O.w-.C. Library
Serials Dspt.
Bos 370
Chapel Hill, B.C.
Gen. Sherman Edition
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Today's Weather
Clear and cool, man.
Offices in Graham Memorial
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1963
United Press International Service
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AMI
MAR
10MGIA
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Students To Vote
On 3 Amendments
Three constitutional amend
ments will be presented in the
election on Tuesday to the Stu
dent Body for its ratification. All
three amendments were passed
by the Student Legislature but
must receive the approval of a
majority of those voting to be
become student law.
The first amendment would,
if passed, change the name of
" Al iil m T A. 3 - L
ine men s mieraormiiory coun
cil" to the "Men's Residence
Council." The IDC Court
would become the Men's Resi
dence Council Court. The sup
porters of the name change claim
that it is only the first step in a
Moody To Meet
With Professors
Ralph Moody, state deputy at
torney general, will speak on the
Speaker Ban law at the fall
meeting of the UNC chapter of
the American Association of Uni
versity Professors Monday at 8
p.m. in Howell Hall auditorium.
Moody has gone on record in
public assertions in favor of the
law.
A panel of UNC professors
Henry Brandis Jr., Dean of the
School of Law; Carl W. Gotts
chalk, prof, of medicine; Arnold
S. Nash, prof, of religion; and
Corydon P. Spruill, prof, of ec
onomics will discuss the topic.
A question and answer period
will follow the presentations.
Copies of "Campus Censorship:
The North Carolina 'Visiting
Speakers' La wv" written by Dan-,
iel H. Pollitt, professor of law,
will be distibuted to AAUP mem
bers. Daniel A. Okun, professor of
sanitary engineering, will pre
side over the meeting. Prof. Nash
is . president-elect of the UNC
chapter. Assoc. Prof, of statis
tics W. J. Hall is treasurer and
Asst. Prof, of physiology Richard
L. Glasser, secretary.
The meeting is open only to
members of the UNC faculty.
TRIAL POSTPONED
The trial of Ford Rowan, a
UNC student charged . with fail
ure to yield the right of way
when the automobile he was
driving struck another student
Saturday Oct. 19, has been con
tinued until Nov. 8.
A Carrboro man has appealed
a 30-day jail sentence for as
sault .on a university student
who was picketing the College
Cafe last April.
Roy Lee Merritt, 27, was con
victed this week in Chapel Hill
Recorder's Court on a charge of
assaulting Paul Hutzler, a UNC
sophomore, on April 11.
h jtfjj XL A v- ,
I t
IT WAS Band Day yesterday and high school bands from through
out the state converged on Kenan Stadium to fiill the field in a mas
sive half-time presentation. The combined bands were under the
direction of UNC Band director Dr. Herbert Fred.
: - Photo by Jim Wallace
new concept of dormitory living.
A second amendment dealing
with the IDC seeks to clarify
the IDC Court's jurisdiction over
violators of dormitory rules of
conduct by non-dormitory resi
dents. The amendments would
delete the words "by male dorm
itory residents" in the provision
of the Constitution which states:
"The Men's nlterdormitory Court
shall have original jurisdiction
in cases involving infractions
by. male dormitory- residents
of dormitory rules of conduct as
established by the Men's In
tcrdormitory Council and ap
proved by the Student Legisla
ture." The third amendment seeks to
place the Interfraternity Coun
cil Court under the Constitution.
While the Interfraternity Coun
cil is mentioned in the Consti
tution, no mention is made of
and Interfraternity Council Court
although the Court has been in
existence for some time. The
amendment would add the In
terfraternity Council Court to the
list of already constitutional
ly established Men's Council, Wo
men's Council, Constitution al
Council, Men's Interdormitory
Court (possibly to become Men's
Residence Council Court), the
Women's House Councils, the
Law School Court, the Dental
School Court,. the Medical School
Court, and the Student (?) Fac
ulty Review Board.
The amendment states that
"The Interfraternity Council
shall have original jurisdiction in
cases involving infractions by
fraternities, fraternity members
or agents thereof of rules of
conduct as established by the
Interfraternity Council and ap
proved by the Student Legislat
ure. The Interfraternity Council
shall have the power to deter
mine the composition of the
Court and the procedures under
which it shall operate within the
limitations imposed by this con
stitution and subject to the ap
proval of the Student Legisla
ture." In subsection 1., section 7, Arti
cle II of the Student Constitution,
the amendment would insert the
words "Interfratornity Council
Court" in the provision which
states: "In cases before the
Men's Interdormitory Court and
the Women's House Councils, the
(defendant shall have) the right
to a public trial, which shall be
defined as meaning the presence
of no more than two representa
tives of the student .newspaper
within the chambers of the judi
cial body during a particular
case. Only people signing a
written release may be mentioned
in resulting publicity.
Unless a defendant requests a
public trial, the proceedings shall
be kept secret, except for such
information as the defendant may
disclose at his discretion;"
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Interviews For
Canadian Swap
Are Next Week
Interviews for the Toronto Ex
change will continue next Monday
and Tuesday.
Jaene Yeager and Kellis Park
er, co-chairmen of the annual stu
dent swap "with the University of
Toronto, announced yesterday
that interviews will be held in
Roland Parker I from 3-5 p.m.
The program, now in Its fifth
year, was set up to promote inter
national good will and under
standing. Toronto students will
visit, here over the Duke week
end, and UNC will make a re
turn trip during semester break.
The Canadian students will at
tend the Germans Club concert,
tour the state government facili
ties in Raleigh, see the Duke
game and a Playmaker produc
tion and participate in discus
sions. Each student will be as
signed a "co-Tar Heel" during
the weekend.
The interviewers will decide the
24 students who will represent
UNC. 12 male students and 12
coeds will be chosen.
Petrov Won't
Get Gagged
A professor from the Soviet
Union will speak here Monday,
but his appearance will not vio
late the Speaker Ban Law, a Uni
versity official said yesterday.
Dr. V. V. Petrov, professor of.
statistics at Leningrad State Uni
versity who will address a Statij-;
tics Colloquium is irot according
to, Dr. G. E. Nicholson, head of
the Statistics Department, a
member of the Communist Party
and his apoearance will there
fore not violate the law.
"He has been thoroughly inves
tigated by the FBI and State De
partment," said Dr. Nicholson,
"and there is no reason to think
that he is politically affiliated or
a member of the Party.
"He is a visiting scholar here
on a purely scientific mission.
We feel the state law is unfortun
ate but we didn't want to violate
it in any way. Therefore we fol
lowed the necessary procedure in
clearing the talk."
Dr. Petrov, who is an interna
tionally known figure in probabili
ty theory, arrived in Chapel Hill
last weekend and was asked on
Tuesday, according to Dr. Nich
olson, to address the colloquium.
"We knew far in advance that
he was coming here," he said,
"but we had to wait and see if he
would be willing to speak."
Prof. Petrov is on a three
month scientific exchange tour
which will take him to universi
ties all over the United States.
He is expected to remain in
Chapel Hill until the end of the
week.
UNC-Duke Begin New Program
An
By GARY BLANCHARD
Imagine that you had a pock
etful of money, a list of things
you had long wanted to buy, and
that you woke up one day and
found yourself within ten miles
of two of the best supermarts in
the country.
Imagine that, and you have a
pretty good idea of how dozens
of faculty members for miles
around Chapel Hill must feel as
a result of the recently-announced
$800,000 Cooperative
Program in the Humanities from
the Ford Foundation.
The Foundation is supplying the
money, the faculty members are
supplying the shopping list of
ideas they wish to know more
about, and UNC and Duke are
providing the supermarts of
knowledce in the form of ex
cellent libraries.
The idea behind the program
is to allow selected faculty mem
bers from liberal arts colleges in
North and South Carolina, plus
Virginia, ' to . spend a semester
or two at UNC and Duke, study
ing most anything their hearts
desire.
The emphasis win not be upon
bagging further "degrees, but
-sw y-r - ft ,v j
UNC Defensive Backs Squeeze Juice
, Tommy Ward (38) and Gary Black (12) put
clamps on Georgia's star quarterback Larry Rake-
Phones
J. S. Bennett, superintendent
of ground and buildings, told
several student leaders that
there is a definite possibility of
installing private telephones - in :
each suite of Craige dormitory
if enough interest is shown.
Bennett said that because sev
eral people have taken the ini
tiative and have shown enough
interest, the chances are very
much in favor of the phone in
stallation. The approximate cost of the
phones would be only 50 cents a
month.
Telephones in rooms has been
the objects of campus discussion
for some time, and several indi
vidual students have had them in
stalled. The approximate price for
an individual telephone is $6.70
per month.
Educational.
upon tilling the soil of the facul
ty members' minds, allowing
them to probe for deeper levels
of understanding, while at the
same time allowing them to
polish up the knowledge and
teaching techniques they already
have and go after more of the
same.
The hope is that this coopera
tive venture will be sort of an
educational Marshall Plan for the
Humanities, which encompasses
the fields of History, Philosophy,
English, Classical Languages,
Modern Foreign Languages, Mu
sic, Art and Theater, in an at
tempt to improve and strengthen
man's'TtnowIedge and expertise in
this area, as it is being im
proved and strengthened already
in the Natural and Physical Sci
ences due to the technological
revolution which the space age
has usherd in.
The project also is aimed at
doing something about the rela
tive, neglect of faculty members
at Negro colleges and universi
ties. The thinking here is that un
less Negro professors end in
structors are allowed to develop
their talwents further, they can't
stretch the minds and intellec-
FOOTBALL HIGHLIIIGTS
Football highlights of the game
between UNC and Georgia :will
be shown on WUNC-TV tomorrow
evening at . 9: 30 p.m.
Crash Kills
3 Georgians
Three University of Georgia
students were killed and three
ethers critically hurt late Friday
when their car skidded into a
trailer truck on U. S. 29 near
Piedmont, S. C.
The students were reported to
have been on their way here
for the UNC-Ga. game.
Killed were Linda Kay Blay
lock and Charles Kelly, both of
Charlotte, N. C. and Robert Al
len, Coral Gables, Fla.
STINNETT TO SPEAK
The spotlight will be on the
schools during American Edu
tion Week, being observed at
UNC Nov. 10-16.
Profs Coming Back
tual horizons of their students
as modem needs dictate they
must be stretched.
What makes this program all
the more striking is that it rep
resents a departure from the
Ford Foundation's usual prac
tice of backing projects that are
From Peach
straw. It was a familiar scene all afternoon yes
terday as Carolina romped, 28-7 -
--.'-r-T,, by Jim (Peachpit) Wallace
God?
What happens to students
when they come to UNC and
are confronted by 'questions
such as "What is God?" and
"What is the meaning of life?"
The answers to those and
other similar questions will be
discussed on "Encounter" Mon
day night at 8:30 p.m. on
WUNC-TV, channel 4.
Guests will be Dr. Sam Hill,
chairman of UNC's Religion
Department; Rev. Harry
Smith, Presbyterian campus
chaplain; and Father Robert
Wilken, Catholic campus chap
lain. Host for the weekly show is
Dr. John Clayton, professor of
Radio-TV and Motion Pictures
at UNC.
General theme of the series
of shows is "Minds, Manners
and Morals."
npermarket
u
national in scope. This will be
the first time the Foundation has
agreed to underwrite a program
aimed at capitalizing upon the
regional strength of colleges and
universities in the Humanities.
The program has three features
and works this way:
First, promising faculty mem
bers from the cooperating col
legs such as Davidson, North
Carolina College, Furman, and
Washington & Lee will be
sought out under the direction of
a joint UNC-Duke professors com
mittee, and invited to come to
UNC and Duke for a 'semester
or a year of research and study
as Humanities Fellows.
Their home-school teaching
positions will be filled as much
as possible by advanced gradu
ate students from UNC and
Duke, therby easing the burden
of the faculty members tempo
rary absence and offering the
graduate students valuable x
perience as colleg teachers.
Second, the program will in
clude a 6-week Institute during
the summers of 1964 and 1965,
emphasizing research into the
Medieval - Renaissance Period,
with participants known as
Bulldogs Muzzled;
'Straw Pitchforked
By CURRY KIRKPATRICK
UNC defensive backfield coach Bud Carson may not be
a genius, but don't ask Larry Rakestraw about it.
The Tar Heels put their own sharp-Edged rake on
Georgia's Strawboss here yesterday, jammed the muz
zle on the Bulldogs' vaunted passing gun and completely
obiterated the visitors, 28-7.
You wouldn't think Carolina
could have possibly looked better
than it did two weeks ago against
NC State, but 34,000 chilled fans
thought so as UNC assurred it
self of the first winning season
since 1958.
The Tar Heels are now 6-1, and
they got that way yesterday with
a pass defense that continued
to wallow in magnificence and an
offense that must have made
Rakestraw blush all the way to
his press clippings.
Rakestraw came here as the
tnird-leading total-olfense man in
the country. He left last night
just a withered peach. For Dave
Braine, Ronnie Jackson, Eddie
Kesler, Junior Edge and the rest
of UNC's defensive company just
laughed at his totals of eight of
17 passes for 58 yards.
The points Georgia did get came
as a gift from this guy wearing
stripes who saw early what would
happen and decided against a
shutout. The Bulldogs scored late
in the first quarter on a drive of
65 yards, 55 of which were mark-
Probation
Given For
Book Theft
A sophomore was sentenced to
definite probation for two semes
ters Thursday night in a Men s
Council trial.
The student was charged with
stealing books and trying to sell
them. He said he needed the
money at the time.
The defendant was unable to
sell the books when the book
store salesman suspected that the
books were not his. He then re
turned the books to the owner
saving he had . found them.
The owner accidentally found
out from the salesman a few days
later that someone had tried to
sell his books. He called the de
fendant who admitted the theft
and turned himself in to a mem
ber of the Men's Council.
The council felt that although
the defendant had committed a
"serious Honor Code violation"
he had been honest enough to
give his correct name to the
salesman and to return the books
before he was caught.
Suspension is the sentence us
ually given for an offense this
serious, the Council said.
Institute Fellows coming from
a somewhat bigger land area
than the academic-year Fellows.
Third, the program will bring
in outstanding scholars from
around the world as Visiting Hu
manities Professors to serve as
visiting lecturers and advisers
to the Humanities Fellows for
varying periods of time.
The whole thing is scheduled
to get off the ground in time for
an Institute next summer, follow
ed by the first Academic-Year
Fellows that fall. The first Visit
ing Professors hopefully will be
lined up by next summer to coin
cide with the Institute, and will
continue on into the regular aca
demic year.
Thus the stage has been set for
the educational heart of the Re
search Triangle to become even
more of an academic mecca than
it already is.
In addition, the program dem
onstrates anew that although
UNC and Duka one a private,
the other a public institution
vie ferociously on the athletic
fields, when it comes to educa
tion a high level of competition
becomes a high level of cooperation.
ed off in penalties against the
Tar Heels.
The only penalty UNC fans could
fee was against Georgia too
many men on the field (11 Bull
dogs and the referee).
Junior Edge, the Carolina
quarterback who has had trouble
getting started this year, had the
greatest day of his career in
leading his teammates to the im
pressive win.
He completed 15 of 20 passes
for 189 yards, ran for 37 more .
along the ground, scored two
touchdowns on short runs and
passed for another while leading
the Heels to all four scores. '
The gift TD to the Bulldogs
came after UNC drove 57 yards in
10 plays the second time it gut
the ball.
Runs of six and nine yards by
Ken Willard featured the move
as Carolina drove from its 43
to the Georgia 23. Here, Edge hit
John Hammett with a 21-yard
pitch to the seven, and two bursts
by Willard and a third by Eddie
Kesler got the 7-0 with 4:44 left
in the first quarter.
Georgia took the opportunity
then to show what a ballclub can
do with 12 men.
On a fourth-and-12 from their
33, the Bulldogs kicked. A rough
ing the kicker penalty got thtv.S
the first down.
On a third-and-18 from their
41, Rakestraw was smothered by
Frank Gallagher for another six
yard loss. A personal foul again.st
UNC gave Georgia another 15
yard break to go for another
first down.
And, on a second-and-twelve
fiom the UNC 35, The Bulldogs
smiled again. Rakestraw faded a
pass to end Pat Hodgson on the
Carolina 12. UNC's Braine and
Hodgson both went for it, both
tripped over each other, and the
little red flag came flying out
of the striped pocket once again.
It gave Georgia the ball on the
j 10, and three running plays (the
final two yards by Marv Hurst)
and a conversion later, the score
was tied 7-all. It came on the
first play of the second period.
But the UNC pride was hurt. Its
defense had gone seven quarters
without allowing a score and this
one shouldn't have happened.
The Tar Heels exchanged punts
and get the ball on their 43. It
took them six plays to go ahead
for good. Bob Lacey, the magician,
carried them most of the way.
He caught a look-in from Ede
and eluded three men the profes
sional way to get 18 yards and
a first down on the first play,
taught two other passes for six
UNC
21
192
189
J5-20
2
229.3
0
70
UNC
GEORGIA
First Downs 11
Yds. Rushing 87
Yds. Passing r8
Passes 8-17
Intercepted By 2
Punts 457.3
Fumbles Lost 1
Penalized 30
7 7 0 1128
GEORGIA 0 7 0 07
Scoring:
UNC Kesler 4 run (Braine kick)
GEORGIA Hurst 2 run
(MeCuJIough kick)
UNC Edge 1 run (Braine kick)
L'NC Jackson 16 pass from
Edge (Braine kick)
UNC Edge 8 run (Braine kick)
a, j
and seven-yard gains, and provid
ed a decoy as Edge rolled out for
a big gainer to the Georgia six.
Kesler carried fur five before
Ivdge sneaked for the second TD.
It was 11-7 with 5:5." left in the
, half, and still Rakestraw had nut
completed a pass.
Larry did throw four strikes
in the next series to get the Digs
to the UNC 23. But it was more
bark than bite, for Clini Eudy in
tercepted a pass thrown by Rake
straw from a falling position to
end the advancement.
The Georgia QB was obviously
planning to ground the ball when
he threw it, but foresight would
have shown him that the mistake
(Continued on Page 4)