I Wm Weather -. Continued fair and cool. Candidates Wanna hear your candidates? They'll be in Grimes at 10 p.m. and Whitehead at 11 pja. n i i i it 11 FoundedFebr23. 1833 Editor's Notebook With Mike Yopp There are commercial postcards on sale in Alabama that depict the state's bound ry lines extend ing from the . Gulf , of Mexico to the Canadian border. The enlarged area occupies .ful ly one-third of the United States map. The caption reads: "The Real Alabama." The vastness and implied strength of the mock superstate are indicative of the way many Selmans and Alabamians look , at themselves and their state. J "In that part of the South," some say, "the people live in an other world." While they do not live in an other world they do live in one where the concept of segregation is hard, fast and full of fears. Their greatest fear appears to be the political potential of the Negroes. Many deep South areas are like Dallas County where Ne groes outnumber whites three to one. Selmans are quick to admit that they do not want all Negroes to have voting rights. "For the most part," one man said, "they are uneducated." "Anyway," said another, "how would you like Negroes running your local government?" Resist Change So the citizens of Selma and hundreds of other communities hide behind the worn-cloak of "Southern tradition" and fight to resist change in their social sys tem, one which has prevailed for generations. Things haven't changed much there since the passage of the Civil Bights Bill of 1964. Don Wasson, managing editor f of the Montgomery Advertiser, puts it this way: "In Selma you have a people who, nutured on tradition as old as Selma ! itself, have resisted change with all their hearts and souls. They are a people who are conservative in their thoughts and actions and the forcible disrup tion of their traditions by an all powerful government has been a bitter pill to swallow." They don't swallow well. Selma Public Safety Director Wilson Baker told a January meeting of a local civic club: "This administration feels that it has a responsibility to lead Sel ma through the maze of legal transitions resulting from the passage of the Civil Rights Bill." Sounds good. But Baker didn't reflect this stand Tuesday as he waited for the marchers near Brown Chapel A.M.E. Church. "What will you do if they march," reporters demanded. Baker had one answer which he' gave through clinched teeth with a scowl on his face: "We got plans for 'era." Armed Camp Selma is like an armed camp City police, sheriff's deputies and state troopers patrol the streets, usually in cars. The walking is often left to Sheriff James Clarke's possemen, "storm troopers" they are called by some observers. They are lo cal residents hired by Clark to augment his regular staff of dep uties. They were out in full force Tues day. So with a virtual army Selma has barricaded itself in the sou thern part of the Alabama super state. r And it has support from Mont gomery, the state capital where Gov. George Wallace is not only a leader in the eyes of Selmans, lie is a hero the segregationist's segregationist. - He is as unbending as the Sel mans. But the civil rights movement is also unbending. "This is a new day for the Southj: said Mrs. Amelia Boyn ton, Alabama secretary of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. "They have got to realize this." ! But the Selmans don't or won't. And the situation there is at breaking point. So there is trouble in the heart nf the superstate, but the resi R w-r;. :. 1 ' r 1 - I r , ' I ''x ; dents don't admit guilt. "The fault of outside agitators," they say. To some degree they are right and militant rights leaders must share some blame for the in juries and deaths that have re; suited. But the stark fact remains that (Continued on Page 2 Little Ruffle Seen In Clause Decision A survey of sororities and frat- ther developments" before taking ernities on campus here revealed any action, according to KA vice that the recent decision of the president Borden Parker. Faculty Committee on Sororities jqQ statement and fraternties calling for the vr,n ri abolition or waiver of discrimina- f"f eta. soron 01 cials tory clauses by Sept. 1, 1966 will SLZ T ' A-JnKr tl0nal Pollcy they would make Only one fraternity on campus with a discriminatory clause is not seeking a waiver or clarifica tion from its national offices, and one sorority has refused com ment on the subject. Kappa AfphTSemny, whose membership is limited to "white Christians" only, is awaiting "fur- Istomin t 1 oni Tickets are available at the GM Information Desk and will be available at the door for the Eu gene Istomin concert in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. tonight. The balcony will be reserved for UNC students. Istomin, one of America's lead ing keyboard . virtuosos, though still in his mid-thirties, s a vet eran of the concert stage. He began what has become world-wide career in 1943 when, as winner of the Youth Contest of the Philadelphia Orchestra, he made his bow with that company playing the Chopin F Minor Con certo. A few days later he made his . New York debut in Carnegie Hall with the N. Y. Philharmonic Sym phony as winner of the Leventritt Prize. Istomin's career began to span the continents after 1950 when Pablo Casals requested that he be invited to the Bach Festival at Prades, France. - --' ' Since that time he has played repeatedly in nearly every major music center. This "poet of the piano" as the New York "World Telegram" called him, is also featured on a growing list of Columbia Mas terwork Records. CPU Picks Apartheid As Subject South Africa's apartheid system of segregation will be discussed in an open meeting of the Caro lina Political Union Sunday at 9 p.m. in the Grail Room of Gra ham Memorial. Leading the discussion will be Magnus Gunther, a UNC gradu ate student in political science and past president of the bi-racial National Union of South African Students. Gunther has worked in the sec retariat of the International Stu dent Conference in Leyden, Hol land. - ' New members of the CPU are David Kiel, Miriam Lane, Rob ert Farb, Baron Holmes, Roy Sparrow, Jim Medford and Dan Stoddard. More Tutors Sought By Y A meeting will be held today at 4 p.m. in Gerrard for persons now engaged in the YM-YMCA tutor project and for additional volunteers. Almose 100 UNC students are now engaged in tutorial work with public school pupils in Chapel Hill and surrounding areas, but Nancy Elkins, YM-YWCA associate di tnr savs. "The demand for tutors continues to exceed the supply. We are getting requests for tutors to help children of both races at all grade levels, students interested in partici pating in this program should at tend today s meeting. . Additional information is avail able at 203 Y-Building. LIBRARY COURSE ThP School of Library Science will again offer a course in law lihrarianshh) in the first term of the 1965 summer session, June 10 to July 17. Intended for those who are nreoaring for careers as law librarians and for those who may now be working m law li braries, this course augments the curriculum in law li&ranansmp which trie School has been develop ing since 1953. C oncer ght no. statement about their by-laws or constitution with regard to the issue. Their membership is closed to Negroes and non-Christians. The Kappa Delta chapter at the SjL5h.! by the University far not comply ing with requests to abolish or I waive their clause. All other sororities on campus have publicly stated that they have no discrinrnatory clauses. An official of Pi Kappa Phi frat ernity, which was listed as hav ing a secret clause against Ne groes and non-Christians in a 1963 survey by the DTH, said Univer sity officials were presently ne gotiating with its national offices. Chi Phi and Phi Delta Theta fraternities have clauses restrict ing membership to individuals "socially acceptable to national," but officials or Doth houses say they expect no difficulties. No Trouble "We have had members who were Jews, Chinese and 'Japan ese, cm I'm president Dick Stone said, "and there has been no trouble over this in the his tory of our fraternity." Sigma Nu president Warren Price said his fraternity has al ready applied for a waiver from its "whites only" clause, and is expecting confirmation within the near future. All other fraternities on campus have no clause or have received a waiver. S.C. Lawmakers Given Proposals For Speaker Ban Several anti-communist speak er measures, -calling to mind North Carolina's Speaker Ban Law, were introduced Wednesday into the South Carolina legisla ture. One bill would prohibit campus talks by known Communists, per sons who advocate the overthrow of the U. S. or South Carolina constitutions, and persons who have pleaded the 5th amendment in loyalty cases. . . Introduction of the speaker-ban proposals came three weeks after a lecture at Winthrop College by Dr. Stringfellow Barr, an avow ed opponent of the House Un American Activities Committee. Gov. Donald Russell, who just this week cautioned Winthrop College to screen its speakers more carefully, said Wednesday that he questioned "The need for this type of legislation in our state." Winthrop President Charles S. Davis said yesterday that he is opposed "to any so-called speaker ban law." i - - - ' -- , , . Jr""' , J r . - . r " i; i : . - s -' - s i ' i . 5 y , - - ; ! xi - r -, r v 'j jf:--:...? :-;;i::s ;. ? S v S , i i s fe Nil) CHANCELLOR PAUL SHARP addresses the N. C, Council on World Affairs yesterday during a panel discussion as Dr. Anne Scott, assistant professor of history at Duke listens. Both were members of a panel on "The U. S. Citizen and U. S. Foreign Policy." The statewide meeting was held in Hill Hall. - - Photo by Jock Lauterer. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CARQUNFmDAYrMiCH 12. 1965 " " -I To Begin March If 1 PETER NERO 3. Katzenbach Pledges Action Against M Deputies WASHINGTON U!) Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach , pledged Thursday the government will move promptly to file' charges against Alabama deputies and state troopers he said violated federal law in a Sunday civil rights confrontation at Selma. Katzenbach said federal officials are "working around the clock" to identify people responsible for violations. "The violations would come out of the fact that they used a total ly unreasonable use of force under the circumstances," he said. The confrontation came in Sel ma, Ala., as civil rights demon strators tried to launch a march on Montgomery, the state capital; Katzenbach said investigations are underway now in an attempt to linK individuaiswltn tne specif ic offenses he considers involv ed. ; ' .... ' .. Potentially, Katzenbach said, 100 Alabama officers could be in volved. But he said specific com plaints could not be substantiat ed against all of them. In his televised news conference, Katzenbach also said he expects to submit to the President tomor row recommendations for voting rights legislation, and expects the President will send congress a message on the - subject next week. Meanwhile, in Montgomery, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. took his spreading Negro voter drive into federal court Thursday and told the judge that unless his people could march, a racial explosion would result. King said he ; led a massive street march in Selma two days ago in the face of a court ban only after a federal spokseman handed him a march route and said, "I think everything will be alright." The Negro leader, winner of the 1964 . Nobel Peace Prize, elected. 4 1 i 4 A A v ! SEYMOUR UPTON I . BULLETIN jlev. James J. Reeb of Boston died last night in University Hos pital in Birmingham, Ala. Reeb had been in a coma for two days after he was attacked by a band of white men Tuesday night in Selma. sought a right-to-march ruling for his twice-thwarted 50-mile pil grimage from Selma to Montgom ery. ? There were these other develop ments in the steadily intensify ing racial struggle: White and Negro demonstra tors flopped to the floor of a corridor in the White House in an unprecedented sit-in , at the nation's executive mansion. There were a dozen in the group. 4,Rain ,- soaked ; demonstrators fcept up a marathon street vigil in Selma for a critically injured Boston minister, clubbed by a white gang Tuesday night in Sel ma. The victim, the Rev. James J. Reeb, remained in a deep coma in a Birmingham Hospital. A fourth white man was ar rested in Selma and charged with U. S. May Hit Hard At N. Viet Buildup WASHINGTON UP) Increas ing concentration of enemy battle units in South Viet Nam was re ported Thursday with hints that the United States may apply more pressure on Viet. Gong and their North Vietnamese partner. Not only have more red battal ions been observed in the north and central portions of South Viet Nam over the last two or three months, but increasing numbers of soldiers who are natives of Red North Viet Nam have been found among prisoners captured from Viet Cong outfits. Defense weapons experts have said the quality of arms used by the Communists has been improv ing steadily in the past six or eight months. The weapons, manufactured by the Chinese from Russian models, range from assault rifles to anti tank bazooka type weapons; The experts praised the quality of the arms, which seemed rather heavy considering the small sta ture of . most Vietnamese who would use them. The official U. S position on South Viet Nam was restated Thursday by ' Secretary of De fense Robert S. McNamara in testimony before the House For eign Affairs Committee. He re peated the declaration he made recently in his annual military posture statement, saying that if South Viet Nam faills to the Com munists the United States would "have to face the same problem all over again in another place or, permit them to have all of Southeast Asia by default." A meeting by President Johnson with McNamara and Secretary of State Dean Rusk last night gave rise to speculation that methods for tightening the pressure on the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese reds, and new and more far ranging air strikes against North Viet Nam might have been dis cussed. - In addition to this, the number of American military men is be ing increased slowly- but steadily 0 WILLIAM SCHUMAN assault with intent to murder in the beating. Police said he was Odel Hoggle, 30, an auto mechan ic. A group of about 80 Negroes marched through downtown Mont gomery. They stood on the steps of a church one block from the Capitol and sang freedom songs. In a packed courtroom, King testified of tension among demon strators when he led a Tuesday march, of 2,500 Negroes and white clergymen at Selma. He said the tension followed Sunday's march when state troopers clubbed and tear gassed the demonstrators. "And then you directed these people into the' streets in masses, did you?" snapped attorney Maury Smith. Smith represented Gov. George C.,Wallace and CoL. Albert J. Lingo, commander" of - the state police.1"-'. ' - "I did that," the stocky Negro minister replied in a calm, meas . ured voice, "knowing that it would give the people a creative, non violent way to relieve the tension otherwise, it would explode some other way." in South Viet Nam, over and above the 3,500-man augmentation in the form of two Marine battalions sent this week. . Except for the Marine outfits for defense of the Dan Nang Air Base area, no single large unit has been sent into South Viet Nam. The buildup from a low point of about 16,000 more than a year ago to nearly 27,000 has been through individuals or small units of 100 men or less. At this point, there seems to be no firm indication that any large size American units, per haps as big as an infantry divi sion, is scheduled for South Viet Nam. But obviously plans for Viet Nam are being kept in fluid state. Gen. Harold K. Johnson, the army chief of staff, is now on a fact-finding mission in Viet Nam. 'Moral9 Task Force To Visit Wednesday Members of a Moral Re-Armament task force, on a speaking tour of southern universities, will be here Wednesday at 3 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Carolina Forum will sponsor the visit. Olympic Gold Medal winner and three times member of Helm's Hall of Fame for rowing Richard Wailes heads the task force. Wailes describes MRA as "an idea which will equip man kind to live in the nuclear age." Traveling with Wailes and his wife Lynn are Charlotte Daneel, daughter of international rugby football player George Daneel; Emiko Chiba, of Japan whose grandfather is a member of parliament and leading advisor to the cabinet; and the three Colwell Brothers, television and recording stars from Hollywood, who have just returned from a 174,000-mile tour of 37 countries on six continents. The Colwell Brothers have composed a song for UNC and will sing it here. At the request of the U. S. Olympic Committee, Wailes wrote the statement of aims and goals adopted by the 1964 U. S. team. Because of his training with Moral Re-Armament he was asked to give orientation to the entire team on how to represent America most effectively while in Japan. The effect of his work drew comment by the Japanese and Russian press on the sense of purpose and discipline in Americans. SO TO re or Shapiro, Schuman, Barzun By KERRY SIPE DTH Staff Writer Pulitzer prize-winner Karl Shapiro and William Schu man and historian Jacques Barzun will headline the 1965 Fine Arts Festival March 30 through April 5, it was announced yesterday. The week-long program, entitled "Encounter: Arts and the University" is a biennial program which is plan ned to alternate with the Carolina Symposium on odd numbered years. This is the first year that the Festival has been con ducted. Poet Karl Shapiro will launch the festival on March 30, with readings of his Pul itzer Prize-winning verse. Shapiro, who won the Prize during World War II for his collection "V-Letter and Other Poems" is dubbed by critics as representative of the Alan Gins berg school of beat verse. Pianist Peter Nero will pre sent a concert March 30 of light music. Nero's appearance in Chapel Hill is sponsored by Graham Memorial and the Fine Arts Festival. An address by Pulitzer Prize winning composer William Schu man and a concert from his works by the University Chorus, Glee Club, and Symphony will make up the second day of the program. Schuman, now president of the Lincoln Center for the Per forming Arts and the past presi dent of the Julliard School of Music, has composed eight sym- phones, three film scores, and an opera, among other works. , . Award Winner He is the winner of two Gug genheim Fellowships in recent years. The University Chorus, di ' rected by Wayne Zarr, and the University Men's Club, directed by Joel Carter, will present a program of three of Schuman's choral works. The University Symphony orchestra under the direction of Earl Slocum, will perform two of Schuman's works. Schuman's prize-winning com position, "A Free Song," will be performed as a finale by both chorus and orchestra. On the third night of the Fes tival week, Bosley Crowther, New York Times screen critic and movie editor will partici pate in a discussion about "Con temporary Trends in Motion Pictures." Experimental Film After a showing of an experi mental film entitled "The Play ground" Crowther will discuss the film with its producer-director, Richard Hilliard, and its screenwriter, George Gar rett. The panel will be mod erated by James Beveridge of the North Carolina film board. "The Playground" is about "the fifth horseman of the Apocalypse anxiety," accord ing to producer-director Hilli ard. The film will receive its southern and perhaps its nation al premiere at the Fine Arts Festival. Sculptor Seymour L i p t o n , whose works are in most major museums of the world, will use his own film "Archangel" to il lustrate a talk on training, pa- c Continued on page 3) Volume 72, Number 111 n n 7th BOSLEY CROWTHEIl JACQUES BARZUN Roommates Get Leading Roles In 'Billy Rudd' By an ironic twist in casting, the Carolina Playmakers' forth coming production of "Billy Budd" will feature roommates as the op posing symbols of absolute good and absolute evil. The powerful sea drama, adapt ed from Herman Melville's short novel, will run March 23 through April 5. Christopher Parsons and Char les Schmick, both of Baltimore, Md., and new roommates, have been cast as Billy Budd and John Claggart, respectively. Parsons and Schmick also have appeared together in high school and com munity theater productions in the Baltimore area. Other Roles Director Foster Fitz-Simons an nounced the casting of other ma jor roles: Captain Vere, Bill Goodykoontz, a member of the staff of the Department of Eng lish; Squeak, Douglas Barger of Kannopolis; The Danskcr, Rich ard F. Willhite. Richmond Heights, Mo.; and Jenkins, Bill Smith, Ra leigh. Others in the cast are: Mark Handler, Durham; Chuck Wrye, Greensboro; William McDaniel, Bronxville, N. Y.; Carlton New toe, Gastonia; Tom Myers, Sea Girt, N. J.; Terry Hoffman. Syra cuse, N. Y.; William Feingold, Melrose, Mass,; Jerry R. Fanner, Winstcn-SaJcm; Tom Wilsoa, Bing hampton. N. Y.; Stephen Chand ler, Durham: John A. Baker III, Charlotte; . David Courts, Allo way, N. J.; Laurence A. Kraehe, Chapel Hill; Doug Lawson, Pink Hill; Alex Nislick, S. Orange, N. J.; and Ted Simpson, Laurinburg. "Billy Budd" will be presented by the Playmakers in connection, with the campus-wide Fine Arts Festival at U.N.C., being held March 30 to April 5. Tickets for the drama will go on sale March 22. i