Saturday, November 7, 1964 Volume 72, Number 42 UNC Participation Discussed 4 DM ftln f r. - r r- n n o TED- Of V 1 72 Years of Editorial Freedom wfcKh first pcn4 as doors 8 Offices on the second floor of Graham Memorial. Telephone number: Editorial, sports, news 933-1012. Business, cir culation, advertising 933-1163. Address: Box 1080, Chapel Hill, N. C. Second class postage paid at the Post Office In Chapel Hill, N. C, Subscription rates: $4.50 per semester; $8.00 per year.' Published daily except Mondays, examination periods and vacations, throughout the aca demic year by the Publications Board of the University of North Carolina. Printed by the Chapel Hill Publishing Company, Inc., 501 West Franklin Street, Chapel Hill, N. C. i A Cause For Disgust '. Every member of the UNC student body has cause to be disgusted and alarmed by certain tactics currently being employed by opponents of the National Student Association on this campus. - Resorting to the cover of anonymity, they have issued scathing personal at tacks on respected campus leaders whose integrity and honesty cannot be ques tioned. They have circulated distorted or completely false "hate sheets' con cerning NSA, relying heavily on re prints from YAF bulletins and "Human 'Events," both right-wing sources of questionable motive and veracity. They have declined to act with dig nity or restraint, choosing instead to originate wild and often slanderous rumors about NSA, its supporters and its aims. They have refused repeated chal lenges to debate the issue publicly. Much of the material which they have circulated is unsigned, further in dication of their reluctance to enter in- - & . . Our Awards Here, to brighten your. spirits on the day of the Clemson game, are our week ly DTH i I Extinguished , Personalities riiiMM&lfMi WEEK: A golfer in a recent stroke-play tourna--ment who addressed his ball, swung and missed. Assessing himself a stroke, he hit it the next try, only to find it was not his ball, thus? incurring an other two-stroke penalty. And our other picks: POLITICIAN OF THE YEAR: Ala bama Gov. George Wallace, whose arch conservative stands in the national election resulted in a Republican land slide in his home state which threw -most of his Democratic congressman friends out of office, sending five GOP candidates to Congress for the first time. In one Alabama county, the Demo crats lost every election they entered. PROMISE OF THE WEEK: By Clem son football coach Frank Howard, who said he was going to the Carolina dressing room after this afternoon's game "to kiss Ken Willard good-by." A retort from New York Giant's scout Peahead Walker sums up our senti ments: "Frank is so ugly his wife goes on trips with him so she won't have to kiss HIM good-by." VOTING TURNOUT OF THE WEEK: We thought the prize would go to Glen Lennox, where 1,086 of 1,098 registered voters went to the polls. However, the prize goes to a precinct in Madison County, where 2l5 of 208 voters showed up. When the ballot boxes were opened, there were 233 ballots. You just can't beat that kind of turn out, even in Madison County. to healthy and open argument. In short, they have run a campaign against NSA based almost completely on lies, appeals to bigotry and fear. When the Nov. 10 referendum on NSA was first proposed, we aired our support for NSA and called for a cam paign based on reason, integrity and dignity, in the hope that this issue would not become compounded by emo tionalism and hate.- Unfortunately for every honorable, well-intentioned student, whatever his stand on NSA, this request has been ignored. The campaign has disintegrated in to a series of attacks from NSA's op position, replete with name-calling and smear. It has become apparent that many of NSA's antagonists are willing to resort to any means, no matter how low, to achieve their ends. In fairness to a few honest opponents of NSA, we are constrained to point out that many on the side of disaffiliation have disavowed the tactics being used by their less principled counterparts. They have based their opposition on well-researched information about NSA, they have spoken against it in articu late, reasoned terms and they have made themselves known. , I "Nevertheless, so long as unsigned and unsubstantiated anti-NSA material con tinues" in evidence, they must be as signed a share of the ' blame for. allow ing such disreputable tactics to con--tinue. . ' : . ' Finally, as a means of contrasting an honest campaign with a deceitful one, we commend to you the tactics of NSA's proponents. They have distributed well-researched, carfully documented material about NSA, including an impressive list of its accomplishments and a series of en dorsements from national figures. They have left no doubt as to their identity, signing all material which they have used. The names are those of respected, conscientious student lead ers, without exception. They accepted our offer of a public debate as a means of bringing to light the true issues of this campaign. And, finally, they have shown their concern for the campus by participating in dormitory discussions and by taking their campaign directly to hundreds of students through personal, door-to-door contact. Thus, on the one hand NSA is being attacked by anonymous purveyors of hatred and discontent who are too un scrupulous to come forward and con test the issue with fact and decency. On the other hand, NSA is being supported by student leaders who are eager to identify themselves and to supply the truth about NSA's purposes, activities and members. Is there any REAL choice, then, as to which side deserves your support? Sartre Says No So Did Faulkner From The Knickerbocker News Jean-Paul Sartre, the, French playwright-philosopher one hears about and reads sometimes, says he will refuse the Nobel Prize for literature. His pro nouncement brings to mind another such William Faulkner of Oxford, Miss. The late Mr. Faulkner was blase about the prize, and when he was awarded it said he wouldn't bother. He went down town and 'alerted his daughter, how ever, so that he would have a traveling companion on the way to Stockholm, where the prize is given, out. The next notation came from Atlanta, where the Faulkners were stopping over, now Stockholm-bound. The great novelist had bought some black socks in a downtown department store, to go with his evening clothes. There's no point in dragging out the story other than to say that by the time he arrived in Sweden, Mr. Faulkner was enthusiastic aboift the award in the ex treme. He received it, and the news photos indicate he was smiling at the time. Maybe Mr. Sartre should go to At lanta and buy some socks to get in the mood. By HANK PATTERSON Ed. note: Patterson, a UNC law student, was vice-president of the student body, 1960-61, and spent the year 1962-63 working as special assistant to the Inter national Affairs Vice-President of the National Strident . Association. The following article describes NSA's work on the international scene and tells how UNC is in volved in this work. Through the National Student Association we, the students at Carolina, speak with and help other studens the world over. NSA seeks to strengthen demo cratic student organizations in other countries and to promote within a democratic framework cooperation among the various national student communities. It works to give American stu dents broader educational experi ences in international affairs. The Association works through bilateral and multilateral rela tionships with other national stu dent organizations to effect poli cies developed by representatives of member schools at the annual National Student Congress. As sistance in implementing pro gramming is often sought from advisory committees on which university educators sit. International Student Conference NSA joined with student organi zations of other countries in 1950, principally from Western Europe, to form the International Student Conference (ISC). The ISC was organized as an alternative structure to the Prague-based International Union of Students (IUS) considered by NSA- to be "a partisan political instrument in the service of the Soviet Union's foreign policy' The IUS is the sponsor of the chain of "world youth festivals" which have been condemned by the National Student Congress for their partisan and controlled na ture. The ISC, with its international headquarters in the Netherlands, has served since 1950 as a forum for the free exchange of student opinion and a structure for the promotion of international educa tional and relief activities. Over seventy national student organi zations, representing most of the countries outside Eastern Europe, have participated with the frame work of the ISC. This past July a large delega tion of European, African and Latin American student leaders were brought to Chapel Hill by NSA on their return from the Eleventh meeting of the ISC in New Zealand. This delegation spent several days in discussions with UNC students and faculty, visited with business leaders in Durham, and met with Governor Sanford. World University Service Since shortly after its forma-, tion in 1947, NSA has been one of five national sponsors for World University Service (WUS). Other sponsors include the YM YWCA, National Student Chris tian Federation, and the B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundations. WUS carries on an extensive program of material assistance to overseas student communities, for which a large proportion of the UNC Campus Chest receipts are yearly pledged. Recent NSA-WUS sponsored ac tivities include a scholarship pro gram for African students who were forced to leave Bulgarian universities in 1962. The UNC Student Government contributed to the success of this program, which has resulted in the attend ance of some of these African students at American universi ties. NSA and WUS also cooperated in placing Hungarian students in U.S. universities after the 1956 revolution. Bilateral Relations NSA maintains bilateral con tacts with national student or ganizations in other countries.. American students, acting as NSA overseas representatives, at tend student meetings abToad and help strengthen relationships be tween NSA and other national student unions. Close cooperation between NSA and European national unions of students has meant substantial discounts on travel and entertain ment in Europe for American students using International Stu dent Identity Cards. The issuance of Identity Cards is a service of NSA's student travel bureau, Educational Trav el Incorporated, which also makes available low cost student travel to Europe, Africa, and Latin America. "THAT'S MY BOy ! " To increase communication be tween democratic student organi zations and understanding among student communities, NSA ex changes delegations of student leaders and artists with other na tional student unions. A UNC student, Bill Lucas, was selected by NSA to participate in a delegation sent to Southeast Asian university centers for three weeks last year. The delegation was financed and programmed abroad by the Institute of Inter national Education and the De partment of State. This past summer four Amer ican student folk singers were chosen by NSA to perform as the guests of local student unions in the Middle East and Africa. In 1961 an Israeli musical group, touring the U.S. under the auspices of NSA and the Israeli national student union, played to a full audience in the Playmak ers Theatre here. A second Is raeli folk dancing team per formed at Carolina last spring under the local sponsorship of the Hillel Foundation and NSA. Aid to National Unions NSA carries on a substantial program of aid to democratic student organizations abroad with the support of its member campuses and the Ford, Rocke feller and other American foundations. The Association, for instance, has furnished mimeographing equipment for the new Tanganyikan national union of students. NSA has provided training scholarships for leaders of the national student union in India. This democratic student organ ization has worked to develop an effective student press serv ice, to mobilize Indian student' energies in support of the na tional defense against Red Chi nese aggression, and to expose the real nature of a minority group which purports to repre sent Indian students at com munist sponsored international student meetings. NSA has given assistance to the illiteracy projects of the democratic student union of Chile. During .the past aca demic year, . the Stray Greeks at UNC raised funds to sup port the Chilean project. In cooperation with other national student organizations, NSA collected money for medi cal supplies and food for stu dent refugees in Tunisian and Moroccan refugee camps dur ing the Algerian war. Fraterni ties and sororities at UNC, through an IFC-Panhellenic Council project, contributed $300 for this purpose in 1961. International Exchange The generous support of Ford and other national foun dations has enabled NSA to establish an extensive interna tional student exchange pro gram. More than 25 foreign stu dents attend American univer sities today on NSA scholar ship grants. Ten foreign stu dents have studied in Chapel Hill on NSA scholarships; one will complete the Ph.D. decree this fall. Cecilia Gajardo, NSA schol arship grantee from Chile, fre quently addressed dormitory and sorority groups at Carolina last year. A special NSA program now makes available scholarships to enable qualified students from Portuguese-held African territories to study at Ameri can universities. A UNC student, Sid Wald man, Is currently studying at a Polish university for a year on a NSA-Polish national stu dent union academic exchange project supported by Ameri can foundations. Domestic Activity In addition to it1? overseas activity, NSA sponsors an im pressive variety of domestic international programs. NSA conducts a largo num ber of intercollegiate confer ences dealing with interna tional subjects. Several have been held in North Carolina in recent years. The Association has in the past sponsored and made travel grants to American student journalists to attend national conferences on world affairs. These conferences have been supported by Time and Read ers Digest and other founda tions. Fifteen full scholarships are granted annually by NSA for students from member schools to attend an intensive seminar in the summer months to study international relations and world student politics. UNC students have participat ed in these seminars from which come much of the American leadership in free world student organizations. NSA is engaged in research in international student pro gramming techniques and study abroad on several Ameri can university campuses. The Association also makes avail able to student groups at mem ber schools prepared mate rials for programming in the international affairs area. Perhaps of special note is the impetus provided by NSA to the establishment of the Peace Corps in organizing a national conference to dis cuss and support its creation in 1961. NSA representatives have since served in Peace Corps advisory posts. .National student, religious organizations, the YM-YWCA, the 4-II Clubs, the CCUN, the Young Democratic Clubs, and other student and youth groups work with NSA in promoting international programs through mutual membership in the U.S. Youth Council. The U.S. Youth Council is the recognized repre sentative of American youth in international circles. NSA is also associated with the U.S. Commission for UNESCO, the Council on Stu dent Travel, and the American Association for the United Nations. Moderates Unite In Fifth Column Letters To The Editors Ref erenduni Issue Rages. On Maupin Article Called Misguided Editors, The Tar Heel: I was rather shocked when I saw in Friday's DTH that Ar mistead Maupin had departed from his role of satirist and attempted to say something on a subject he knows nothing about NSA. All of NSA's resolutions are definitely non-political. If they were not, NSA would lose its tax-exempt status granted to educational groups. The type of resolution it does pass is strictly educa tional. NSA has such programs as tutorial projects and literary projects, much like the kind of work that the YMCA and Stu dent Government are doing this year in the Chapel Hill area. These projects help unedu cated people in the community and they are helpful in the student's education. He or she can learn a lot from teaching illiterate people to read and can get a good deal of satis faction from it as well. Surely Mr. Maupin can not be opposed to something as hu manitarian as this. Many stu dents on campus, including myself, have done just this type of work with the North Carolina Volunteers this sum mer. This is not political and it is certainly an area open to stu dents who really care about learning about people. Mr. Maupin's rejection of this is ridiculous. Snzy Sterling .316 Spencer Orientation Study Helped By NSA Editors, The Tar Heel: Realizing that NSA is a cri tical issue on this campus now, and will be in the coming elec tion, I would like to express my feelings toward the mat ter. , As secretary of Orientation Reform Committee last year and Co-Chairmen of the com mittee this year, we have dealt with NSA to a large extent. Last year, we sent for infor mation regarding other college orientation programs which enabled us to receive critical comparisons of comparable programs. These schools ranged all the way from California, to New York. The following will' illustrate my point: 1) N SA publishes a seven page orientation pamphlet with suggestions concerning a program in relation to size and type of college. 2) NSA publishes a pamphlet, "Some Considerations of Freshman Orientation Pro grams." 3) NSA publishes separate pub lications from various schools concerning the housing problem in regard to counselors. All these previous publica tions were used last year on the committee in analyzing and evaluating Carolina's Orienta tion program of 1964.. From this evaluation, many new ideas were obtained, kicked around, and hopefully will be initiated into next year's pro gram. For example the possi bility of Freshmen counselors living with their counselees for the entire orientation week which would certainly give the freshmen a more personal in troduction to Carolina life. The Orientation Reform Committee would not have been the same without NSA and I personally feel it would be a crime to disaffliate. NSA is too valuable to our student government. Judy Grape Co-Chairman of Orientation Reform Committee By BOB COLVER He walked cautiously down the cold foggy alley, his foot steps echoing off the dripping stone walls. He stopped at a heavy oak door that led into a cellar and knocked once, wait ed to the count of four and knocked twice. A peephole slid back and a round red eye peered out at him. "Yes?" the eye whispered. "I I want to join," he whis pered back, hesitantly. The peephole slid shut, and in a moment the door creaked back. "Come in," the little owner of the eye said, and motioned him into a smelly smoke filled cellar room -where sev eral others were hunched over tables. "Are you a 'have' or a 'have not'?" the little man rasped warily. "Well, actually," he mum bled, "I'm a little in between I think!" The little man grunted and motioned him to a curtained booth in the back. They sat, drinking old fiz-zled-out beer and talking. "You say you want to join, eh?" the little man said, wip ing a smear of foam off his .lip. "Yes, I'm sure now." "You realize the conse quences. We are called a sub versive group by many, and if you are ever found out, we cannot be responsible." "I I I know the conse qences. But T believe in our cause!" ' "Very well. I will ' have to ask you the routine questions, you understand." The little man took a rumpled sheet of paper from his. pocket. He watched the little man - unfold the paper slowly, quiet ly. He must pass the test, he thought. He believed iri it so. "Now," said the little man, squinting and pushing up wrinkles in his face, "You are neither a 'have' nor a 'have not' I believe you said." He nodded, solemnly. "Do you or have you ever put' faith in 'conventional nu clear weapons'?" "No." "Do you believe in Medi care?" "No." "Are you against Social Se curity?" "No." "Do you favor selling the TVA?" "No." "Do you favor government control of utilities?" "No." "Do you favor segregation of the races?" "No." "Do you support wholeheart edly the Civil Rights Bill?" "No." The little man sighed and smiled a little. "Well," he said, "you passed." - He was happy, and he smiled even more than the little man. "Now," said the little man, "raise your right hand and re peat after me: I hereby swear that I am not a member of either the Liberal Faction nor the Conservative Faction but am fully dedicated to the prin ciples of . . ." (the little man took a deep breath and threw back his shoulders proudly) ". . . MODERATISM!" The little man held his proud pose for a moment, then let the air slowly ou of his lungs and shook his head sadly. "And some " he sighed " some call it Treason!"