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Box 870 Clpel Hill, lUC, Fuilbrigh (US Ii i SEN. WILLIAM FULBRIGHT .uAiZ Red Carpet Is Out For CS Speakers By MAID A BURCII In honor of keynote speaker Senator William Fulbright, the 1964 Carolina Symposium will Candidates Hold Meet Gubernatorial candidates L. Richardson Preyer, Dan K. Moore and I. Beverly Lake will be featured today in the first of a series of programs on "Mixing Religion and Politics" presented by the Westminster Fellowships of UNC, N. C. State and Duke University. Featured also in the program at 3 p.m. in the College Union Ballroom in Raleigh will be Senator Lunsford Crew, chair man of the North Carolina Democratic Party. Crew will deliver a talk entitled "Is Po litical Participation Worth the Effort?" Cars will leave for Raleigh today from the Presbyterian Student Center, Henderson Street, at 2 and 4:30 p.m. All interested persons may pick up additiontal information from the Student Center. Golden Fellowship Goes To Graduate Student In Dramatic Arts At UNC Michael Carrington, graduate student of dramatic arts, has been awarded a John Golden Travel ing Fellowship. The grant is designed to foster closer relationships between the professional theatre in New York and educational theatres through out the country. Carrington will spend two weeks in New York in June attending Radio-Television Schedule The entire Carolina Symposium will be broadcast on WUNC Radio. 91.5 FM, Sunday, April 5, through Thursday, April 8. WUNC television will broadcast most of the Symposium pro grams on Channel 4 during the week, beginning with the speech by Senator Willicm S. Fulbright on Sunday night at 8 o'clock. SUNDAY 5 15 p.m. Fulbright Press Conference. Radio, f 8:00 p.m. Fulbright speech. Radio, TV. MONDAY 4:00 p.m. Cooper speech. TV. 5:30 p.m. Press Conference, to be announced. Radio. 6:00 p.m. Emile Benoit. Radio (pre-recorded). 7:00 p.m. Cooper s'peeeh. Radio (pre-recorded). 8:00 p.m. Morgenthau speech. Radio, TV. TUESDAY 4:00 p.m. Knight, Graham panel. TV. 5:30 p.m. Brinkley Press Conference. Radio (pre-recorded). 6:00 p.m. Barnes, Eckstein panel. Radio (pre-recorded). 7:00 p.m. Knight, Graham panel. Radio (pre-recorded). 3:00 p.m. Brinkley speech. Radio. WEDNESDAY 5:30 p.m. Press Conference, to be announced. Radio. 6:00 p.m. Orlans, Gross panel. Radio (pre-recorded) 7:00 p.m. Thompson. Adler panel. Radio (pre-recorded). 8:00 p.m. Mannes. Howe, Knowles, Cole panel. Radio, TV. 9:30 p.m. Brinkley speech. TV (pre-recorded). THURSDAY 4:00 p.m. McGovern-Yarmolinsky panel. TV. 5:30 p.m. Pre Conference, to be announced. Radio. 6:00 p.m. Leprince-Ringuet speech. Radio (pre-recorded). 7:00 p.m. McGovern-Yarmolinsky panel. Radio (pre-recorded). 8:00 p.m. Ball speech. Radio. FRIDAY 9 00 p m. Ball speech. TV (pre-recorded). SATURDAY 9:00 p.m. Thompsoa-Adler panel. (Pre-recorded). U 1964 6 Arms And The Maim9 1964 'Arms And The Man' Memorial. - Senator J. William Fulbright, chairman of the Sen ate Foreign Relations Committee, will speak in Me morial Hall at 8 tonight to open the Carolina Sympos ium. He will hold a news conference today at 5:15 p.m. which will be heard live over WUNC radio. Newsmen from all over the nation will attend, including Max Frankel of the New York Times. It is hoped that Fulbright will elaborate on a foreign policy speech he made on the Sen ate floor March 25, in which he urged the nation to stop "cling ing to old myths in the face of new realities." Fulbright advocated a major revision in American foreign poli cy by' asking the American people to stop looking upon the world's Communist nations as a block of open its week of lectures, semi nars and informal gatherings with a banquet at the More head Planetarium dining room tonight. The members of all Sympo sium committees, faculty mem bers, administrative officials and townspeople will attend. The Social and Hospitality Committee has planned lunch eons and dinners through the week for the speakers who will deliver formal lectures and panel discussions. These are to be attended by invitation. The" Economics Department will entertain Emile Benoit for lunch on Monday, and William Barnes and Otto Eckstein on Tuesday. The YMCA-YWCA plan to honor Douglas Maitland Knight at a luncheon, and Dr. Robert Davis of the Mathematics De partment will entertain Harold Orlans and Paul Gross. Irving Howe, Marya Mannes, and John Knowles will attend a luncheon given by the Eng lish Honors students and facul ty advisors, and the creative writing honors students and professors. The Carolina Playmakers wlil entertain Richard Adler at a (Continued on Page 5) Broadway plays and rehearsals of new plays opening in the near future. Carrington received his under graduate degree in music at High Point College. He will return here next year to complete work for his M.A., and plans to teach aft erwards. He was the musical director of 'The Fantasticks," a Playmakes production last week. i 4 tarts inseparable states with its head quarters in Moscow. "In the Cuban missile crisis of October, 1962, the United States proved to the Soviet Union that a policy of agression and ad venture . involved unacceptable risks," he said. Fulbright believes that with the present lowering of world ten sion, it is in the best interest of the nationa to "cut loose from established myths and to start thinking some 'unthinkable thoughts' about the Cold War and East-West relations, about the underdeveloped countries and particularly those in Latin Ameri ca, about the changing nature of the Chinese Communist threat in Aisia and about the festering war in . Viet Nam." Fulbright was born in Mississi ppi and received his education at the University of Arkansas, Ox ford University in England and George Washington Law School. After several years as an at torney for the Justice Depart ment, he taught at the University of Arkansas and became presi dent of that institution in 1939. He ran successfully for the House of Representatives in 1942 and was' the author of the Ful bright Resolution of 1843 which precipitated the organization of the United Nations. . He became a senator in 1944, and held positions on the Banking and Currency and Foreign Rela tions Committees. Earlier in 1962 he was ap pointed a member of the U. S. Delegation to the U. N. General Assembly. A leader in the move to cen sure the late Senator Joseph Mc Carthy in 1954, Fulbright is fam ous for the statement, "Demo cracy is more likely to be destroy ed by perversion of, or abandon ment of, its true moral principles than by armed attack from Rus sia." Bershak Aivard To ennessee The Andrew Bershak Interfrat ernity Scholarship for four years of study at UNC has been award ed to Keith Corwyn Hennessee of Wilkesboro, it was announced to day by the Office of Student Aid. Hennessee is a student at Wilkes Central High School. The Bershak scholarship is worth $600 per year for four years of study. Established in 1948, the scholarship fund is com posed of contributions from UNC students who are members of social fraternities. It was estab lished as a memorial to Andrew Bershak, class of 1938, who was an All-American football star. 4 Of Four of the five candidates seek ing nomination to Orange Coun ty's State House and Senate seats in the May Democratic Primary favor outright repeal of North Carolina's Speaker Ban Law. Ed Hamilin and Gordon Cleve land, candidates for the House seat, and Don Matheson and Rob ert Midgette, candidates for the Senate seat, all called for im mediate repeal. Donald Stanford, a candidate for the House seat, stood alone in suggesting possible amendment rather than repeal. The candidates gave their views on the Gag Law in answer to rilllll I , ; vm .. it - m t - ri Ft i " , , W l r:i i. - ' - W VLMmmm iiMiirnnwrTir- nfTT' " " 1 hmmtw r- r----''''' . ARMS AND THE MAN A BOMARC Missile stands out against the , night in Y Court. The missile is one of several displays set up around the campus in connection with the Symposium title "Arms And The Man." Photo by Jim Wallace Huge Rocket Goes On Display Here By DONNA FAGG A BOMARC interecpter missile for air defense has been sent by the United States Air Force for display during the Carolina Sym posium. This missile, long range and suepersonic, is designed to inter cept enemy aircraft while they are still far from our borders. It has a wing span of 18 feet and a gross weight of 15,000 pounds. Traveling faster than the speed of sound at an extreme altitude, it can deliver either a convention al or a nuclear warhead more than 250 miles. The U. S. Army is setting up an exhibit in Morehead Planetarium during Symposium entitled The Soldier Key to Power. The five piece display portrays the criti cal skills and essential qualities of the modern men who serve in Army uniform. Included in the multi-unit ex hibit is a 10-minute film docu mentary of the soldier from World Assembly 5 Oppose Gas questions put to them by The Chapel Hill Weekly. Each can didate was asked: "Do you think the Speaker Ban Law should be repealed by the 1965 General As sembly? Amended, and if so, how? How do you feel generally about the law as it pertains to free dom of speech and academic freedom? Do you think its bene fits, if any, have outweighed any adverse effects that it might have had on the University?" Both of the candidates for the Senate stood flatly for repeal. Matheson, retired Orange County farm agent and a resident of Hillsboro, said, "The Speaker Baa War II to Vietnam. Exhibits have been set up in Wilson Library by the committee headed by Mike Bissell. "Arms and the Man" is illustrated in the display cases at the main en trance, and a mobile with the names of the speakers through out the week hangs in the hall way. A film short in connection with the week's topic is to be run at the local theatres. The Intimate Bookshop has set up an exhibit of books which various speakers have written. QUIET, PLEASE! Campus Police Chief A. J. .Beaumont said yesterday cables will be placed across the service roads behind the new dorms each evening at 7:30 p.m. Beaumont said the cables will be put up each evening starting Monday in order to keep cars and motorcycles from creating noises and disturbing the residents of the dormitories. Candidates Law, hurriedly passed by the 1963 Legislature is a bad law and should be repealed." Mid gette, a Chapel Hill attorney, said, "The Speaker Ban Law does not effectively protect . . . and can be harmful ... I am in clined therefore to favor repeal." Two of the three candidates for the House were equally direct in calling for repeal. Cleveland, a political science professor at the University, said, "I firmly believe reconsideration by the 1965 General Assemly, with full hearings, will demonstrate to the people of North Carolina, the wisdom of repealing the Speaker CHAPEL HILL, Hesse Is Chairman Sym posium Committees Are Responsible For Success By VANCE BARRON, JR. The core of Symposium ac tivity, an office on the second floor of the Y building, unlike the eye of a hurricane, has been a scene of unmitigated confusion for the past three months. Yet out of this chaos has emerged what promises to be the finest Carolina Sympo sium ever. The history of this year's Symposium is set forth in its committees, from its genesis in the Interim Committee to the Handbook Committee that will commit the Symposium to his tory and posterity. How did the Symposium ever make its way out of the wilderness and into the prom ised land? Most of the credit must go to the able chairman, Dick Hesse, but this modern- Investigation Of Fires Still IrtrJPr ogress Mounting concern resulting from two fires within a two week period has triggered sev eral reactions here on campus. Campus Police Chief A. J. Beaumont said yesterday he has noted increased concern resulting from two recent fra ternity house fires here. Beaumont said there was positively, no indication of ar son in the fire which gutted the Kappa Sigma fraternity house Thursday night. The fire at the Phi Delta Theta fraternity house has definitely been cited as a case of arson. Investigators for the North Carolina Department of Insur ance are reported to have con siderably narrowed the range of suspects in the Phi Delta Theta fire which broke out Sunday, March 22. The investi gation is still in progress. Chief Beaumont said several fraternities have asked for aid and instruction in conducting fire drills for their houses. Beaumont also said fire alarms would be installed in all dormi tories which are not fireproof. Dormitories which will receive fire alarm systems are Battle-Vance-Pettigrew, Old East, Old West, Smith and Carr. Additional plans are being made to include all fraternity houses and other dormitories in the existing Chaupel Hill fire alarm system, presently being revised. Fire Department officials con firmed that a report of a fire in Old West dormitory was called in Friday morning. The fire, reported as smoke coming out of an upper story window, turned out to be steam escap ing from a shower room. Law Ban outright . . . . " Hamblin, a resident of Hillsboro and pub lisher of The News of Orange County, said, "Immediate repeal by the 1965 Legislature would be in order . . . ." Stanford, a resident of Chapel Hill and a dairy farmer, said in suggesting amendment rather than repeal, 'The repeal of the Speaker Ban Law in the 1965 General Assembly is an im practical consideration in view of the strong Statewide sentiment in favor of the action taken by the 1963 Assembly It is more practical to reconsider the law with the idea of an amendment." NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, APRIL 5, 1964 day epic has literally a cast of thousands. The work of formulating the theme of this year's Symposium was begun in the spring of last year. Grey Temple was chair man of the Interim Committee set up by the previous Sympo sium. This committee provided the transition and continuity from the old to the new. This year's officers were chosen and given the responsibility of see ing that the word became flesh. Assisting Hesse, there are Bill Davis, Executive Secre tary; Steve Dennis, Vice-chairman; Bev Haynes, secretary; and Al Sneed, Treasurer. The faculty advisor, .surreptitiously known as "th e great white father" of the Symposium, is Dr. David Lapkin of the De partment of Economics. The spotlight then shifts to the Program Committee, under the direction of Steve Dennis. This commilttee set about plan ning a schedule of the five day affair and began to per suade prophets from foreign parts to come and hold forth. A group of 30 faculty members and students met all last spring' and hashed out the final topic: "Arms and the Man: National Security and the Aims of a Free Socity." Of course, at the bottom of every successful operation, there is that vital commodity: money. The task of securing this fell to "Evil Al" Sneed (he is at the root of all money), Treasurer and chairman of the Finance Committee. Individu als, groups and foundations from all over the state were approached and asked to sup port the Symposium. Governor Terry Sanford and Pres. Wil liam Friday aided in this op eration. When school opened in the fall, the Symposium had money in the bank and very little of anything else except a faith that their hopes would mate rialize. Campus organizations, fraternities, sororities and dor mitories were asked to contri bute, and the work of finding speakers went on. The operations began to gather momentum as the Sym posium moved out of the plan ning stage under the work of its committees. Steve Dennis began making arrangements with his com mittee for the Intercollegiate Seminar. This will bring stu Symposium SUNDAY Sen. William Fulbright . . 8 p.m. Memorial Hall MONDAY Emile Benoit 2 pan. Carroll Hall Sen. John S. Cooper .... 4 p.m. Memorial Hall Hans Morgenthau g p.m. Memorial Hall TUESDAY William S. Barnes Otto Eckstein 2 p.m. Carroll Hall Douglas M. Knight Frank P. Graham 4 p.m. Memorial Hall David Brinkley 8 p.m. Memorial Hall This is the full list of speakers for (he Carolina Symposium, which begins tonight with the speech by Sen. William Fulbright (D.-Ark.) Today naper is devoted to the Symposium, and special credit should go to Harry DeLung and Virginia Cames, publicity co chairmen. Peter Harkness assisted on the layout. Photo credits are to Jim Wallace. The engraving on page 3 was done with the cooperation of the Durham Morning Herald. In addition, this edition could never have been published without the help of Ch3rlcs Campbell and his co-workers at the print shop of the Chapel Hill 30 dents from all over the nation to attend the Symposium and discuss the topic with some of the speakers. Larry Ehrhart is vice-chairman of this commit tee. The Related Discussions Committee, under the direc tion of Bill Graham, Emily Klyce and Vance Barron set up meeetings in dorms, fraternity and sorority houses where faculty members and students met to discuss "Arms and the Man." No student could escape being familiar with the 1964 Symposium, however, if he Continued on Page 5) Edit Writers Hear Esser On Friday Some towns and counties in N.C. are going to be left be--hind -in the. race for new in dustry, and it's going to be necessary for many people in some poverty stricken sections of the state to migrate from rural areas to urban centers where industry prospers, it was declared here Friday night by George Esser, director of the N.C. Fund, who described the problems of joblessness, sick ness, poverty, and too slow in dustrialization to keep pace with farm unemployment. Speaking at the N.C. Confer ence of Editorial Writers, he said Ford Foundation financed the $14 million N.C. Fund drive to find not one, but many ways of relieving poverty, and the total community approach ap pears to be the best way. "Many rural and agricultural counties throughout North Carolina which face unemploy ment for many of its people are trying desperately to attract new industry to produce new jobs and give a balanced econ omy in many localities over the state. However, there isn't that much industry available for all who want and nppH it said Esser. "Therefore, it is in evitable that many of the un employed must migrate to other places, to be trained in new skills and to be able to hold down different kinds of jobs." Scorecard WEDNESDAY Harold Orlans Paul Gross 2 p.m. Garrard Hall Rep. Frank Thompson Richard Adler 4 pm Memorial Hall Irvng Howe Marya Mannes John Knowles William Coles g pjIU Memorial Hall THURSDAY Adam Yarroolinsky Sen. George McGovern . . 4 p.m. Memorial Hall George W. Ball g pm. Memorial Hall Prof. Louis Lcprince- RinS"et 2 p.m. Gerrard Hall 9
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 5, 1964, edition 1
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