Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 29, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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870 " SP Chairmanship? Don Wilson captures SP Chair- manship. Shake-up for the party? See edits, page 2. Football Ratings Carolina's talented Tar Herb were named among the top foot ball teams in the country in yes terday's AP survey. See story, page 4. Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINATUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service IS I I III II II II .; pearman Plans For 'National 'Issues Week' Here a Student Body President Bob Spearman announced plans yes c terday for a National Issues Week to be held Oct. 26 through Oct. 30. . The week as planned will con sist of a series of open meetings on election issues sponsored by tlie Carolina Political Union, speeches by national political fig ures, and a mock presidential election on Nov. 2. "The concern of students in the political life of the United States is a valid and important one," Spearman said. "It is the responsibility of the University and student groups to stimulate debate and discussion of issues in this election year." A special showing of the film "The Making of the President" will be sponsored by the Graham Memorial Current Affairs Com-, mittee, and a national Broadcasting-Company documentary may possibly be presented. Highlighting the week will be a debate between the national presidents of the Young Demo cratic Club and the Young Re SchnorrenhurgOpens D orm Speaker Series Dr. John M. Schnorrenberg of the art department will kick off the YMCA-sponsored Dormitory Speaker Program tonight at c8:30 o'clock in the Nurses Dorm. He is scheduled to speak on "Pressure to Conform." According to Harry Weiler, , ee chairman of the Dormitory Pro- gram Committee, the main pur ! pose of the experimental speak er is "to provoke thought, not to entertain." The program is now limited Church To Head Alumni Council John . T. Church, senior vice . president and secretary of Rose's Stores, is the new chair man of UNC's Alumni Annual Giving Council. Church's election was an nounced last week as a final tab ulation showed that 7,440 UNC alumni contributed a record to tal of $137,233 in the Alumni Annual Giving Program for 1963-64. - The council earmarks funds . raised from alumni in the an nual program which is co-sponsored by UNC's General Alumni Association, headed this year by Hugh Morton of Wilmington, and the University here. The election of two new mem bers of-the Council also was announced. They are Alex H. Galloway of Winston-Salem, chairman of the board of Reyn olds Tobacco Co., and Charles A. McLendon of Greensboro, an executive with Burlington In dustries. Church, a 1942 graduate of the University, succeeds Harry H. Montgomery, Wilmington busi nessman who held the chair manship for the past two years. Other past chairmen who now serve ex officio members of the council are R. Mayne Albright of Raleigh, Archie K. Davis of Winston-Salem, James W. Poole of Greensboro, E. J. Evans of Durham and Voit Gilmore of Southern Pines. Toronto Exchange Interviews for 27 positions on The Toronto Exchange will be held "tomorrow, Thursday, and Friday, co - chairmen Roxanne Kalb and Stephen Dennis announ ced Mondav. Application forms and a sicn-up sheet for inter7 views will be available at the Graham Memorial Information desk, they said. Twcnty-icur students, 12 men and 12 women wili be selected for the trip to Toronto, which is set for late January. Three per sons will be picked as alternates. Co-chairman Dennis urged all interested students to make ap plication, indicating that all non freshmen rre eligible. Expenses will be negligible, added Miss Kalb. Bus fare to Toronto was $35 last year, she said, and should be about the same for the coming trip. The Toronto students will visit Notes publican Club, sponsored by the Carolina Forum. Seminars sponsored y the YWCA will be held in various liv ing units on campus prior to the week. The mock election will be run by the Elections Board, and over all coordination or the week's events will be handled by the Communications Committee. In conjunction with these ac tivities, the Daily Tar Heel will feature a series of articles pre senting opposing view points on election issues. In designating the week, Spear man said, "I urge all students to inform themselves of the issues in this campaign and to partici pate in the mock election." "I further urge all eligible stu dents," he added, "to register and vote, and to actively support the candidate of their choice." Student Body Presidential As sistant Mike Chanin said final plans have not been completed by the sponsor organizations. They will be announced within the next 14 days. to two geographic areas, the Nurses Dorm and Ehringhaus Hall, and only residents of these areas may participate. The Committee hopes to gain enough student support for the speaker program to permit an increase in the number of participating geographic areas in 1965. The Committee suggests that the campus be divided into nine areas, drawn along lines of election districts. Each of these will be called a Resident Col lege Unit, and the nine together will compose the Resident Col lege System. By the fall of 1966 the Com mittee hopes to have a rotating speaker program with a core of nine professors who will speak in each of the geographic areas on the same night. The men will speak in the same area, but they will not give the same speeches as they rotate through the campus. During the fall semester this year the programs will be pre sented at 9:30 p.m. in Ehring haus and at 8:30 p.m. in the Nurses Dorm. Each will con sist of a 45-minute speech fol lowed by a 45-minute discussion period. Following is the tentative schedule: Ehringhaus: Sept. 30, "The Garrison State," Mr. William Geer. Oct. 14, "Disarmament and World Government as a Solution for Peace," Mr. William Geer. Oct. 28, "Problems of Homosexuality." Nov. 11, "The Extent and Possible Effects of the Proposed Resident College System," Dean William Long. Dec. 2, "The Chancellor's Du ties," Chancellor Paul Sharp. Dec. 16,. "Birth Control," Dr. Tyndall Harris. Nurses Dorm: Sept. 29, "The Pressure to Conform," Dr. Paul Schnorrenberg. Oct. 13, "The Chancellor's Duties," Chancellor Paul Sharp. Oct. 27, "The South and Integration." Nov. 10., "Re ligion and its Need to Communi cate with this Generation." Dec. 15, "The Extent and Possible Effects of the Proposed Resident College System," Dean William Long. Interviews Listed Chapel Hill the weekend of Nov ember 21, arriving Thursday night and leaving Sunday after noon. They will tour the campus, hold discussion groups, partici pate in several social activities, and see the Duke football game. The theme for this year's pro gram will be "Academic Free dom and Civil Rights in the Soutii Today." The North Carolina students selected will have similar activi ties when they visit the Univer sity of Toronto for about five days during semester break. The exchange is underwritten by Stu dent Government funds. "We are looking," said Dennis, "for good representatives of the University who have distinguish ed themselves in some way and who will be able to make inde pendent contributions to our dis- cussions." UNC Is On it . Jl .11 i j I I mil I II III ! I. II ' jt , ., r-m " v - v - ' ' ' "i tim i lu jt i ii.ijw j..,.,, ,i . vTiim j ' ;', ' ' " ' """""""""'"'""-- &$P$& f I- II' nil " . W 'tirrrrmw i n.i. .nil m " - - UP SHE GOES!! Construction on UNC's new annex to Woollen Gym is well under way. The girders, like the one above, will radiate from the center hub which alone weighs sixteen tons. The steel p WASHINGTON (AP)-A White House committee on Presidential safety, created overnight to con sider the broad recommendations of the Warren Commission, plan ned swift action Monday to get proposals ready for the new Con gress in January. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield of Montana said the new security measures, grow ing out of the Commission's in vestigation of President Kenne dy's assassination, should be "one of the first orders of busi ness" when Congress reconvenes. The Warren Report, declaring Lee Harvey Oswald to have been the lone and unaided assassin, was selling "phenomenally" af ter it went on sale at three out lets today, the Government Print ing Office reported. The Commission, headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, criti cized "deficiencies" in the Secret Service's precautions for Kenne dy's fatal visit to Dallas last Nov. 22. It called for "complete over haul" of the service's advance detection practices and other re forms including closer liaison with the FBI and other agencies. The President, in Texas, im mediately named Secretary of the Treasury Douglas Dillon to head a committee of four to work out the Warren proposals. A Treasury spokesman said Dillon intends "to get this mov ing as soon as he can" and has set a Jan. 1 target date for the completion of recommendations. A first meeting of the special group will be held, the spokes man said, on the earliest day that all are in Washington. One cf them, Director John T. Mc- Cone of the CIA, was out of the Chancellor Is Honored At Craig e Chancellor Paul F. Sharp was guest of honor at a reception Sunday afternoon at Craige Dorm. After a short tour through the dorm, Dr. Sharp gave an in formal address to nearly 100 stu dents assembled on the front lawn. He answered questions about the University, its prob lems and its future. Chancellor Sharp emphasized that increasing size would not weaken UNC so long as channels for individual development re mained open. Stressing the stu dent's , role of self-responsibility, he encouraged his audience to seek more than an academic edu cation. He noted that a Carolina education is sufficiently broad to prevent technical obsolescence. The chancellor's visit was the first in a series of Sunday after noon meetings which are to be part of Craige Dorm's new aca demic program. The Move: Construction At A Hams Capital today. The others are Acting Atty. Gen. Nicholas Kat zenbach, and McGeorge Bundy, Presidential Assistant for Nation al Security Arrarrs. Neither , the Secret Service nor the FBI had any comment on the Commission's criticisms. One of tne Warren proposals to make it a federal crime to assassinate the President or Vice- -President is already pending in several bills. One of them con ceivably could be enacted before Congress adjourns. A new Mans-, field proposal would cover also the presidential and vice-presidential nominees of both parties. r Mansfield, who said last night that Congress should stay in Washington, if necessary, to act on the Warren recommendations, conceded today that it probably is too late in the session for the "considerable work" which must be done. There was little doubt that Congress would provide whatever appropriations might be asked to tighten Presidential security. "Congress has never turned down a request fcr more men or mon ey for them (the Secret Service and FBI)", Mansfield noted. The Republican Leader, Sen. Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, said procedures probably will be discussed when the Senate Ju diciary Committee meets tomor row on the pending bills. Dirksen lauded the report as a "thorough-going, job," but said he isn't sure the "sharp criti cisms of the Secret Service and the FBI were well taken." Jack Ruby learned about the Warren Commission's report yes terday from his sister, Mrs. Eva Grant. But she said he "just didn't comprehend it." Mrs. Granf "inhibited with hallucinations about the Jews being persecuted ... the things I say to him don't register." The Commission reported it had no evidence that Ruby knew Lee Harvey Oswald, the accused presidential assassin whom Ruby shot Nov. 24. Ruby acted alone, apparently aHer he read that Mrs. Kennedy might havi - re Fall Fraternity Rush Rush just doesn't seem to end. On the heels of sorority rush, the fraternities started their fall session last night. Most fraterni ties reported a maximum of 75 rushees. Fraternity rush will last through tomorrow, "when bids will be issu ed. Only students w ho( have been here a semester are 'eligible to participate, due to the Interfrater nity Council's new rush regula tions calling for deferred rushing. TORONTO EXCHANGE Interviews for the Toronto Ex change wm be held Sept 30, Oct. 1-2. The Exchanse, to take place during semester break, has 26 vacancies. Co-chairmen of the Exchange are Roxanna Kalb and Steve Dennis. girder in this picture is 125 feet, gym will have. Quiick. turn to Dallas to testify at Os wald's trial, the Commission said. A" jury convicted Ruby of Os wald's death after a month-long trial last March and sentenced him to death. Ruby's lawyers Chancellor'' s Cabinet Discusses - Housing, . The chancellor's cabinet, in ses sion Monday for the first time this fall, found no reason to ex pect problems from last week's order by Chancellor Paul Sharp designed to end discrimination in University housing. The cabinet discussed means of implementing the housing rule, Sharp said, and found "no rea son to anticipate problems." The housing order replaced a 1963 rule, adopted during the ad ministration of former Chancellor William Aycock, which stipulated "initial room assignments will be made according to race." Socialized Medicine9 Held As Onlv 'Partial Success By ALAN BANOV The immediate past president of the British Medical Associa tion considers England's Na tional Health Service a partial success. Sir George W. Pickering, re nowned English physician and Professor of Medicine at Oxford University, presented this opin ion during a press conference at Memorial Hospital yesterday. Dr. Pickering will speak to area physicians tonight at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of Memorial Hospital. His speech, sponsored by North Carolina Heart Association, will concern hardening of the arteries. He will also lecture to medical stu dents and visit the medical cen ter's facilities. He attributed the partial suc cess of Britain's "socialized medicine" mainly to the "paper revolution" by which the plan was effected overnight. On an "appointed day" the hospitals and research facilities of Eng land were merely nationalized under the Ministry of Health. Moreover, he said, the com prehensive health service for every citizen "tends to become a little stereotyped, in the sense that there is an establishment." A doctor can't get a post unless there is a vacancy. While the doctors and patients of England like the service, 'ac cording to Dr. Pickering, he stated it was "rather hard to say" anything about proposed plans here. Outspoken against writers of complex, pseudo-scientific pap ers and texts. Sir George critic ized doctors who use unclear, imprecise language in talking with patients and instructing students. This leads, he said, to a "lack of communication" be Sivift Pace which is not the biggest the . . . ' Photo by Jock Lauterer Action won a 30-day delay Saturday in their appeal of the sentence. Judge Jce B. Brown granted the extension "when the defense said the voliuninous trial records they needed to present the full record of the case had not yet been, transcribed. Sheriff Bill Decker said he also visited Ruby's Dallas County jail - cell to deliver- mail. ''He didn't say a word about the report.' Robert Oswald, 30, brother of the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy, said that while he agrees with the Warren Com mission Report, one question still is unanswered. "I can't help feeling that some how someone originated the idea in Lee's mind, either directly or indirectly," he said. In giving one of his first inter views since the assassination, of which Lee Harvey Oswald is ac cused, Robert Oswald agreeably answered most questions. tween physicians and laymen. "I don't think we pay enough attention to training the . mind as an instrument of precision," he explained. "Emphasis on more accurate conveying of facts" between doctors and his associates, patients and students should be made in medical schools." An example of this impreci sion was found in the title of Dr. Pickering's speech on the na ture of "Nodular Arteriosclero sis." Dr. Pickering defined this illness as a "disease which stops up the arteries of middle age men." Failure to exercise enough in creases the possibilities of coro naries, he asserted. Earlier in man's development "we had to hunt and till the soil ... we were made to work." There is "evidence of the increasing fre quency of heart disease with the replacement of human mus cle by the internal combustion engine," he said. It is desirable that "men par ticularly" do physical exercise "after they cease to be children." "When muscles aren't used they get flabby," he said. "Cigarette smoking doesn't do the heart any good," noted Dr. Pickering. Research has shown a connection between smoking and heart disease. The most harm to the heart, comes from lack of sufficient exercise and weighing too much. Dr. Pickering was firm in his opposition ; to the academic the ory of "publish or perish." He said his predecessor didn't pub lish a paper for five years, but was elected to the presidency of the British Medical Association at the age of 34. He added this paper was outstanding. Wilson Tops Two Opponents, Gains SP Chairmanship By FRED SEELY DTII Co-Editor Sophomore Don Wilson grabbed the reins cf the Student Party Sunday night by an impressive margin. Polling 42 votes against Bill Woodall's 17 and Bill Weems' nine, the legislator won the chair manship of the Party for the coming year. Paul Dickson re tired earlier in the week as chairman in favor of a legisla tive seat. Nominated by Chuck Neely, who had earlier led a procedural fight regarding time limits for speakers, Wilson called for a resurgenge of the SP and pledg ed himself to "find dedicated in dividuals for the party." He also urged liberalization of women's rules and a thorough in vestigation of possible discrim inatory policies in the Univer sity. Dickson won the legislative seat in Ehringhaus Hall vacsted by Dave Rendleman by a 2-1 margin over freshman Richard Thayer. Election of the vice-chairman was delayed until next week pending approval of an amend ment offered by . Arthur Hays. The amendment would provide for two ice-chairmen, one of which would handle administra tive work and the other to handle party policy. The SP by-laws specify that an amendment must be passed in two consecutive meetings. Paul Chused introduced a reso lution, eventually passed by ac clamation, congratulating Dick son for his work as chairman. Another resolution, also passed by acclamation, urged other campus organizations to join stu dent government in stopping dis White, Two Others Face Trial Today William Earl White of Chapel Hill will face preliminary hear ing on a first degree burglary charge and trial on a resisting arrest charge this morning in Chapel Hill Recorder's Court. Earl Hokclaw and Tommy White, both of Chapel Hill, are scheduled for trial on charges of assault and battery, stemming from reported violence at an in tegrated student beer party here cn Sept. 19. A number of University stu dents have been subpoenaed and are expected to testify today. The burglary charge was brought against W. E. White last week by Ed Causey Jr , a UNC senior from Southern Pines, who said White broke into the house he was occupying in University Heights, outside Chapel Hill. The break-in reportedly occurred near the end of four hours of harass ment of a student party at Caus ey's house. The resisting arrest charge was brought against White by Bing ham Township Constable Hugh Wilson, who attended the party. Wilson said E. R. White entered the house, u resiled with Causey over a loaded shotgun, and fled after Wilson told him he was un der arrest. Wilson said he sep arated the two by striking White with a chair leg. Wilson also brought the assault and battery charges against Jlolsclaw and Tommy White af ter the two allegedly struck him when he was leaving the party. W. E. White is free on a total of $700 bond, $500 for the burg lary charge, $200 for the resist ing arrest charge. His bond was signed by his father, H. E. White. Odetta To Appear Here October 14 The Memorial Hall appearance cf folksinger-guitarist Theodore Bikel, scheduled for Oct. 14, was cancelled yestenlay, and Negro fclksinger ' Odetta was scheduled in his place. Howard Henry, GM director, said that Bikel had been asked to make a motion picture for the United Nations and would not be available for persona appearan ces this month. Odetta, renowned tor her mel low, melancholy voice and guitar accompaniment, will appear Oct. 14 at 8 pjn. in Memorial Hall. Ticket sales will begin at 1 pan. Oct. 6, at Graham Memorial. crimination in the University. T.ie resolution also fully support ed recent actions of StuJcnt Doiy President Bob Spearman, Chan cellor Paul F. Sharp, and Dean of Student Affairs C. O Cathey. Prior to his election, Wilson gave a report on a special com mittee formed last week to in vestigate seating of students at Kenan Stadium. He told the 125 members present tlie crowded conditions last week were caused by the added load of Consolidat ed University Day, and that steps were being taken by the Athletic Department to alleviate the con fusion. Dickson read a letter from former StuJent Body President Mike Lawler, who urged students to participate in the Student Par ty. Lawler. a '64 graduate, is now working for the National Student Association. Continued on Page 3) i i i .A DON WILSON Mr. Holsclaw and Tommy White are free on $100 bond each. The party was broken up by an alleged eight or ten men, some of them reportedly resi dents of the University Heights area. Shots were fired near the house and stones thrown at it. .Only minor injuries were report ed. University Security Officer Ar thur Beaumont said the reason for the attack on the party was that Negroes were attending it. Some members of the harassing group were reported to be mem bers of the Ku Klux Klan. This report has not been confirmed. Singer Is First Music Series Star Sylvia Friederich, the first per former in the Tuesday Evening Series, will appear tonight at 8 o'clock in Hill Hall Auditorium in a free public concert. Miss Friederich, a mezzo-soprano, was recently awarded the Artist's Diploma at the Eastman School of Music, where she v. on numerous awards as an under graduate, including the Perform er's Certificate and McCurdy Scholarship for senior voice ma jors. Erna Berger, noted European 'oice instructor, accepted Miss Friederich as a pupil- She has studied in Hamburg, Germany on a Ful bright Fellowship, and in Milan, Italy. In 1952, she won first prize in the Metropolitan Opera Regional Auditions from the Great Ikes region. She was "Singer of the Year" last year as chosen by the National Association of Teachers of Singing. She is on tour and will be per forming in Boston, Chicago and many large Southern cities. Some works that Miss Fried erich will sing here are three arias from Handel's opera, "AI cina"; "Dt-ei Zigeunerromannen," Three Gypsy Ballard;.) by Her mann Ruetter; "Side Caneiencs Populared Espano'as," Seven Spanish Folk Songs) by dcFalla; and four songs by Jean Berger. The Tuesday Evening Series is sponsored by the UNC Music Department.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 29, 1964, edition 1
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