Serials--Dtt-
The Weather
-Ar
Cooling: with occasional showers.
Founded" Feb. 23. 1893
CHAPEL HILL, N0RTH"CAR0ONA!weDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1964
United Press International Service
mm
B
urned-Qut Kappa
Sigma To
By TEX HARRINGTON
Kappa Sigma Fraternity may
start rebuilding its fire ravaged
house within two weeks.
Neil Thomas, president of
the fraternity, said Monday the
national organization of Kap
pa Sigma has pledged finan
cial support to the project
along with "many of our alum
ni." Fraternity representatives
have met with contractors and
insurance adjusters during the
past five days, but damage and
repair costs have not yet been
decided.
The house was extensively
damaged last Thursday night
Shubert Fellowship
Is Worth $2500
A $2500 fellowship in playwrit
ing will be awarded next year to
a graduate student in the Depart
ment of Dramatic Art, it was an
nounced this week.
The new grant, established re
cently by the Sam S. Shubert
Foundation, Inc., will be known
as the Shubert Fellowship in
Playwriting, and will be awarded
for the autumn and spring sem
esters of the 1964-65 academic
year.
Dr. Harry E. Davis, chairman
f the Department of Dramatic
Art and director of the Carolina
Playmakers, stated that inquiries
concerning applications are now
being accepted and that they
should be accompanied by ex
amples of the playwrights' pre
vious work.
Davis further pointed out that
although the holder of the fellow
ship will give primary attention
to the original writing of full
length plays, he will be expected
to enroll in the Master of Arts
program with the Department of
Dramatic Art.
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NO PARKING? Someone, possibly with the new motorcycle fad
In mind, neatly placed this "No Parking" sign in the center aisle
of Memorial Hall Sunday night prior to Sen. Fulbright's speech. The
sign was apparently effective as no parking tickets were given out
inside the auditorium. Ph&to by Jim Wallace
Relative Lives In Chapel
Bulldozer
emonstrator In Cleveland
jj
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI)
A young white minister was
killed by a bulldozer Tuesday
as civil rights demonstrators
tried to stop construction of a
school building.
The Rev. Bruce William
Klunder, 27, a civil rights
- BULLETIN
The demonstrator tilled yes
terday in Cleveland by a bull
dozer was the brother of Mrs.
Norman Weatherly, 206 Hunter
Place. Mrs. Weatherly could
3 ot be reached for comment.
leader and adviser to college
Students, was crushed trying
to stop a bulldozer during a
wild demonstration in a tension-packed
day.
Police said four demonstra
tors tried to immobilize the
bulldozer. Three threw them
selves on the ground in front
of it to stop the huge machine.
Rebuild
by a fire which started in base
ment. The flames spread to the
living room on the first floor
and to parts of the second
floor. The fire raged for al
most three hours, destroying
the basement and first floor
completely. The rooms on sec
ond and third floors were se
verely damaged by smoke and
heat. Everyone in the house
escaped without injury.
The gutted house will be ex
tensively remodeled.
"Although nothing is defi
nite yet, we have drawn plans
which call for expanding the
basement, an entirely new
first floor and complete re
placement of the second and
third floors," said house treas
urer Dick Johnson.
Alumni advisor Frank Urn
stead said, "The general archi
tecture of the building will re
main the same."
"We definitely will not build
somewhere else," he added.
Umstead praised Thomas and
the fraternity's members for
their "tireless efforts and an
ticipation of problems."
"We hope to be in the new
house by September," said
Thomas.
The fraternity has rented
apartments for its displaced
members.
Smoke damage to clothes and
other personal property is
much higher than first esti
mated. "I don't have anything left,"
said Lee Lokey. "Everything I
own was ruined by the smoke."
"I sent everything to the dry
cleaners, but it still smells
like smoke," said Terry Kerr.
"All of us have lost a lot,"
said Elbert Jackson, holding
out a blackened radio.
Most of the members do not
have personal . insurance to
cover their loss.
Hill
Kills Rights
The driver, to avoid hitting
them, backed up and ran over
the minister, who had thrown
himself on the ground behind
the bulldozer to keep it from
changing course.
Klunder's death touched off
the second wild demonstration
at the scene during the after
noon. Many of the 1,000 people
on hand threw stones, bottles
and other objects at police.
Mounted police marched in a
cavalry style phalanx to dis
perse the rioters.
A few minutes before, police
had pulled four screaming
demonstrators from under con
struction equipment and put
them into a police van under
arrest.
Spectators then launched a
battle against police, hurling
stones and bottles at the offi
cers. The demonstration was the
second big one here in recent
weeks in the school contro
versy and was on the site
where 20 persons were arrest
r i
6 J1
I Jot'
JOSH WHITE
Josh White
Here Friday
By JOE EXUM
Phi Mu Alpha will present
Josh White in concert at Me
morial Hall Friday. Twice be
fore White has delighted
standing-room-only audiences
at Carolina with his collection
of spirituals, blues and folk
songs.
Thirty years of experience
have won the guitarist univer
sal acclamation. He is respect
ed throughout the western
world as a perceptive artist
and versatile craftsman who
can electrify an audience while
retaining the power and sim
plicity of traditional singing.
Born in the South, White's
road to the spotlight of the
world's finest concert stages
has been long and hard. From
his Southern environment he
is able to infuse the ancient
art of ballad singing with gen
uine pathos and fresh vitality.
However, no one taught him
how to sing and no one taught
him how to play the guitar. .
Accompanied by his guitar,
White's voice has been de
scribed as having a caressing
liquid quality, that enables him
to create a spectrum of moods.
The fact that he has reached a
degree of perfection has not
made him . forget that . he.-isA.
man of the people," and his
songs are still the people's
songs.
Tickets went on sale Mon
day. Balcony seats are $1.75,
orchestra seats $2.00. They will
be on sale through Friday in
Graham Memorial Lounge.
Girls Try
To Have
The Powder Puff Football
game, rained out last month,
will be played Friday at 3 p.m.
in Kenan Stadium, weather
permitting.
The name or the game is
flag football and it is played
by junior class girls.
Blocking is allowed but the
girls may not leave their feet.
Each player carries a handker
chief. A player may be tackled
by pulling the handkerchief
from her pocket.
Girl grabs by fans on the
sidelines are illegal. Spectators
are warned to stay away from
the girls' hankies.
Harrison Merrill's Red Romp
ers (no reflection on Merrill's
politics) will clash with Billy
1 "Lobo" Galantai's Blue Bruis-
ed Monday.
The state's first civil rights
death came as the local inte
gration controversy spilled onto
the floor of the U.S. Senate
where Sen. Jack Miller (R.
Iowa) demanded the Justice
Department investigate reports
Negro civil rights leaders in
Cleveland were forming a
rifle club.
Downtown city officials had
mapped plans for handling vio
lence and had decided to build
a barbed wire fence around the
school. The demonstrators
claimed building it in a pre
dominantly Negro area would
guarantee segregation would
continue.
The morning was peaceful,
with the action in conferences
and in the courts. Municipal
Judge James T. Cassidy, ar
raigning the 20 arrested Mon
day, sparked a dispute when
he said angrily, "It's about
time some intelligent judge has
the guts to take a stand in this
matter."
L
-.T1irr.
BrimMey
By JEFFREY DICK
David Brinkley vehemently deni
ed the existence of "news man
agement" before an overflow
crowd in Memorial Hall last night.
The nightly new commentator
for NBC told a Carolina Sympos
ium audience that "news is freer
now in Washington than at any
other time since I have been in
the business, and that goes back
to Roosevelt.
"The news, readily available in
more easily than news from any
Washington today, comes to us
other capital city in the world,
and we get more of it.
"In my opinion, the whole
phrase 'news management' and
all that goes with it is a hoax,"
Brinkley said.
Brinkley traced the origin of
Graham, Knight Blast Gag
-
Law To Symposium Crowd
By DENNIS SANDERS
A pair of educators, one with
years of experience and the
other on the threshold of what
has been termed a "brilliant fu
ture", lashed out at the Speaker
Ban Law Tuesday as adding to
DR. FRANK P. GRAHAM
Again
A Ball
ers.
Former Bruiser Coach Billy
Cunningham was dismissed be
cause of dissension on the
squad. It is rumored that Tail
back Kay Hoyle and Scatback
Carole Miller were battling
over his vote for Senior Class
secretary. Galantai has solved
the problem by promising to
vote for Susan Zehmer, Stray
Greek washerwoman.
Paul Chused has charged
Merrill with a political power
grab by having the game so
close to elections and has de
cided to be referee. Merrill in
sists that's not what he's try
ing to grab at all.
"I'm just looking for some
one to take back to the swim
ming pool to run relays with
me," Merrill said.
"The Bruisers will beat Mer
rill's Rompers so bad, they'll
all be back in the pool for
good," Chused said. He has
warned the girls against un
necessary roughness.
The UNC Pep Band will
play Dixie before kickoff time.
Phatsy Lefler will model ten
nis skirts at half-time.
Right Guard Sissy Trott,
Women's Council chairman
and recent old lampshade pick
for "guard of the year," will
anchor the Bruiser line.
Karen Nelson, chairman of
the WAA, is at the pivot spot
in the Romper line and is a
tough competitor. She will face
off against Sis Craver who
learned her tricks from All
ACC cousin . Joe.
A
David Brinkley walked into
his press conference at the
Carolina Inn yesterday and
turned to face the cameras and
lights as one well used to their
glare.
His first crack: "I don't
know why I'm having a press
conference, I'm not running
v & : ;
ii iiwi in in ji nil mimrimin innimnwwn-ffli
Gaig
the phrase "news management"
back to the function it served in
fulfilling a need and a purpose.
'The need," he said, "is to
deny a fact which exists or one
which a party doesn't wish to
hear. For example, if a particular
group doesn't want to hear a
fact stated, or given credence,
they can discount that fact by
saying the person who released
the fact is guilty of news man
agement, and only released the
fact to manage the news.
"The only time I can recall the
news being managed," Brinkley
said, "was when Preisdent Ken
nedy was shot. President John
son has said that at the time he
and those around him did not
knew if the assassination was part
of a plot not only against Kennedy,
the impact of the Cold War.
Former Consolidated Univer
sity President Frank Graham
and Dr. Douglas Knight, youth
ful President of Duke University,
spoke to a Symposium audience
in Memorial Hall and labeled
the law a "padlock on the quest
for ideals".
Graham, the United Nations
representative for India and
Pakistan, said, "The Gag Law is
the impact we've felt here in
North Carolina. A patriotic
North Carolina, fearing that its
youth might become infected
with alien ideas, rushed through
that law."
"It's not good," Graham con
tinued, "for our youth to think
that their elders are afraid for
them to hear ideas."
He also noted that "when I
. was president here, . there was a
Communist" "cell at v the univer
sity. But," he added, "It was
above-board and students could
see it in open forums." He em
phasized that "open forums are
an important part of the edu
cational process."
"A university must be free to
hear any ideas," Graham stat
ed. "This Gag Law is a violation
of the tradition of Duke, UNC,
the state itself and the Bill of
Rights."
The former U.N. mediator .al
so made it known that he felt it
was ironic that North Carolina
was the first state to ratify the
Bill of Rights.
"The Gag Law," Graham con
cluded, "will certainly come to
its own end."
Dr. Knight emphasized that
the rise of atomic and nuclear
power and the developments in
medicine, science and tech
nology have placed education
and the university in the spot
0
aw
if?
3h
NBC's David Brinkley is introduced to the RTVMP 45 class
which he spoke to Tuesday. Introducing Brinkley is John Clayton,
WUNC-TV director and class instmcter. photo by Jock Lauterer
Disg
for anything."
Brinkley spoke out on topics
ranging from a public accom
modations law to the Speaker
Ban law, never deviating from
the abrupt delivery character
istic of his nightly newscasts.
When asked if he had seen
the State's Speaker Ban law,
ies News Management
but against all those around him,
including the Vice President and
the Cabinet.
"For this reason," he continu
ed, "they suppressed the news of
Kennedy's death for 20 minutes,
while they got Johnson into a
plane, where nobody could get
to him.
"This, he said, "was completely
justified at the time."
Brinkley attacked the Speaker
Ban Law in response to a ques
tion from the audience, saying,
"I think it is preposterous. You
have trustees to run the Univer
sity. Under their predecessors, the
University has become the finest
State University there is.
"Aside from that," Brinkley
said, "the law is nonsense."
light of the Cold War.
"The major university to
day," Knight said, "is stronger
than ever before, and it is
more central to its society.
"Equally, the university is
(Continued on Page 5)
DOUGLAS M. KNIGHT
TODAY
Editor's Roiindtable 3-4 p.m.,
discussion on the bylaws and
permanent statutes for Round
table. Basketball Club 4 p.m., Worn
. . en's Gynu
Stray Greeks 6 p.m., Lenoir.
Wesley Foundation 6:45 p.m.,
Wesley House, Communion.
Badminton Club 7 pan., Wom
en's Gym.
f fN. , i 3
v. :
V" I
Campus
ill1
if n & ill:
race Brinkley
he answered: "I have seen it.
It's a disgrace. It is embarras
sing to the University. I don't
know why it was passed. The
trustees are here to run the
University and should be al
lowed to do so. The whole
thing is unworthy of the State
and the University."
Neicsman David Brinkley
Photo by Jim Wallace
Cathey Sets Up Procedure
For Mentally III Students
By KERRY SIPE
A uniform procedure for the
handling of students suffering
from acute emotional disturb
ances was established recently
in a memorandum from Dean
of Student Affairs C. O.
Cathey.
"Up to this time, the Uni
versity has initiated no proce
dure for dealing with those
people obviously in need of
medical help," Cathey said.
"While the management of
each case must be individual
ized, the following suggestions
are offered as a possible guide
to instructors in such circum
stances: "When it becomes apparent
that a person is behaving in
such a way as to suggest that
he is psychotic or that - he
represents a threat to himself
or others, the Dean of Men or
the Dean of Women will be no
tified immediately. That officer,
accompanied by another such
administrative officer or mem
ber of the Campus Police, will
go and tactfully, but firmly,
request that the person ac
company them to the Infirm
ary for medical evaluation.
"It is advisable that we not
request a fellow student to
prevail upon a disturbed stu
dent to go to the Infirmary,"
Calendar
Dix Hill Comm. 2 p.m., Y-
Court, bingo party at Hospital,
two wrapped "White Elephant"
prizes.
Foreign Students Comm. 6 p.m.,
upstairs Lenoir.
CWC 6 p.m., Grail Room.
Westminster Fellowship 6:45
a.m., Presbyterian Student Cen
ter. CWC will NOT meet at 6 p.m.,
as scheduled.
MOVIES
Carolina A Comedy of Terrors
Varsity A Stranger Knocks
Rialto Tom Jones
LOST AND FOUND
Lost A brown leather wallet,
contact David Yount, 320 Avery,
reward.
Goldwater
Group Starts
The formation of a UNC Stu
dents for Goldwater Committee
has been announced by Tom
Kemp and Warren Williams, co
chairmen of the group.
The primary purpose of the
organization will be to consoli
date Senator Goldwater's support
on the Carolina campus and to
coordinate the Goldwater cam
paign at the Mock Convention
on April 16-18. In addition, the
committee plans to form a group
of "Goldwater Girls" to assist it
in its activities.
Anyone interested in joining
the committee or in receiving
further information should con
tact either one of the co-chairmen
or call Warren Williams at
942-6271.
Several questions were di
rected toward Brinkley in
reference to the Civil Rights
Bill now before Congress.
Brinkley reflected that if the
filibuster in the Senate were
to continue on into the sum
mer, there will probably be
(Continued on Page 5)
he said.
"If the disturbed person
steadfastly refuses to go to the
Infirmary, and the situation
seems to demand medical care,
someone should remain with
the person while the Infirmary
is contacted.
"A University physician or
psychiatrist will come and
evaluate the situation. If neces
sary, this physician can ar
range an emergency commit
ment to a hospital.
ITEM
Scabbard And Blade
Initiates Fourteen
Scabbard and Blade, a nation
al honorary military society of
outstanding KOTC cadets, has re
cently nominated 14 new pledges.
The nominees are equally di
vided between members of the
AFROTC and NROTC units.
The pledges are K. B. Massie,
H. E. "Cass" Peele, M. S. Doc
tor, G. H. Hawkins, W. T. Eliot,
F. A. Hall, J. P. Riek, S. L.
Blate, R. P. Lukens,L. vF. Cur
tis, W. A. Davidson, C. W." Good
ing, R. P. Rambo and R. E.
Simmons.
They were selected on the ba
sis of outstanding leadership
ability and proficiency in mili
tary discipline and organization.
The pledge class will be initiat
ed into the society after a train
ing period on the history and
ideals of Scabbard and Blade.
Aycock Names Blalock
To Professorship
Dr. Hubert Morse Blalock
has been appointed a profes
sor in the Department of So
ciology - Anthropology begin
ning Sept. 1.
Chancellor William B. Ay
cock also announced the pro
motion of Dr. Herbert Aron
David to Professor in the
School of Public Health. David,
a native of Germany, has been
at the University for a year.
Blalock received his PhD
here in 1954, was an instruc
tor and assistant professor
fiom 1954 to 1961 at the Uni
versity of Michigan and was
an associate professor at Yale
from 1961 to 1964. He has
been a visiting professor here
since February.
He has written two books
and 22 articles in professional
journals.
Chessmen Take One,
Help In Another
By BILL STROUPE
UNC's chess team won a
match in Chapel Hiil and helped
win one ?"n Raleigh last Sunday.
At Raleigh the top three UNC
players Vernon Robinson, Ron
Simpson and Froncff teamed
up wilh Duke and State players
to put do.vn a team from Vir
ginia, W2-IV2.
Fcr the North Carolina team,
it was a case of getting there
first with the most, as Virginia
forfeited six games. Robinson
chipped in a victory, but Simp
sen and Fornoff lost.
Meanwhile, the "B" team
held down the fort at Chapel Hill
by beating Durham High School,
3-1. Hardy Batchelcr. John
Brooks pnd Dalton Smith won
for UNC before Keywood Cheves
lost to Durham High's top play
er. 1
This year's record for the
chess team now includes Contri
but'ng roles in this state's wins
over teams from South Caro
lina and Virginia, a victory
over Durham High and a tie
with Duke.