sponsored peace march, claimed there is more academic freedom at the University of Mos cow, and even more at the Uni versity of Arizona in Tempe, Ariz., home of Republican Sena tor Barry Goldwater than there is at the University of North Carolina. Lyttle addressed a group of about 150 persons gathered in front of the Post Office on Frank lin St., in a program sponsored by the campus chapter of the Stu dent Peace Union. To Men's Residence IDC Proposes Name Change By KERRY S1PE An even two-thirds majority vote of the Interdormitory Coun cil Wednesday night, passed an amendment changing the name of the organization from the IDC to the Men's Residence Council. The bill is pending be fore the Student Legislature and is expected to be voted on by the student body in a Novem ber referendum. The measure was passed as a token of the future revitalization of Residence Hall Administra tion. "We intend to change the entire concept of Residence Hall living," said Council President, Jerry Good, who left the chair to speak in favor of the bill. Good said that the intramural appropriations bill endorsed a week ago is the first of a num ber of moves that will make Wills Starts Trouble Wills started with a single over over second base and,, on the first pitch to Jim Gilliam, stole second base. Pepitone's high throw drew Bobby Richardson past the bag when it appeared that Downing might have had the Dodger speedster who cracked the immortal Ty Cobb's base-stealing record, picked off first base. Gilliam followed with a single to right. Wills racing to third and then taking a long lead to ward home. Maris threw to the plate but Wills retreated to third but Gilliam took second on the throw. '-:-.''. Willie Davis now loosed a drive to right .field' which it appeared that Maris would catch; But it sank on him and as it sliced in toward the right field fence the Yankee outfielder fell. By the time he retrieved it as it carom ed off the wall the same wall that was to be his nemesis again Private Original plans were for the group to speak on the campus but rather than subject them selves to questions about their prior political affiliations, as re quired by the recently enacted gag-law, they spoke at the post office across from the campus mall. Lyttle explained the Walk's pur poses saying it hopes to promote better relations between the Unit ed States, Cuba and Russia by asking the removal of all foreign troops stationed there and thus decreasing the tensions that could lead to a nuclear war. "We usually don't have any trouble finding a place to sleep when we arrive in a new town," Lyttle said of his 17-member group. Usually we send some one ahead to set everything up. Council Residence Hall living more at tractive to the University stu dent. He expressed his hope that the present Residence Hall system would evolve into a Residence College system similar to those of the Ivy League schools. Don Carson, author of the bill, said that "a complete change in the present image of the Men's Interdormitory Council is neces sary if its purposes are to be accomplished." "The dormitory men," he said, "lack the continuity of the fra ternity social system. We want to give the dormitory a little so cial desirability." Opposition to the bill was ex pressed by some council mem bers on the grounds that the change in name would accom plish little significant good. Pro ponents for the bill argued that later W. Davis wound up on sec ond with that gift double and Wills and Gilliam had raced across the plate. The wall proved double trouble for Maris in the third when with two out Tommy Davis sliced a drive into right field. Chasing it furiously, Maris skidded into the low steel wire railing. By the time he retrieved the ball and lobbed it in, Davis went all the way to third and time was called as Maris knelt, clutched his left arm and finally left the game. All this went for naught when Downing struck out Frank How ard. Moose Bombs One The "Moose" padded the Dod ger lead in the fourth when he rapped Downing for a wrong-field home run, slicing the ball into the lower right field stands. An ane mic hitter with the Dodgers this season, that drive he curled just As Supposed t-. , Y "But we couldn't find a place to stay in Greensboro. We got some bad publicity there from the newspapers, so we had to pitch our tents, and sleep in them but we didn't mind." Lyttle said that the group had undergone harrassment during their trip, but he added that the few warm welcomes and the amusing incidents that had oc curred have helped keep the walk ers morale up. "Near Scranton, Pa." he said, "people were throwing firecrack ers, tomatoes and bottles at us, and in Binghamton, N. Y. some one shot a rifle at us. "One of the happiest parts of the trip was when a Canadian boy and an American girl who met on the trip got married," Lyttle said. the IDC already has its reputa tion while the MRC has a repu tation to build. "'Nothing is ever accomplished without change," said Carson. Carson said that the present student image of the Residence Hall was "just a place to take a shower and go to bed." It is the hope of the newly renamed Men's Residence Council that this image can be changed. Dean of Men, William G. Long, recently gave his support to the measure. "The word 'dormi tory, " he said, "denotes a de rogatory impression to the stu dent. It is very much like the word 'barracks.' " Long said that it was the duty of the Coun cil now, to "do more than change the name." He believes that the change is a "'symbol of movement forward" in residence .ball life 1 -.:: -IVA-. 4- ; . Jfl i. . i I--' fYf M . inside the foul pole was only his fifth homer of the year. But it had to be the biggest. The dashing Davis boys gave Podres another lift in the eighth Willie lacing out his second double and Tommy driving him home with a long triple to left center that made it 4-0. It was a victory which made the Dodgers who opened as 7Vz to 5 underdogs in this 60th clas sicsudden 3 to 1 favorites to win their third world championship in 11 starts. But the odds-makers, probably as unbelieving as the twice - humbled Yankees, still made the Yankees 11 to 10 fav orites for the third game. In that one it will be a pair of righthanders, Yankee Jim Bou ton with a 21-7 record against Dodger Don Drysdale, who was 19-17 on the season. But Dodger Manager Walt Al ston wasn't making any predic tions of victory. "It takes two more," he said. S utherland Says In His Final Speech Private enterprise in the Unit ed States in many cases is more public than we think, according to Arthur Sutherland, Bussey Pro fessor of Law at Harvard Uni versity, who delivered the third and , last in a series of Oliver Wendell Holmes Lectures here I last night. While there has been a move ment from private to public con trol during the past century, pub lic enterprises have begun to be have more like those traditional ly private, said Prof. Sutherland. Along with an increasing popu lation and an increased technol ogy, goes a continual increase in the degree of political control, all dominant characteristics of life in today's America, according to Prof. Sutherland. He said that the future century will continue to see expansion in population, technology and man's dependence upon technology, and an increase in "the volume and intimacy of government." Things to look for in the future and perils that lie ahead, accord ing to Pi of. Sutherland, include: the extent to which political di rection will substitute itself for the present degree-of our govern ance which we like to call pri vate; the fate of private univer sities; dangers to academic free dom; the prospect of war; more military posture; and the danger of expecting absolutes, that is of, not accepting failure. He called on a statement written by Justice Holmes in "The Law and Court" in 1913 in which Holmes recognized the property vhich is socially administered and advised that men give up thought of labels or words to think instead of things: ". . . drop ownership. money, etc., and to think of the stream of products; of wheat and cloth and railway travel . . . the great body of property is socially administered now, and that the unction of private ownership is to divine in advance the equili- rium of social desires which social ism equally would have to divine, but which under the illusion of self-seeking, is more poignantly and shrewdly foreseen." Emphasizing that all men are governed to a large extent all their lives by their immediate sup ervisors, he said that the main point to consider about the cent ury ahead is not whether man will be governed more but how far political direction will sub stitute itself for the present de gree of our governance which we like to call private. He pointed out that even though the individual citizen of the cent ury ahead might lose some sense of local initiative there is yet a certain protection of the individual against the political mass in the separation of power in the United States.