OTC Library Serials Dapt. .Bat WoMioack til Kays Gary Weather Fair and cold today. Colder to night and Friday. Charlotte Observer columnist Kays Gary will speak to members of the Press Club at 7:30 tonight in Iloweil Hall. Tie public is ia Tiled. Founded Feb. 23. 1893 CHAPELHILL, NOmiTCAROLiNA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1965 Volume 72. Number 92 696S -LL 1M c mm X 5 Dirty Rush Charge Against TEP Under Investigation By ERNIE McCRARY DTH Managing Editor Pi Lambda Phi fraternity has asked the Attorney General's of fice to investigate possible dirty rush charges against Tau Epsilon Phi fraternity. Pi Lams contend the TEPs broke strict silence regulations on the Saturday before rush start ed. The student involved, fresh man Ralph Grosswald, has pledg ed TEP. Groswald reportedly talked with TEP alumnus E. J. Evans in Durham on Feb. 6. Evans, a former mayor of Durham, is a UNC graduate and a former TEP national president. Fraternity rush rules state that "no fraternity men, fraternity alumnus, bull pledge, or other fraternity agent . . . shall in any way entertain, engage in social conversation or correspond with 1 directly or indirectly a prospec tive rushee, except to exchange a formal salutation." TEP, president Dave Robbins said, "We feel that we have not violated the strict silence rule. The house knew nothing about this and Mr. Evans was not acting as an agent of the house. He was ignorant of the rush rules and we feel the Pi Lams are not justi fied in their accusations." Offer Reported It was reported that Evans of fered Grosswald money to pledge TEP, but Robbins said, "There was no monetary offer or offer of a scholarship." According to information giv en to the office. of the Dean of Men, .Grosswald -was visiting -in4 Durham' at' the r home of UNC freshman Eddie Hockfield, also a TEP pledge. - . : . . r Hockfields parents talked ,with Asst. to the Dean of , Men Larry McDevitt yesterday and told him they arranged the talk with Ev ans, a family friend, after Grosswald said he might , not be able to afford to pledge a frater nity. The Hockfields said they knew Evans as a "friend of the Uni versity" and arranged the visit They said Evans and Grosswald $$ Hearings Begin Today Finance Committee hearings for the 1956-66 Student Government budget will begin today in 205 Alumni. Testimony will begin at 4 p.m. with hearings on Graham Me morial activities budget. It will be followed by Men's Honor Coun cil at 4:15 p.m. Women's Honor Council at 4:45 p.m., Women's Residence Council at 5 p.m. and Men's Residence Council at 5:30 p.m. Hearings will be open. NCr K NO, JOSE ISN'T BACK! Bat the motif is still castillian as Ginny Pittman, junior . elementary education major from Durham, per forms a Spanish dance with acrobatics in last nights auditions for I I the upcoming sophomore talent show. (Photo by Jock Lauterer) Pi Lams Make Claim discussed the chances of getting a fraternity scholarship, but not necessarily a TEP scholarship. Evans reportedly contacted Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey on Grosswald's behalf, and Cathey talked to Director of Financial Aid Julian Mason. Cath ey and Mason were both out of town yesterday and could not be contacted to confirm this. Pi Lam president Kenny Mann said, "We are protesting the fact that strict silence may have been violated. It looks like a clear-cut violation to us, and if it isn't we'd like to know so we can fol 30 Represent UNC At Opening Of SSL By PETE WALES Associate Editor Everything from sex to speak er bans will be discussed today through Saturday in the annual President, Chancellor To Miss Rally University President William C. Friday said 'yesterday that . he and Chancellor ' Paul F. Sharp will not be able to attend the protest rally to be held at noon Fri day in Y-Court. ' Graduate student James Gard ner invited Friday and Sharp to attend the .rally. It wil protest the alleged insult to a Liberiah visitor ;i here Fri day, its handling by the adminis tration, discriminatory clauses in fraternity by-laws, the. dropping' of James Farmer as a Carolina Forum speaker and the Speaker Ban Law. Previous Commitment "We have a previous commit ment to attend a luncheon with the State Board of Higher Educa tion at the hour the rally is to bp held." Friday said. He indicated that some repre sentative of the administration will be present, however. Gardner said he also plans to invite the presidents of the stu dent body, Interfraternity Coun cil and Sigma Alpha Epsilon frat ernity to take, part in the meet ing. None of the three had been con tacted yesterday, however. Jim Light, SAE president, said, "I have no objection to appear ing at the rally, but I am urging other fraternity men not to go just as spectators. I don't object to an intellectual debate only a mob meeting." - 'rvi,i i , , " low suit next year." ZBT Not Involved Reports that Zeta Beta Tau fraternity is involved in the ac tion are false. ZBT president Wally Loewen baum said, "We don't know any thing about this firsthand. Our only interest in the matter is that whatever affects other fraterni ties also affects our house." The case is being investigated by the attorney general's office to decide if grounds for a trial exist. If a trial is held it will not be until next week. meeting of State Student Legisla ture in Raleigh. Thirty students will represent UNC at the mock legislative asr sembly held in the old State House chambers. UNC has 12 representa tives in the House and two in the Senate. The rest are alter nates. Resolutions include proposals for the distribution of birth con trol information and devices, a public defender law, regulation of billboards and legalizing liquor by the drink. ' UNC will present a bill to Create a .state-wide lottery based on the New Hampshire plan to raise funds for education. David Kiel, High- Point freshman," will "intro duce the bill in the House, and Kathy Cauble, Hickory, junior, will present, it in the Senate. Kiel and Jane Dallen are co authors of the resolution. Bob Spearman, president of SSL, will open the plenary session today at 3 p.m. Officers for the session wil be elected and ad ministrative business handled. Governor Dan Moore will wel come the delegates at 4 p.m. The plenary will be followed by a banquet at the N. C. State stu dent union. Al House of Roanoke Rapids, president of the National Federation of Young Democrats, will address the students. Legislative sessions will begin tomorrow at 9 a.m. and run un til 11 p.m. They will continue through Saturday morning. UNC's bill is scheduled to come up about 1 p.m. tomorrow. The annual meeting will close Saturday afternoon with the elec tion of officers for next year. William Aycock Leaves Hospital Former Chancellor William B. Aycock left Memorial Hospital yesterday for an indefinite period of recuperation at his home here. Aycock was admitted to the hospital Feb. 6 with a hemorr haging ulcer. He underwent surgery at the hospital several days after he was admitted. Aycock stepped down as chan cellor last year to teach law. No indication was given as to when he would return to teach ing in the University Law School. Weekend Retreat Is Planned By Y The YMCA will conduct a lead ership retreat at Camp New Hope from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday for. Y cabinet members and persons interested in inter viewing for next year's offices. It will cost ' 50 cents the price of the lunch. Students interested in transpor tation should meet in Y-Court at 9:30 a.m. Persons planning to attend should sign up in the Y office by noon Saturday. Interviews for next year's offi cers will be held today, tomorrow and Monday at the Y office. Of fices vacant are president, treas urer, secretary and two vice-presidents. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS From AP Wires RECENT U.S. Supreme Court decisions concerning apportion ment of representation in state legislatures were the target of a resolution introduced in the North Carolina House Wednes day. The resolution would ask Con gress to call a national conven tion at which an amendment to the federal constitution on ap portionment would be prepared. Rep. Thorne Gregory of Hali fax was joined in introduction of the resolution by Reps. Hugh S. Johnson Jr. of Duplin, Way Irmd Sermons of Beaufort, Gor don H. Greenwood of Buncombe and Hollis M." Owens of Rutherford.- . The resolution said that the recent decision by the U. S. Su preme Court on apportionment of legislative representation "goes so far as to restrict the ability of the citizens of the re spective states to designate the manner in which they shall be represented in their legislatures, thereby depriving the people of their right to determine how they shall be governed." TWO bills to cut the ties be tween the state and the North Carolina Dental Society to avoid integration were approved by the Senate Public Health Com mittee Wednesday. v The bills, sponsored by Dr. Dennis S. Cook of Caldwell County, secretary-treasurer of the society, would eliminate a provison requiring the society to nominate a member each for. the "Medical Care. Commission' and the Mental Health Council, The requirement was cited by Dr. Reginald A. Hawkins of Charlotte, a Negro dentist and integration leader, who filed a suit for membership in the so ciety. . "'' . ' .' PRESIDENT Johnson said Wednesday the United States "will persist in the defense of freedom" in Viet Nam and he sought advice from former President Dwight D. Eisenhow er on solving the dangerous confrontation with Communist power there. . Eisenhower met with Johnson at a surprise White House con ference and stayed for lunch. Later the President added to his address before the National Industrial Conference Board the renewed pledge to defend South Viet Nam, and stated: "We seek no wider , war. . . our continuing actions there will be those that are justified and made necessary by the con tinuing aggression of others. He said U. S. response to Communist moves will be "measured and fitting and ade quate." The President's attention to the Viet Nam fighting recently gravely stepped up by Red at tacks on U. S. installations and American retaliatory air raids came against a background of debate on the issue in Con gress and elsewhere. RACIAL terrorist cells in other American and Canadian cities reportedly were under surveillance Wednesday, for possible links to the thwarted dynamite plot against the Statue of Liberty and two other na tional shrines. Published reports mentioned Cleveland, Detroit, Washington, Philadelphia, Chicago, Balti more, Toronto and Montreal. In Washington, the FBI had no comment. Three New York Negroes and a blonde Canadian woman ex tremist were arrested here Tuesday, and charged with scheming to blow up the Statue of Liberty, the Washington Mon ument and Philadelphia's Lib erty Bell. Police claimed to have seized 22 sticks of dyna mite. "We know they have made contact in other cities," Police Commissioner Michael J. Mur phy declared. "We have no idea how many people might be involved. THE BOARD of Trustees of Southeastern Baptst Seminary will meet Thursday and are expected to look into reports of dissension recently among the school's faculty. Late spells End For St n ( - ;: 1 ! ii -1 "in 1 M tf 'w ; , 3 r ' zzzz i ? I j: v " f4A J ' i ( jk ' "3 -r : Jil l I : I lyF? , . - I i ', . Sv, y : ; - fr . j 'j fiy,... i.i.Mi.iil Vu i l.. u... ' 1 1 1 1 1 "W. .....J- i m.i..,!.-..........! .i . .ii ' V . 'imt- -j mm' '"iwwi m,,,.-..........,.. , ..r NT" t t" y Kl J ZARRO IN ' JAIL? Not really .1 ! JfootbalL player s the defendant Schools mock trial Friday. Here ' ' .'.' . : ; ... ! ' .V' ' - -- ' Richie; Zkrroils Defend In Law School Mock Trial . By KERRY SIPE DTII Staff Writer Richie Zarro, Tar Heel foot ball guard and president of the Monogram Club, was arrested late Tuesday night and charged with spying on a coed as she dressed for bed in her dormi tory. The staged arrest waa part of the annual Phi Alpha Delta Law fraternity's mock trial to be held this week. Zarro, a three-year letterman from Bloomington, N. J. was ap prehended in his residence hall room after a five-day investiga tion by Chapel Hill Police. The alleged victim of. a "peep- PRICE TO SPEAK Reynolds Price, UNC's writer-in-residence, will speak in 301 Carroll Hall Friday at 8 p.m. His speech will be sponsored by the English Club. A coffee hour will be held at 7:30 pjfi. For Yiet Na: By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer Two professors and two stu dents recommended economic and governmental reform as a means of stablizing the Viet Nam situa tion, during a panel discussion Tuesday night in Gerrard Hall. Dr. G. T. Yu of the Department of Political Science; Dr. Y. C. Wang of the Department of His tory; Cpl. C. N. Riley, USMC; and UNC graduate student Wil-. liam Lucas participated in the discussion, w hich was sponsored by Carolina Political Union, Caro lina Forum and Student Peace Union." . , "America's primary objective in South Viet Nam is the ex pulsion of Viet Cong aggression in order to insure the security of Southeast Asia," Yu said. "As you know, we haven't been very Basket By The Tar Heel - r ed of being a for0ie; Law; he might take Zarro, accus-; - . - ; rhoto by jock Lauterer - . ' " -. ' : . " .....,... , ' . . ... ' Not Far Real! .. ing Tom,".. Miss Elizabeth Tay lor of 421 Cobb Dormitory, brought charges against Zarro for "look ing into a residence occupied by a female person." Miss Taylor said she became aware that she was being watch- . ed through the .window of her East Cobb room, when she re ceived two anonymous letters de scribing her activity as she show ered and dressed for bed. She said she notified police immedi ately on receipt of the first let ter. Police set up a five-day watch outside the window and arrested Zarro after-noticing the light in his room some distance away go ing off as Miss Taylor went about her regular bedtime procedures. - - In Zarro's room, police com pounded a pica typewriter simi lar to the one allegedly used to type the anonymous letters. A tele scope was found propped in Zarro's window. The football player denied the charge against him. He said that the telescope was used for "star successful." Yu said the other two U. S. objectives have been economic re form and the establishment of a South Vietnamese government - "with some form of direct or in direct popular support." Wrang outlined the historical background behind the current situation to illustrate a leader ship gap in South Viet Nam. 'Trench rule of Indochina was marked by 80 to 90 years of -terror, misery, high taxes and exploitation," he said. 'The East today is violently anti-Western, and the United States is suspicious - in the eyes of many Vietnamese. . 'The basic goal of the United States is to" drive out the Com munists," he said, "while the Vietnamese are looking for wealth, power and international respect. "Our short range' goals do not peeping . Tom, strikes; the pose if the charge were legitimate. gazing" in connection with a course in astronomy. Zarro's trial has been set for 8 p.m. Friday in the Law School courtroom in Manning Hall. Presiding Judge Presiding judge will be Win fred Ervin from Charlotte. So licitor will be law student Char les Robeson. Richard Lane Brown, UNC law student, will represent Zar ro. Class Ring Sale School rings for seniors and second semester juniors will be on sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. to day in Y-Court. This will be the first Grail ring sale of the se mester. Others are planned for the spring. The Grail will sell graduation invitations to seniors in the Y-Building Friday, Monday and Tuesday from 9 am. to 4 p.m. Econo mic R coincide, but our long range goals may. "Because cf their suspicion of the West, many capable Vietnam ese leaders won't work for the South Viet Nam government, while the Viet Cong seems to have lit tle trouble finding leadership." Wang called for a genuinely democratic image at home, more knowledge of Asian problems, and a flexible policy in Viet Nam, which would allow the U. S. to decide its own theater of opera tion. . Riley outlined U. S. programs of civic improvement in South Met Nam and called for a great er emphasis by the military in guerrila warfare. Claiming that the Viet Nam situation was not so bad as the newspapers had portrayed it, Bi Sill Overcome 13 -Point Deficit By LARRY TARLETON DTII Sports Editor RALEIGH The Tar Heels came roaring back from a 13-point deficti in the second half to knock off the N. C. State Wolfpack 69 68 by All-American Billy Cunning ham's tap-in cn a missed shot with 32 seconds left. The game was a replica of the earlier meeting between the two clubs but Ihis time the shoe was on the other foot. In the earlier meeting the Wolfpack erased a 14-point Tarheel lead to win 63 64 in Chapel Hill. After Cunningham's tap-in, Carolina's Ray Respcss and State's Ed Biedenbach missed one . and-one opportunities. With 12,000 fans roaring in the background, Respess, Carolina's best foul shooter missed his first attempt with 12 seconds to go. Then with only eight seconds left, Tom Gauntlet fouled Bied enbach, but the State sophomore missed his first try. With the ball rolling on the floor, Tommy Mat tocks retrieved it and fired it to Pete Coker, whose jumper fell short at the buzzer. ; .The Wolfpack is now 7-4 in the conference, while the Tar Heels are pressing them with a 6-4 mark. "I'm real proud of the way we came back," said Tar Heel coach Dean Smith." 'The boys showed real courage in atoning for the earlier defeat." After building a 33-34 halftime margin State stretched the lead to 13 points at 50-37 with 15:13 left. Four minutes later the Tar Heels cut the margin to 55-43, when Larry Lakins picked up his fourth foul. With five and a half minutes left, the Heels cut the lead to 61 60 when Ian Morrison hit a 30 footer from the corner, but bask ets by Biedenbach and Lakins gave the lead back to the Pack. Then Cunningham hit a jumper; Morrison hit from the corner again; and Cunningham found Lewis all along under the basket to give the Tar Heels a 67-64 lead with 1:29 left. Twenty seconds later a Lakins bucket cut the lead to one point, but when Lewis' driving shot roll ed off the rim, Cunningham was there to tap it in. Coker's jumper with 18 seconds left set the stase for the hectic finish. Although scoring only one point, steady John Yokley was the un sung hero of the Carolina win. Yokley refused to be flustered by the brilliant State defense and was guilty of only one error in the game. Cunningham was high man for North Carolina with 22, but La kins took game scoring honors with 32, including 15 of 13 from the floor. Respess and Lewis add ed 15 each for the Heels while Coker trailed Lakins wit!x 13 for the Pack. eiorin Riley said, "One of our basic problems is that U. S. forces are spread too thin to give com plete security to the local peas ants." Fractkmalization of political and religious factions is one of South Viet Nam's difficulties, ac cording to Lucas. 'The largest, single and cohe sive unit in South Vfet Nam is the militray," Lucas said. "The State Department made a big mistake in pressuring General Khan out of office. "What we need there is a mili tary government with a civilian facade, even at the risk of not having complete democracy," he said. "At the same time we must develop some form cf popular backing for the government cn a local level."

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