U.'t.C. Library
Serials Dept.
Bos 870
Chapel HilL, fUC,
WW
mm
Recount Edition
-ft-
Today's Weather
Scattered Showers
Offices in Graham Memorial
Bills Ask
Abolition
Of System
By PETE WALES
Two similar bills asking for the
abolition of the student judiciary
were presented before the Judici
al Committee of Student Legisla
ture yesterday.
In other business, the commit
tee considered the recommended
penalties of the Men's and Wom
en's ouncils submitted to legisla
ture last week which included
expulsion. They voted to report
the penalties out favorably to
legislature.
Hank Patterson and John Ran
dall, former student legislators
and now law students, represent
ed the Student Committee for
Constitutional Integrity in the
presenting of the two bills.
They asked the committee to
held extensive hearings for the
next two or three weeks to test
the truth of several charges made
in the whereas clauses of the two
bills.
They further requested that the
two bills be combined to make
consideration easier.
"The bill doesn't have to come
to a vote this week," Patterson
said.
"It's a bill that has to be con
sidered over a period of time."
Patterson explained that the
bill came primarily as a reaction
to the faculty decision to drop
students from the Student-Faculty
Review Board.
"The faculty's action has put the
. student judiciary in the position
of a sandbox affair. It leaves very
little validity to the student judi
ciary." The bill that Patterson is pro
posing would strike Article II from
the Student Constitution. This ar
ticle sets up the Honor System
and student judicial procedure.
He would have three things re
tained from the article: -
1) the Honor Code and. Campus
Code
2) the Constitutional Council
3) A provision by Student Leg
islature providing for defense and
counsel for students appearing be
fore Administration and Faculty
tribunals for violations of the var
ious codes of conduct.
In the whereas clauses, the bill
charges administrators with three
violations of due process to stu
dents other than the recent facul
ty committee decision:
1) The alleged administrative
expulsions of students in the past
year in morals cases. Students
are not made aware of the judici
al procedures in these circum
stances. 2) The alleged use of Adminis
trative Probation places students
in double jeopardy.
3) The alleged Administrative
instructions to resident advisors
which condone the urging of stu
dents to vacate their dorm as a
threat of being reported to the
IDC for action prevent the IDC
from carrying out its judicial re
sponsibilities. "We are asking for deliberate
hearings that will bring out the
facts," Patterson said.
He suggested the committee hear
testimony from Administrative
and faculty committee representa
tives and from student leaders
concerned with the student judici
aries over the past three years.
Orgies At Havahd?! Well,
Maybe Little Bitty Ones
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI)
Harvard students admit that sex
relations occasionally occur when
an undergrad entertains a coed
in his room, but they denied Fri
day that there had been orgiastic
parties in the dormitories.
Students criticized the press
and their ownd eans for airing
the university's sex problems be
fore a national audience. Faculty
mssters of Harvard residence halls
tended to support the student's
contention tht dormitory behavior
was not out of line.
Attention was focused onH ar
vard's sexual climate Thursday
because of a letter to the campus
newspaper from a dean who com
plained that allowing girls into
men's dormitories tended to licen
se "wild parties and sexual inter
course." The university admit
ted a few incidents but said that,
No Forum For Destroyers
Of State, Moody Asserts
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Photo by Jim Wallace
Assistant Attorney General Ralph Moody
Miami U. Editor
Fired From Post
MIAMI (CPS) The Univer
sity of Miami, Student Publica
tions Board recently . dismissed
the editor of its student news
paper, The Hurricane, but denied ,
that this was due to a controversial
editorial urging greater partici
pation of .Negro students in cam
pus activities, which had appear
ed the week before.
University of Miami Vice-President
and Chairman of the Pub
lications Board, H. Franklin Wil
liams, said Monday night that
there is a requirement that stu
dent editors carry a full class
load and that editor Elayne Gil
bert fell below that standard.
"It is not true that Miss Gil-
bert was taken to task for the
editorial she wrote. The Uni
versity extends a great deal of
freedom to its students," Wil- 4
liams said.
Williams said that she had been
dropped from the courses be
cause of excessive absences. He
noted that she had been specially
registered for these courses two
weeks late, because she had not
the proper course load at the
beginning of the semester.
Miss Gilbert said that two of
her teachers dropped her from
their courses without any warn
ing and that "it occurred immedi
ately after my editorial."
She said hat both of them were
journalism courses and one is
taught by the paper's advisor.
She noted that her teachers had
informally allowed her to miss
class in order to work on the
paper and that she had not been
.warned about excessive cutting.
The new editor is Linda Reis
man, senior in journalism who has
"never worked on the paper be
fore," according to Miss Gil
bert. in the main, the wild parties con
isted of isolated heavy drinking
bouts.
Harvard, like numerous other
Eastern schools, allows its men
to entertain women in their suites,
bedrooms included, at certain
specified hours. The practice is
long-standing, and the duration of
the hours was last changed in
1952. .
There was no indication that
the new public controversy would
lead to any immediate revision of
house rules. In fact, the Novem
ier meeting of the faculty of
arts and sciences, .which would
have to vote such changes, has
been canceled.
Erik Sundquist, 21, a Harvard
senior from Arlington, Va., scoffed
at the idea of a general campus
sex scandal.
The closest thing to a scandal
' l-
s.-.-.- t cat-. .w
..
If
Williams said that the paper's
supervisor picked the best editor
he could find. She was not on the
staff, but is well qualified, and
was conf rimed ,by the Board
after a complete hearing of Miss"
Gilbert's case."
The editorial charged that there
are no Negroes in any of the ath
letic departments except intra
murals and that there is only
one graduate assistant. It also
urged an end to possible fratern-.
ity discrimination.
Williams noted that "the editor
ial gave an improper impression
that there are some reservations
on integration at Miami. The
impression of her editorial is
incorrect, since the University of
Miami has achieved complete
integration."
Miss Gilbert said that she had
been told that there were certain
areas she was not to write edi
torials on and they included in
tegration, temporary buildings,
student freedom of the press and
morals. She added that she had
no opportunity for a retraction.
Williams said that "editorial
restrictions are negligible and that
only certain restrictions within
good journalistic taste such as
morals are clearly taboo sub
jects." LUXON JUDGES
Norval Neil Luxon, Dean of
the School of Journalism at The
University of North Carolina, will
spend Saturday in Washington,
D C. judging science articles in
newspapers and magazines for
which two $1,000 prizes are
awarded by the American Assoi.
ciation for the Advancement of
Science and the Westinghouse.
Company.
at Harvard happens when the
deans say one is brewing and the
newspapers print it, Sundquist
said.
LAW DEAN HERE
Dr. Frank K. Walwer, Assis
tant Dean of Columbia Universi
ty Law School will be on campus
Thursday , to talk to any students
interested in attending Columbia.
Dr. Walwer said Columbia would
like to have more students from
North Carolina. He will be glad
to discuss admissions or the
possibilities of scholarships with
interested students.
Interested students should con
tact Dr. Frank Duffey of the Col
lege of Arts and Sciences at 942
3664 to make an appointment.
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., WEDNESDAY. NOVF.MBF.B 6, 1963
By MICKEY BLACKWELL
N. C. Assistant Attorney Gen
eral Ralph Moody upheld the
speaker-ban here Monday night
saying "tTie state does not have
to provide a forum for those who
would destroy the. state."
Moody, speaking in Howell
Hall to some 100 members of
the UNC chapter of the Ameri
can Association of University
Professors, said foe law was con
stitutional because the state had
jurisdiction over the university
and that freedom of speech "is
not applicable to those who ad
vocate Communism, no matter
how skillfully the doctrines may
be cloaked and disguised."
"Any person who is a com
munist," he said, "is dedicated
to the overthrow of the govern
ment of the Unite dStates by any
means possible."
"The theory cf "the competi
tion of concepts in the market
place of ideas in which commun
ism must be afforded its hearing
is silly on its face, for commun
ism would destroy the market
place itself," he said.
Moody added:
"The doctrine of academic
freedom "has no application in
this situation. Academic free
dom has no statutory or consti
tutional basis except possibly
the situation where it may merge
into the freedom of speech
clause and the first amend
ment." Moody did say, however, that
he had "no idea of the extent"
the so-called gag-law restricts the
flow of purely scientific informa
tion. He said that many of the leg
islators were probalily unaware
of the law's adverse affect,
particularly in nonpolitical fields.
Moody said he wanted to cor
rect any misunderstanding that
had arisetn over his part in the
drafting of the bill. vr
"I did not ' draft this act nor
was ' I - at any time consulted
about it," Moody said. "I did
not support the Act in any .form
or fashion and the truth is; that
I knew nothing about the .act
until I read in the newspaper
that it had been enacted into
law."
Following Moody's address,
he joined a panel of UNC pro
fessors who discussed the law
and answered questions from the
audience.
Some of the typical comments
from panel members other than
Moody were:
Corydon P. Spruill "The law
is truely a symbol of mortal dan
ger. If the vagueness and lack
of a penality is later corrected
by the legislature, it will be dras
tic for the University."
Arnold Nash "The legislature
shouldn't interfere with the run
ning of the University unless
they have to. Genuine demo
cracy interferes (with the ele
ments of society) as little as
possible, until there is a reason .
When they make their mistake
it comes down on them like a
ton of bricks but not until then."
Dan Pollitt "No one had an
opportunity to present their
views opposing the bill. We
should always be able to expose
the different viewpoints on this
campus.
Robert Rupen "If redisrict
ing is a cause for a special ses
sion of Legislature, then this is
a cause for a special session."
New Craze!
Hot Cars!
Thieves left a trail of crime to
Durham and half the way back
Sunday night when they stole two
automobiles and broke into a ser
vice station.
The first car was stolen from
Durham and recovered at the
Town and Country Service Sta
tion here at Airport Rd. and Hills
boro St.
The service station was broken
into through a side window and
$30 in bills, cookie machine
change and $20 in nickles were
stolen, according to Lt H. Pen
dergraft of the Chapel Hill Police.
The Town and Country car was
also stolen, but later ran out of
gas in front of the Howard John
son's Restaraunt on U.S. 15-501,
between Chapel Hill and Durham.
It was abandoned and no trace of
the thieves was left.
Pendergraft said that a rash cf
thefts had been . occurring lately
and urged that students take their
personal belongings with them
when they leave their cars.
CI
evelantil bays Jr acn
.R.esponsibility
Say Race Not Cause Of Attack
DKE's Apologize To Tilden
Bill Davis, DKE fraternity
president, yesterday issued a
statement terming Saturday
night's incident at the joint DKE
Zete party "unfortunate" and
apologizing to Doug Tilden for the
treatment he received at the
party.
Tilden, a UNC junior from
Orlando, Fla., was roughed up
while attending the open house
party and received a bloody
Berlin Convoy Still Held
BERLIN (UPI) Soviet troops
and armored vehicles blocked a
U. S. Army convoy in East Ger
many for the second day Tues
day but permitted a French and
a British convoy to rush to the
support of the Americans in what
could be the start of a Soviet
backdown.
British and French officials
sent convoys of their own from
Berlin along the 110-mile high
way through East Germany to link
UiS. Refuses Asylum
SAIGON, South Vietnam (UPI)
The United States Tuesday
delivered slain president Ngo Dinh
Diem's younger brother, Ngo Dinh
Can, to the new revolutionary
government for probable trial and
execution.
Can, feared and hated master
Lodge Hailed In Saigon
SAIGON, South Viet Nam (UPI)
U.S. Ambassador Henry Ca
bot Lodge received a hero's wel
come from 300 Buddhists yester
day when he visited the Xa Loi
Pagoda, Saigon's Main Buddhist
cathedral.
The ambassador and his wife
Poland Signs
OTTAWA (UPI) Canada and
Poland Tuesday signed a long
term wheat agreement providing
for the sale of some 44 million
bushels to the Communist na
Ike Falls Into Old Habit
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)
Former President Dwight D.
Eisenhower lost his chance to
vote Tuesday because he did
not apply for an absentee ballot
in time.
A spokesman said that Eisen
hower had planned to vote in per
son, but that a "trip came up at
Wig tier
Of Nobel
A noted physicist who spoke
at the Eastern Theoretical Phy
sics Conference here recently was
awarded the Nobel Prize in phy
sics yesterday.
Dr. Eugene P. Wigner of
Princeton University received
half of the $51,158 Nobel Prize
money awarded to him, Dr.
Maria Goeppard Mayer of the
University of California and Pro
fessor Hans D. Jenson of the
University of Heidelburg, West
Germany.
The three were honored for re
search contributing to mankind's
knowledge on how nuclear ener
gy might be best operated and
applied.
Wigner, 61, was one of the sc
ientists who witnessed the birth
of the atomic age at the Univer
sity of Chicago in 1942. He was
co-author with the late Enrico
Fermi of a 1939 letter to Presi
dent Roosevelt suggesting that
uranium could be turned into "a
new and important source of
energy."
nose and black eye in the inci
dent. Meanwhile a member of
the DKE fraternity, Tom Crudup,
admitted being one of those who
hit Tilden. Crudup indicated, how
ever, he was not solely respon
sible for the incident.
Tilden disagreed with Davis'
statement as to why and exactly
how the incident occurred. Davis
maintained that the trouble was
simply a misunderstanding be-
WORLD
NEWS
BRIEFS
up with 44 American Soldiers
guarded by 100 Red army soldiers
in armored cars armed with
machine guns at Marienborn, 110
miles west of Berlin.
Both the British and French
convoys defied a Soviet demand
that soldiers dismount to be count
ed at the Soviet Berlin check
point. The French convoy was
held up for 65 minutes and the
British convoy for 55 minutes.
of central Viet Nam, escaped
house arrest Tuesday in Hue,
400 miles to the north, and
sought asylum in the U.S. con
sulate. He had been under heavy
guard to prevent mob violence by
angry Buddhists in Hue.
made an informal visit to the
pagoda shortly after noon.
They entered unannounced,
with Lodge wearing a short
sleeved sport shirt. It was sev
eral minutes before they were
noticed.
Wheat Pact
tion during the next three years.
The deal, fifth major grain sale
negotiated with the Communist
bloc during recent months, will
net Canada about $90 million.
the last minute" and he left Mon
day for Augusta, Ga.
The Adams County Board of
Elections told the former Presi
dent that it was too late to ap
ply for an absentee ballot. State
laws require that applications for
absentee ballots be submitted a
week prior to the election.
Takes V2
Prize
The letter led to the first atom
ic bomb.
DR. WIGNER
.-- ....... -frfy-
" )h- '"
r "
United
To Uphold.
tween Tilden and Crudup, and
was not related to the fact that
Tilden came to the party with
Kellis Parker, a Negro UNC stu
dent. Tilden, however, contended that
the remarks made at the time of
the incident left no doubt in his
mind that his association with
Parker had motivated the assault.
Otherwise, Tilden said he ap
preciated Davis' "attitude of con
cern over the incident," and felt
that "the sooner this thing settles
down the better." He indicated he
had no intentions of filing either
civil or Honor Council charges.
Davis' statement:
"The DKE house would like to
make a public statement concern
ing the incident which occurred
in our house Saturday night.
"The incident is sincerely re
gretted, but we feel it is import
tant to stress the fact that racial
issue was not the basis for the un
fortunate treatment of Doug Til
den. "We also regret that The Daily
Tar Heel did not give those of us
who might have been able to sup
ply additional information time to
investigate the matter.
"The DKE house must be re
sponsible for the maltreatment of
Doug Tilden, but motivations for
this affair has regrettably become
the issue, not the affair itself.
"The incident was a misun
derstanding between personalities.
Tilden was "hustled out the
door," but by a different indivi
dual and only to avoid further
trouble.
"Kellis Parker was not person
ally insulted, nor was he mis
treated or embarrassed in any
way. Parker has attended func
tions at this house before, such
as the mock U.N. Convention
party, at which the DKE house
served as host for the entire dele
gation. "This incident has also been
publicized on the radio, but no
member of the DKE house has
been formally approached for
comment by this news media.
"Joel Bulkley, author of the ar
ticle in the Daily Tar Heel, did
contact the house officers Mon
day afternoon, but as this was
the first we had heard of the in
cident, we could shed no light
on the situation. If the story had
been held out only one day, the
incident could have been reported
more accurately.
"The DKE house is taking steps
to assure that these incidents do
not continue, and once more pub
licly apoligizes to Doug Tilden
for the treatment he received Sat
urday night."
RTI EXEC TO SPEAK
James R. Pearson Jr., assis
tant to the president of the Re
search Triangle Institute, George
Herbert, will describe the insti
tute and its general operation to
day at 2 p.m. on UNC-TV, Chan
nel 4.
The program is intended to
provide general background for
future appearances of RTI sc
ientists who will describe the
specific research they direct in
their laboratory or division.
Pearson, who received his BS
degree in Electrical Engineering
from North Carolina State, has
been witht RTI since 1961.
Prior to joining the Institute,
he was with the research divi
sion of Radiation, Inc., in Mel
borne, Fla.
PLAYMAKERS
The Carolina Playmakers
second production of the season,
Eugene O'Neill's Pulitzer Prize
winning "Long Day's Journey
Into Night," is set for Nov. 20
24, Director Thomas Patterson
announced this week.
The play, whicf.i depicts one
shattering day in the life of an
alcohclic, dope addicted family,
will be presented by a cast
which includes Earl Wynn of the
UNC faculty. Marion Fitz-Sim-ons
a Chapel Hill actress, and
three UNC students: Frank Mc
Donald of Giarlotte, Richard
Parks of Jacksonville. Fla., and
Neal Chaffin of Richmond Va.
BALLOT COUNTERS
- Ballot counters are desperately
needed this afternoon. Interested
students should stop by the SG
offices, second floor G.M, any
time after 12 o'clock.
Press International Service
ty Had.
Calls Earlier
Agreement
'A Mistake'
By HUGH STEVENS
Dr. Gordon Cleveland, chairman
of the Faculty Committee on Stu
dent Discipline, told a special ses
sion of Student Legislature last
night that students were not con
sulted about the recent dropping
cf students from the Student-
Faculty Review Board because
"the faculty felt that this was a
responsibility that was theirs and
theirs alone one that could not
be shared."
He said the question of abroga
tion of the student constitution
was not considered "too serious
ly" because the committee "did
not feci that the student consti
tution was the proper place for
this to be written up."
He continued that the commit
tee felt the Student Legilsature,
in approving the Constitution, had
"unilaterally created a constitu
tional restriction on the faculty
in its own area of jurisdiction."
Cleveland admitted that the
Faculty Committee had, in 1956,
encouraged the incorporation of
the Student-Faculty Review Board
in Student Constitution.
"However," he said, "I feel
that this action was a mistake,
in that the faculty allowed an
other group to legislate away its
jurisdiction, without having a
means of withdrawal."
He indicated that the recent
1 simnlv an attemnt to rectifv what
they considered an improper de
cision of the committee.
Cleveland denied that the com
mittee's action represented a lack
of faith in the students, saying
that students were not consulted
because the committee's decision
was "a final one."
"I don't know how consulta
tion could have been provided for
which would have satisfactory,"
he said. Cleveland also noted that
the students were thus relieved
of any responsibility for a de
cision which they could not have
prevented.
He said that if the decision rep
resented a "breach of agreement,"
it was an agreement into which
"the faculty had no right to en
ter." Cleveland appeared before the
Legislature with Dean of Student
Affairs C. O. Cathey and Dean
of Men William G. Long, who al
to supported the decision.
Pre-Dental,
Med Society
To Hold Meet
Alpha Epsilon Delta, the Pre
Med, Pre-Dent Honor Society,
will hold its first annual Pre-Med
Orientation on Thursday at 7:30
p.m. in the auditorium of Howell
Hall.
Ronald Joyner, President of the
AED campus chapter, urges all
freshman and sophomore students
to attend. He said, "Since the
University has no special pre
rred or pre-dent set-up like other
schools, it is our duty to inform
those persons on the campus in
to csted in going on to medical
or dental school." Joyner feels
the meeting will help clarify
medical school requirements and
application procedures.
Talks will be given by Dr. W.
R. Straughn, pre-medical faculty
advisor; Dr. E. M. Hedgpeth of
the medical school; Floyd Bryan,
3rd year medical student, and
Joyner. Following the meeting
there will be a question and ans
wer session.
According to AED, the United
States needs many more trained
physicians and dentists that it
has, but during the four under
graduate years the number of
medical and dental school can
didates dwindles rapidly. AED
fteLs that if questions are ans
wered while the preimed student
is a freshman or sophomore, there
will be more junior-senior pre-meds.