Mm Blood Needed Ted Danziger, owner of the Zoom-Zoom and the Ranch House, is in critical condition at Duke Hospital. He is in need of blood, type B-negative. Any one who can contribute please call Mr. Altmueller at 968-2593. TO BEE OR NOT The bees are buzzing these days, and the DTH 'editors visit ed one yesterday. Read about the trials and tribulations of a UNC bee. See edit, pa?e 2. m r Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service Tl1f Workers9 Dignity Cited GM Is Crippled y UAW DETROIT (AP) The United Auto Workers hit General Motors, the world's largest automaker, vith a nationwide strike yester day which, if prolonged, could i. WALTER P. REUTHER Marvin Belli Will Speak At Duke Jack Ruby's defense counsel Melvin iBelli, Gov. Terry San ford, Congressman Charles Rap er Jonas, and Atlanta Constitu tion editor Eugene Patterson are among leaders from varied fields who are scheduled to speak this year at Duke Univer sity's Law School. These and others will partici pate in the annual -Speakers Series of the sponsoring Profes sional i 'Affairs Committee of Duke Bar Association, Most publicized of the speak ers is perhaps Belli. Even be fore he defended Ruby, accused murderer of Lee Oswald, Belli had attracted national attention by his courtroom theatrics and the huge sums of money he often won for his clients in civil suits. All have accepted invitations to participate but specific dates have not been set for lectures in all cases. Launching the series will be an Oct. 2 address by Baltimore at torney Francis X. Gallagher, who will discuss Constitutional aspects of church-state rela tions. He will give particular at tention to the existing challenge of the tax-exempt status of churches. On several occasions, Gallagher has been a legal foe of. atheist Madeline Murray. She brought the suit which resulted in last year's U. S. Supreme Court deci sion banning the required read in? of Scriptures in public schools. Patterson will give the sec ond, lecture Oct. 12. He is a member of the Federal Commis sion on Civil Rights. Sanford tentatively is schedul ed to speak Dec. 8. Jonas is expected to lecture soon after November general elections Also slated to lecture is Wright Hsdale, vice president of the Ford Motor Co-, Detroit Mich., and chairman of Duke Univer sity's Board of Trustees. UNC Gets I $55,500 In Grants Three research grants totaling $50,000 ana a special lekowsmp in puoiic neaitn aave ueen awaru ea oy ue u. b. Puunc lieaiui beivice io tne uNC Division ok lieaiui Aiiairs. me grants and the fellowship were approved iasi montn, a pomon vi i),3uu awaraea to Norm Carolina institutions. Lr. ttaioui J. raiiou, uiNC spec iausi in internal meuicine, was awarded auuott fcio.uuO ior a cnenucal stuuy oi tne tats and tat-UKe suDbiauce in tne Douy. Le. Ciauae fiantadosi, a pnarm aceuucal ciiemist, was awarded $29,000 for basic research on gly cerol ethers. Dr. James C. Keilett Jr. re ceived a grant of $10,200. A fel lowship was awarded to Donald R. Johnson of the School of Pub lic Health, B I V "j Strike damage the nation's economy. . UAW President Walter Reuther said the strike was called basic ally not over money matters but rather because the company fails to recognize the "human dignity" of. its workers. At GM plants around the na tion, workers laid down their tools and walked off assembly lines where the new 1S85 models had just begun to roll in volume production. An estimiaed 87,616 units had been scheduled this week. The strike came after negotia tors failed in around-the-clock discussions to reach an . agree ment on a new contract covering more than 350,000 GM. workers. In announcing the strike, Reu ther said he was doing so with a "great sense of sadness and disappointment." ' Louis Seaton, GM president in charge of personnel staff, said a prolonged walkout would have serious consequences not only for the company's employees, deal ers and suppliers, but for .the public and the economy at large. Asked how seriously he felt the strike might affect the national economy, Seaton said it was only a matter of time until one out of 14 workers in the nation could be involved. "We are told that one of every seven jobs in America is depend ent on. the auto industry, and since we account for about half, that's one. out of 14. This won't happen right away, of course." The walkout was not called over economic issues. Both sides had reached virtual agreement on a package already accepted by the union from GM's major com petitorsFord and Chrysler. These concessions included higher pension benefits, improv ed medical and - hospitalization plans, increased wages, longer vacations and additional holi days. Reuther said, GM "is unwilling to. meet legitimate standards of human decency in terms of work ing conditions, production stand ards, fair disciplinary proce dures, fair representation and many other things which bear on the dignity of the worker." There was no immediate com ment from Washington, although labor secretary W. Willard Wirtz was being kept informed on de velopments. Psychiatrist To Discuss 'Survival Dr. Jerome D. Frank, chief psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University, will speak here at a luncheon Thursday noon in the Carolina Inn Ballroom. His subject will be "Breaking Through the Thought Barrier to Survival.." Dr. Frank received A.B., A.M., Ph.D., and M.D. degrees from Harvard, and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa He has taugnt at the Washington School 6l Psychiatry, Howard University, and Jonns Hopkins. An author of several studies on psyenotnerapy, Dr. Frank is a sponsor of tne National Commit tee lor a Sane Nuclear Policy and a member of National Ad visory Council oi toe Student Peace Union. Cost of the luncheon, sponsor ed by the American Frienas Serv . ice Committee, is $2. Reserva tions may be made by caning the YWCA, t3-2333, betore 4:30 lues day. 'Conservative' Club Plans 3Ieeting Tues. A club to unite and promote the iaeas of campus conserva tives will hold its organization meeting Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Roland Parker Lounge. Warren Williams, president of Carolina " Conservative Club, says the club intends "to pro mote conservative beliefs and principles among the students and iaculty." Organized last spring, the club sponsors speakers, seminars and study groups dealing with the conservative movement. Other officers are Britt Gor don, vice-president; Ray Lanier, secretary; and Tom Lee, treasurer. Senate Approves WASHINGTON (AP) Senate massage riday left to the House e lace of resident Johnson's .uniroversial $l-dollar program o inject economic heaith into rover ty-stricken areas of the 11 state Appalachian Mountain re gion. A 45-13 roll call vote put a solid stamp of approval on this last of i Johnson's major anti poverty projects remaining be fore a nadjournment-bound Congress. French Mobilize Police In Kidnap Search POITIERS. France (AP) France ' mobilized 100,000 police Friday to hunt lor the kidnapers of three small children who have been happily reunited with their rarents and are being gently queried for clues. Interior minister Roger Frey, ordering roadblocks thrown up, called kidnaping a "leprosy" that must be stamped out in France. Investigators were especially Hearing Postponed . COLUMBIANS. C. (AP) Five Columbia area men postponed a preliminary hearing after their arrest Friday on charges of burn ing a 4V foot cross in the drive way of the governor's mansion. An attorney appeared in city recorder's court to post bond of $500 each fcr the men. They can seek a preliminary hearing any time until 10 days before the Dec. 14 term of State Criminal Court. Accused in, the warrant signed Jews Must Be Exonerated, Cardinal Says VATICAN CITY (AP) Re gardless of political conse quences, Augustin Cardinal Bea told the Vatican Council yester day, it must push through a dec laration exonerating Jews of sole blame for the crucifixion of Christ. Amid applause, the 83-year-old head of the Vatican's Christian Unity Secretariat presented a re vised version of a statement on Roman Catholic relations with E UNC Professor Hits School Segregation By Collegiate Press Service Although 350 of the South's 600 "white" colleges and universities are now desegregated, they en roll only 15,000 Negro students, according to a recent study by a UNC proiessor. Mere than one million students attend Southern institutions of higher education. . The study concludes, however, that aiscrnnination is only a "min or cause of the relatively low Ne gro enrollment in most desegre gated institutions." Writing in a recent issue of "higner xkiucation," UNC profes sor of Sociology and Anthropology Guy Johnson lists several "much more important causes" of tne low Negro enrollment. These are "the Negro student's awareness of interior academic preparation, his tear of a new level of competition, his loyalty to racial institutions, his anxiety over greater expenses, and his reluctance to expose himself to possiDie snubs and - embarrass ments in tne integrated college situation," Jonnson says. Because oi these tears, John son finds "every indication Uiat for a long time to come tne ma jority oi Negro stuaenis will get tneir higher education in pre dominantly Negro institutions," ci wmcn mere are about 100 in the South. These Negro institutions, ac cording to Johnson, will continue to attract many Negro students even though "in the not too dis tant future no public college and. university in tne South will be holding onto segregation." Johnson estimates that about 10,000 Negroes are now attending "white public institutions, and that an additional 4,000 to 5,000 are attending 'white' church and private institutions." Some uni versity and college desegregation WORLD NEWS BRIEFS Final Poverty Bill The outcome in the House hinges on whether the Democrat ic leaders can bring back enough absentees to outvote the pro ject's opponents, most of whom are Republicans. A vote on the question planned three weeks ago was postponed because so many members were away cam paigning for re-election and back ers of the program weren't con fident of enough available sup port. on the lookout for a known pros titute of Poitiers whom they Vould like to question. There was no official word, on whether any or all of the 1,050,000 francs ($210,000) demanded as ransom had been paid... It . was certain that no levy had been made on merchants in Poitiers as ransom notes had requested It was also certain that the parents of the children, of modest means, had made no payment. In Cross Burning by State Law Enforcement Di vision Lt. Leon Casque are: Dewey A. Lovell, 36, and Lewis Cone Mitchell, 20, both of Colum bia, and Clarence D. Hildebrand, 20, Willie P. Richardson, 37, and William P. Bullock, 34, all of suburban West Coumbia. Gasque declined to reveal de tails of how the men were pin pointed, but said "cooperation by officers in the city, in Lexington County West Columbia, and some luck and a lot of leg work figur ed in it.'. - .;. . '. Jews and other non-Catholics and said it must be adopted, even nt the risk of the church "being accused of pursuing political ends. "This cannot be a question of politics. We are not speaking here of Zionism. We are not speaking here of the political state of Israel. We are speaking of the followers of the Law of Moses. This is an entirely re ligious question." .vBhv.v.v.v.-.w.-Xv, has occurred in every Southern state. ! Enrollments range from fewer than five Negro students in the universities of Alabama, Florida and South Carolina, to more than 400 in some of the border state schools. Johnson's article gives some ex amples of Negro enrollment in de segrated white institutions. The University of Arkansas has 20 Negro students: Louisiana State University and the University of Nrth Carolina, 60 each; the Uni versity of Kentucky, 115; the University of Maryland, 450. All the white public colleges and universities in Delaware, Maryland, Wasnington, D. C, West Virginia, Kentucky, Mis souri, and Oklahoma, were de segregated by 1961, although only 20 per cent ot them were in WoO. Oniy eight per cent of the white puolic institutions in Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Ark ansas, and Texas were desegre gated m 1954. Some 74 per cent are desegregated now. Progress has been much slow er in the Deep South Alabama, Mississippi, .Louisiana, bouth Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Only 36 per cent of the 66 public instituuons in these states are now desegregated. This iigure is more than double tne litol per centage, however, when only 17 per cent had admitted Negro stu dents. Johnson notes that "Deep South Negro colleges appear to be even more conservative than Deep South white schools'- in desegre gating. Only 11 per cent of the Deep South public institutions have any white students. All of the border state Negro institu tions and 73 per cent of the Mid- (Ccntinued on Page 3) 1 lar win ? i I?;;. IIP m iBt 1 1 ':vaw". ft I i-a I si! - - it -&r" A- r- J - - c t r c Li I r - I 'm i - " - 1 '--'' s ' t- , I , X 1 .v-:-v :.v.v . v.-Z .:J.-.-.::::: : J:-:- -: --i'0:- : ov-v-r-v.-. ...-... . . . . v; .. - : : -. t 4 f, ' ' I 11 r f - - ' ' & ' t. i v I V -1 - - " - : - . v - Vttmt'iimaaiasL sw& y'Js: . . ""- . i in innn i m tnirf im t A COACH DUFFY DAUGIIERTY'S TEAM, Michi gan State, had its first encounter with UNC hos pitality yesterday when four coeds welcomed, the squad at Durham's Holiday Inn MoteL The girls UP Defeats Bill Favoring Old UNG Housing Policy By JOHN GREENBACKER Controversy flared at the Uni versity Party organizational meeting Thursday night as stu dent legislator Borden Parker ( UP ) unsuccessfully proposed a resolution supporting the Uni versity's old discriminatory housing policy. The move came as a complete surprise to party leaders and nearly 100 members and guests at the Gerrard Hall meeting. The resolution stated that the old policy was better as it elimi nated the possible hardships caused by a change of room assignment at the beginning of the year and it saved students the embarrassment of such a confrontation. The defeated resolution called on the UP to "go on record as favoring a University housing policy which makes initial room assignments on the basis of ra cial separation," except in spec ial cases. Parker stressed the "embar rassment" clause of the proposal as being its primary justuica tion. Student Body President Bob Spearman, speaking against the proposal, said, "It is wrong for the University to act as a dis criminatory agency." Citing federal court cases and restrictions on organizations re ceiving federal aid, Spearman said, "No University gets ied eral aid which has housing dis crimination." "To support this resolution is inconsistent with the principles on which this University stanus," he added. In subsequent questioning, Spearman said he felt the old N. Y. Times Delivery Agency Is Shut Down Chapel Hill's distribution office of the New York Times has clos ed alter. a business life ot three months. Chris Wright, manager of the office, said the shutdown was due to a lack of subscriptions and no interest in the plan. He explained that he would need 1,200 subscriptions to realize any profit. At the present level of subscriptions, he would lose $100 a week. Refunds will be mailed next week to those who have already taken subscriptions. . BLACK, TUTHILL TO PLAY Ag ana ordinance discriminated against all students and not just Neg roes. UP member ' Britt Gordon called Parker's reasoning "twist ed." ' . . "The University can't tell a student he can't room with someone because of his race," Gordon said. "I would be asham ed of a party which would ac cept such a stand in this mat ter." Clark Crampton, another UP member, urged adoption of the resolution saying it was an at tempt to avoid a "bad situation." "You can't say this bill isn't reasonable and well thought out." Citing the University Party's background, Presidential As sistant Mike Chanin said, "The UP cannot say that one group can be housed in one place and another group in another ." The resolution was defeated by the body by division of UP mem- The DTH Pigskin Prognosti-gators,- fresh from a .743 per centage last week, once again have gone into a short period of ..... . , meditation and nave come uy with ThSr predictions. Joining the board of experts this week is Alex Kaplan, a S CO H O S 3 3 i k S S 2 CLEMSON-STATE Clemson Clcmson Clenison Clemson Cleimon Clermon UVA-DUKE Duke Duke Duke Duke UVA Duke USC-MARYLAXD ........... USC USC Md. USC ISC Md. WAKE-FOREST-VPI ....... VPI Wake Wake VPI VPI YPI BOSTON COLLEGE-ARMY .. Army Army Army Army Array Army SYRACUSE-KANSAS Syra Syra Syra Syra Kansas Syra TENNESSEE-AUBURN Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn Auburn GA. TECH-MIAMI Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech Tech GEORGIA-VANDERBILT ... Vandy Ga. Vandy Ga. Vandy Ca. WISCONSrN-N. DAME Wis Wis Wis Wis ND Wis OKLA.-SOUTHERN CAL .... S. Cal Okla Okla Okla Okla Okia LSU-RICE ...I.....--".. Bice LSU LSU LSU Rice LSU IlALNOIS-CAIJFORMA ..... Illinois Illinois Illinois Illinois Cal Illinois PITT-OREGON ' Ut Pitt Pitt Pitt Titt Pitt UCLA-PENN STATE ........ UCLA Penn S. UCLA. Penn S. Penn S. UCLA sit "1 lv fun ' I i I it (, ft iUU .were chosen by the. Student Athletic Council to vanguard UNCs new strategy: "Love thy neigh bor, it'll kill him." Photo by Jock Lautcrer. bers present. No count was made, as the majority was established. After this action the body gave a vote of coniidence to Spear man, and former Student Party Chairman Paul Dickson, present in the room, -voiced the SP's support of the UP's action. In other remarks before the body, Spearman urged student participation in party activities and student government. Spearman recommended the University Party to students by citing such UP initiated pro jects as the Joyner Pilot project the Fine Arts Festival, the Residence College System, the Merit Scholar Program and a course evaluation booklet. The UP passed resolutions calling for a study of rules re stricting the activities of Caro lina co-eds, and investigating the possibility of a carrier current radio system on campus. Football Horoscope veteran from Brooklyn. He and Bill Lee are the only returnees from last year's staff Last week the staff as a ROm!I aA Kv nuic waa - three-way tie for first at 11-3-1 by Pete Gammons, Pete Cross, and Lee. Tom Haney was 10-4-1, a mo H 7171' iiJL XL paruaini By LARRY TAR f. ETON DTH Sports Editor UNC's Tar Heels will try to bounce back from the upset they suffered at the hands of State last week and pull an upset of their own when they play host to Michigan State's Spartans this afternoon at 1:30. A crowd of about 40.000 is ex pected to pack into Kenan sta dium for the third match in as many years between the two teams. Michigan State has soundly trounced the Big Blue the last two years by scores of 38-6 and 31-0 and are rated a one to two touchdown favorite in this meeting. This is the opening game for the Spartans who arc expected to unveil a different type of ball team than seen at East Lansing in the last few years. Fourteen lettermen were lost from last year's 6-2-1 team including All American Sherman Lewis. But Coach Duffy Daugherty has 21 lettermen returning to build from. With only one returning runner vith experience, this Spartan team is expected to reply on the arm of Junior Steve Juday, who had a great game in his debut rgainst the Tar Heels last year. Tne Tar Heels are really "up" for this game and want badly to rtone lor the two shellackings tney have suffered at East Lan sing. However, they have been botnered by injuries during prac tice this week. Third-string guard Charlie Dav is suxiered a oroen jaw in Tues eay s practice and will be out lor at least two weeks. Quarterback SiAUliNG LINEUPS UNC MSU Lt Bill Darnall T. Krzemicnski LT Jonn lull Lj Clint Ludy C C. Hanburger KG J. Malobicky I;T F. Gallagher KE J. AUierton QB Gary Black HB Ken Willard IiB R. Jackson FB Eddie Kesler Dick I'inn J. Karpinski Don Ross R. Bentlcy Jeiry Rush G. Washington Steve Juday Dick Gordon II. Amnion Eddie Cotton ;SGi2..Ly: 'x Gary BlacK and halfback Hon Tuthiil, who sulicred bruised ribs in last Saturday's game, are ex pected to see action today. In one Jineup change Coach Jim Hickey has moved Jay Ma lobicky to the first unit to re place Hichy Zarro, who is still bothered by a leg injury suffered in pre-season practice. while Larry Tarlcton trailed with 9-5-1. The gi missed which everyone B.C.-Syr&cuse, were ... . . . . . . Wake Forest-Virgmia, and Air Force-Washington. Et tu, Sports Illustrated?