- . i.J,ii If W Bo 570 Chap3l HiUS(.aVnti.f.oH 'A' iSr tt Today's Weather Cloudy and wet. Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY DECEMBER 15, 1963 United Press International Service U Cr care m c o O "T7 " LS Big S Senators To Air Districting Tiff In Debate Here Two veteran State Senators will debate the pros and cons of the so-called "Little Federal Plan" for redisricting the State Senate, here Tuesday night. Sen. Robert Lee Humber of Greenville, who represents Pitt County, speaks for the plan while Sen. Richard Long of Rox boro, who represents Durham, Granville and Person counties, is opposed. Senate redisricting was one of the hottest issues of the 1963 General Assembly. Legislators were unable to see eye-to-eye on the problem during the regular sersicn and Gov. Terry Sanrord called a special session in Octo ber. It was during this session that the Little Federal Plan was bcrn. In order for the plan to be adopted a constitutional amend ment will have to be approved by the State's voters. Both those who favor and these who op pose the plan have been mar shalling their forces since Oc tober to w:.n support to their cause at the polls. If the amendment is adopted, membership of the House of Representatives will be dropped frccn its present 120 members to 100, with one representative from each county, and member ship of the Senate will be in creased from 50 to 70. Oppo nents of the measure claim it will give control of the legisla ture to rural Eastern counties and therefore populous Pied mont counties will not get their fair share of representation. The debate, sponsored by the UNC Young Democratic Club, will get under way in Gerrard Hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Humber and Long are both prominent attorneys. Humber graduated from Wake Forest College and the Wake Forest Law 'School. He was a Rhodes Schol ar -at Oxford University, earned his Master -of Arts degree at Har vard University, where he later taught, and studied at the Uni versity of Paris. He had a career as a lawyer and business executive in Paris from 1930 to 1940. He was chair man of the State Art Commission from 1951 through 1961 and ser ved in the State Senate during the 1959, 1901 and 1963 sessions. Long graduated from Duke Uni versity and the Vanderbilt Uni versity Law School. He served on the State Utilities Commis sion from 1958 through 1960 and sat in the State Senate during the 1957 and 19S3 sessions. He is a director of the Roxboro Cotton Mills, The Peoples Bank and the Reinforced Plastic Container Corp. in Roxboro, where he prac tices law. Jr. Class, GM Hold Christmas Party Tonight "A Christmas Get-Together" co-sponsored by the Junior Class ana Graham Memorial will be held ia the main lounge of GM tonight at 8 p.m. All students are invited to come and join in free refresh ments and dancing in the Ren dezvous Room. Also included will be Christ mas caroling. Jucy Allen, Junior Class so cial chairman, said the event was being held to provide an opportunity for students to meet and "join in the Christmas spirit." Susan Powell, Junior Class treasurer, said yesterday that the class realized a $245 profit on the Bake Sale held Dec. 2 and 3. "It was very successful," she said, "and I want to thank all the Junior girls who donated baked goods or money for the sale." She also expressed her ap preciation to everyone who made a purchase during the sale. Miss Powell indicated that the money will be used to finance other class projects, including a dance scheduled shortly after the Christmas vacation. EDUCATION SENIORS You are required to take Na tional Teachers Examinations. Bulletins of information complete with applications may be obtain ed from the University Testing Service, Room 019 Peabody Hall. Applications must be mailed by January 15 to avoid late fees. In case of doubt, come to room 101 Peabody Hall. x- --..-2 r, e D llil DECORATOINS With Christmas Vacation less than a week away, dormitories are beginning to light up each night with bright Christmas decorations. This tree, one of the first to go up, is made entirely of lights and hangs on Avery Dorm. Pohto by Jim Wallace Students Hopping Mad Over Seating By JOHN GREENB ACKER And HUGH STEVENS Student opinion ranged from a slow burn to sheer outrage yes terday in light of an announce ment that most student tickets for the Gator Bowl will be in the end zone. A majority of male comments were unprintable, arid coed re actions were hardly less vicious. "I think it is the dirtiest, nas tiest, most conniving, most un derhanded trick possible," a Spencer Hall resident said. Her reaction was echoed by the majority of students questioned on the matter. "I don't mind sitting in the end zone so much as the fact that someone apparently tried to pull the wool over our eyes by not telling us about it before," a junior remarked. "Did the University know about this beforehand?" was a typical question. Some knocked the Gator Bowl officials. "I think it is a poor policy on the part of the Gator Bowl," a sophomore said. "Some of us are spending $100 or more to see this game. That's a lot of mon ey, and it's not worth it now." Many wondered why the visit ing students weren't given spec ial consideration. "I think the schools playing should have priority," another coed said. "We are the host team; it's unfair to us. Is there any reason for it are these the only seats available?" "Are we to assume that Air Force got the end zone, too?" The announcement has appar ently changed the plans of many Women's Council Acquits 1, Finds 2 Others Guilty Two were found guilty and one acquitted in Women's Council trials Thursday. One woman pleaded guilty to a charge of lateness after she came in one hour and 20 minutes past the time of a late permission. She was sentenced to two week's campusment for negligence. In the second case, a woman returned from Thanksgiving vaca tion two hours and forty minutes late after efforts to obtain public transportation, after her ride had broken down, failed. She was found not guilty and her situation was termed unavoidable. The third woman was campus ed for three days for a mistake in signing out for vacation. She returned 23 hours late. mm O -C7 o 8 ' " ' .""HUM students. "I've been to every game ex cept the one at Michigan State," one junior said. "I'm not going to. this one because of the. seats, and there are lots more like me." "I was going to go," said an other student, "but now I'm just as happy in staying home and watching it on TV." Some students were particular ly inconvenienced by the news. "I bought a block of ten tickets so my friends could sit together," a student complained. "Two of them canceled out yesterday, and I really can't balme them." The first action most stu dents could do in protest was ex pressed hy a junior. "The only way students can effectively pro test the seating is to ask for re funds on the tickets." If reaction could be summed up in one word, it was that used by an upperclassman, "Crimin al!" Christmas Express RIDE WANTED Kansas City or vicinity. An dreas Wolf, 614 Ehringhaus, 963 9039 or 968-9213. . Harrisburg, Pa. or mid-state area. F. Peterson, 260 Craige. Knoxville, Chattanooga or Nash ville. Eric Van Loon, 422 Craige, 968-9052. Beaumont, Tex. or anything south. Jack Shirley, 968-9003 (day) or 968-1692 (after 11 p.m.). Biloxi, Miss or New Orleans (two) Don Morgan, 968-9090, 968 9117. California (two) Mel Stephens, 239 Ehringhaus, 968-9034. New York City, Mike Greene, 963-9159. Washington, D. C. Rick Fahrer, 209 Graham, 968-9159. Orlando or Winter Park, Fla. Don Engvall, 968-9197. Columbus, Ga. Vee Hanna, 106 Everett, 968-9056. Norfolk, Va. Rebecca Berger, 942-1495. RIDERS WANTED Boston, Dr. Thomas Noonan be fore Dec. 14, 933-2078, 968-8192 be tween 6-9 p.m. Southern Illinois. 942-3991. New York City. Jay Cudrin, 942-4223. Pittsburgh or vicinity. Richard Benzio after 4:30 p.m. 967-1733. Cleveland. George Bernard, 966-1171 from 9-5. Washington, D. C. Thurman Smith, 942-2256. 3 More Arrested As Race Protests Continue Here " Three people including one UNC student were arrested yes terday afternoon as the most re cent racial demonstrations con tinued. -. According to a CORE spokes man, the three were arrested when they refused to leave Leo's restaurant when asked by the hostess in the presence of police. Chief of Police William Blake I was unavailable for comment. The spokesman identified those arrested as Karen Parker, a jun ior in the school of journalism from Winston-Salem; James Fou shee of Chapel Hill, and Rose mary Ezra, a night student in the University. John Dunne, chairman of the local CORE chapter, said the two Negroes and one white would re main in jail without bail. CORE also demonstrated at the Shack and Clarence's yesterday. No one was arrested at either place. According to Lou Calhoun, a CORE member, two Negroes and two whites went to Clarence's, where the proprietor yelled at them to stop when one man came through the door, and then grab bed at him to throw him out. The demonstrator went limp, Calhoun said, and the proprietor asked a customer to help throw the dem onstrator out. " Calhoun said the demonstrator suffered minor bruises when he hit the sidewalk, but will not pre fer charges against the men for throwing him out. At the Shack, Calhoun said, four more people went in and sat down in a booth. He said they ordered sodas, and when the manager asked whether they -were going to carry them out to drink, re plied they would stay. The manager then asked them to leave, Calhoun said, and when they, refused, he went.. up the street to call the police. After waiting for a few minutes, Cal houn said, the group left. The demonstrations yesterday and Friday night were in support of three of the four persons con victed Thursday in connection with sit-ins held last summer. (Continued on Page 3) Dunne Says Pines Visit Not Sit-in By GARY BLANCIIARD One of the four persons arrest ed Friday night after seeking service at The Pines, a segregat ed Chapel Hill restaurant, said Saturday the group did not go to the restaurant to break any law but to reconcile their differ ences with the management. John Dunne, 20-year-old former UNC student who gave up his Morehead Scholarship to work full-time for the Congress of Ra cial Equality (CORE), said the bi-racial group went to the res taurant only after making reser vations. Had Leroy Merritt, the manag er, "a!ked us to leave in the presence of police," Dunne said, "we would have, as did the party which went to Brady's." This was a reference to three integrationists who sought ser vice at Brady's Restaurant about the same time as Dunne's group did at The Pines, but who left at police request. After police arrived at The Pines, Dunne said, the manager asked how he could sign a war rant so that all four would be jailed. "We left and voluntarily made an appointment to be booked at the Police Station at 8 o'clock, as the warrants hadn't been sign ed yet but would be by then," Dunne said. Pines Manager Leroy Merritt declined to discuss the incident. Dunne said his group went to the restaurant not only to eat, or talk to the manager if they couldn't, but "to let his patrons see him refusing to let a group of well-dressed, sober, intelligent and quiet people eat a meal. "WTe did not go to antagonize the manager but to try to recon cile our differences." Arrested with Dunne were Dav id Dansby, 24, Negro head of the campus NAACP unit and a UNC Law student; David McReynoIds. 34, a national field secretary of the Wrar Resisters League, who arrived in Chapel Hill on a speak ing visit last week; and an 18-year-old local Negro girl, Phyllis Timberlake. Trial is set for Recorder's Court on Jan. 7. eior Ticket By GARY BLANCHARD Students unhappy with their primarily end-zone tickets to the Gatcr Bowl game Dec. 28 can refund them at the Woollen Gym ticket office Monday between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. At the same time, the 750 remaining Bowl tickets will be on sale. This was announced yesterday afternoon by Chuck Erickson, UNC director of athletics, fol lowing a meeting with student leaders, alumni and Athletic De partment staff msmbers at which Erickscn pointed out that UNC has no control over what seats are made available to Carolina fans. Erickson, obviously harried from trying to keep on top of the numerous Bowl arrangements being made plus his normal du ties, said he understands student resentment over the location of seats but he did the best he could. "Two allotments of tickets were available for the two schools," he explained, "4,000 in one corner of the stadium and 12,000 in the opposite corner and end zone. "We took the larger one." Mike Lawler, student body president, said "The rub is that Bowl games are a business ven ture they are underwritten and it is to those underwriters that the better seats go. "I think the important thing is that we have a large number of students, faculty, and alumni in Jacksonville yelling for the ,Tar Heels-" .: Erickson voiced agreement with Lawler, noting that some 22,500 seats in the 48,000 - seat stadium were sold in advance last summer. He pointed out that no tickets have been placed on sale in Jack sonville and won't be until unused ones are returned from UNC and Air Force. Erickson said about 7,000 of UNC's tickets are behind the end zone, with the other 5,000 stretch ing out to the 35 or 40 yard line. Some tickets were blocked out for faculty members, alumni and Educational Foundation mem bers, he added, but most were sold on a first-come, first-serve basis, with students able to buy as many as they wished. One student pointed out that the uproar over seating might not have arisen if students had been told where the tickets were located when they went on sale. Erickson said he regretted that this had not been done and, to alleviate any possible feeling of misrepresentation, he had ar ranged for disgruntled students to get refunds. Playmaker One-Acts Tonight The Carolina Playmakers will present three original one-act plays, products of Prof. Thomas M. Patterson's playwriting class es, tonight. These plays, recently written by UNC students, are entirely student-produced and directed. The plays include "The Button" by George Gray III of Gastonia, "Sydney" by Richard N. Philp of Vero Beach, Fla., and "A Matter of Distinction," by Tom Benen son of New York City. The productions will be directed by Suzie Cordon, John WTritty, and Tom Hull, graduate students in the Department of Dramatic Art. A short discussion period will follow each play. Curtain time is 7:30 and ad mission is free. PLAYMAKERS TRYOUTS Tryouts for the Carolina Play maker's next major production "The Busy Martyr," will be held Monday at 4 and 7:30 p.m., in the Playmakers Theatre. The play calls for a cast of 16 men, seven women, extras and four children. Scripts are available at the Reserve Reading Room in the library and at the Department of Dramatic Art, 307 Bynum Hall. e owin Refund Offered - v ,-w-" yj if Phota by Jim Wallace. Erickson Explains Ticket Situation ND Hires Parseghian SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPD Notre Dame, never able to beat Ara Parseghian's Northwestern football teams on the field, hired - him under-; a four-year" contract as coach Saturday to try to re store the Fighting Irish to their former days of glory. Parseghian, 40, quit with one year remaining on his contract as coach at Northwestern to take For Chapel Hill Polic e It's All 1,1 jim i iii r i H Jl By SUZY STERLING Decaled on the full-length mirror were the words, "I represent the Chapel Hill Police Dept." The telephone rang. "Yes, Police Department." "Yes?" "Yes, I see. Call the funeral home in Durham. They'll have an ambulance . . . welcome." Car numbers, car numbers, car numbers, car numbers. "Can you read me," came the scratchy, half-static voice over the short-wave radio receiver. Ring. "No, I haven't had a report of a car being stolen in Eastgate." "You're sure it was Eastgate?" "No, I'm sorry." The elderly police officer returned to the small confines of his office. A gold lamp hung from the wall, supplement ing the light of the fluorescent bar hanging from the ceiling. Paint was cracked and peeling from the two-tone smudged green walls. The scratchy radio voice came out again in carefully spaced words. "Report to Farrington Road. A yellow light will be shining. A child has blown himself to pieces with a shot-gun." The officer at desk duty began to thumb through a neat pile of complaint reports. On the walls memorandum notes, schedules, and duty lists were stapled. A 1961 map of Chapel Hill and surrounding area hung over the desk. g lo V the Irish job. Wildcat Athletic Director Stu Holcomb said North western willingly released Par seghian. Parseghian, head coach at" Mi ami of Ohio for five years where he had a 39-6-1 record, tutored the Wildcats for eight years, posting a 36-35-1 mark. In four straight years against the Irish, Parseghian won every game. In A Night's Work X ) 4 ' W, 't -V-.: ' . Heels Stagger To 76-71 Win BATON ROGUE, La Billy Cunningham sat out some eight minutes early in the second half here last night, but came back just in time to push North Carolina to a lackluster 76-71 victory over LSU. The Tigers, tough but not sur prisingly so on their home court, had UNC on the ropes as late as three minutes left to the gun, but could get no closer than 68-67 when Bobby Fetter made two free throws off a foul by Charlie Shaffer. But here, Carolina rung up six straight on foul shots by Ray Respess 2), Cunningham 2) and a lay-up by Billy Galantai to go into a 74-67 margin with a min ute and a half left. LSU's Dick Maile canned a jumper at the 1:25 point, and 30 seconds later John Piazza cut the Tar Heel lead to three (74-71) with a push bucket. But Shaf fer's lay-up with 12 seconds re maining was the final score, and the Tigers went down by the five-point deficit. Cunningham, plagued by his own fouls for the second straight game, got his third personal with 11 minutes left in the first half, and sat out six minutes of the period because of it. UNC led at the break, 42-35. He committed number four just two minutes into the second peri od and was on the bench from then to the 11:00 mark of the half. But the Big Kid's return (UNC was up by four, 54-50) pro vided the impetus needed to stay l with the pesky Tigers to the end. UNC never trailed from there as Cunningham hit 27 points, de spite missing seven straight free throws at one point. Respess got 18 and Shaffer 10 to account for (Continued on Page 3) Photo by Jim Wallace Again the phone rang. "Police Department." "Yes?" "Beg pardon." "Where?" "What's the trouble, ? Who's calling?" "O.K." He rung up and proceeded to call the scratchy voice. "Someone just called here at the desk . . . some kind of a foreign accent, couldn't under stand them very well. Little trouble between dining hall and the Law School. Send someone over now." "O.K." The police chief came in with a large sheaf of plans. "Come here and let me explain what we're going to be doing Monday." The two men discussed the plans in muted voices for several minutes an old man entered the office. "You the only one on duty?" He needed a ride to Carrboro. The Chief left with him. The scratchy voice then spelled out the name of a car owner whose car's tires had been stolen while the car was parked in the Library Parkin" lot. Pecking out the letters one by one, the officer typed out a complaint report for the stolen tires. He leaned back in his leather-covered swivel chair and sighed. Another Saturday night on desk duty had begun.