U.N.C. Library Serials Dept Box 870 Chapsl HilL, H.c, Weather Plenty of hot air and sun shine arc in store for Caro lina for the next few days . . . enjoy it! St Cartoon s Don't forget to submit your choice for an additional comic strip to ma in the DTH next year. Just write the name of your favorite cartoon on a slip of paper and bring it by the Tar Heel office. 66 The South's Largest College Neivspaper" Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1965 Volume 72, Number 163 n(9 ' " Tf Sharp Announces Faculty Changes For Coming Year Faculty changes for the com ing year have been announced by Chancellor Paul F. Sharp, following the approval of Pres ident William C. Friday and the Board of Trustees. Sharp announced 32 promo tions within the University, eight resignations, 14 leaves of absences, 20 new faculty mem bers. The trustees also approved all personnel changes for the UNC Health Center. There were five appointments and 15 promotions. Faculty promotions follow: William E. Jenner has been named chairman of the Mathe- matics Department and Wil liam F. Little, chairman of the Chemistry Department. Those promoted to the rank of professor, listed with their department or school, are as follows: Kenneth R. Byerly and Joseph L. Morrison, Journ alism; Joffre L. Coe and Rich ard L. Simpson, Sociology; Milton S. Heath Jr., Institute of Government; William F. Little, Chemistry; Gino L. Riz zo, Romance Languages. Promoted to the rank of as sociate professor are Samuel G. Barnes, Charles E. Edge and Siegfried Wenzel, Eng lish; Herbert L. Bodman Jr. and Yi Chu Wang, History; Charles V. Briscoe and Earl N. Mitchell, Physics; Ralph A. Gakenheimer, City and Region al Planning; M. David Ga linsky, Richard A. King and Marcus B. Waller, Psychology; Max H. Hommersand, Botany; William C. McCrary, Romance Languages; Ben Overstreet Jr., Institute of Government; Richard C. Phillips, Educa tion; Edward F. Renshaw, Business Administration. Promoted to the rank of as sistant professor are Edgar W. .Butler and Miles R. Cramer. Sociology; Robert P. Fitzger ald and Howard M. Harper Jr., English; John A. Gorman, Psychology; Richard W. Kin naird, Art; Thomas W. Noo nan, Physics. AH of the 20 additions to the Academic Affairs Department become effective September 1 except that of Dr. Douglas W. Schoeninger, who will join the Psychology Department Au gust 1 as an assistant profes sor. The Zoology Department will add a professor, Dr. Howard Thomas Odum, a UNC grad uate; and an assistant profes sor, Dr. Darrell Wayne Staf ford, a post - doctoral fellow at Albert Einstein Medical School. Edwin M. Collins Jr., a Ph.D. candidate at Ohio Uni versity, will join the English Department as an assistant professor. He now teaches at Millsaps College where he has served, as Dean of Students and Assistant to the President. Two assistant professors will join the Sociology Department. They are Marvin Jay Cum mins, lecturer at the Univer sity of Colorado,-and Thomas A. Stein, director of education for the National Society for Crippled Children and Adults in Chicago. Tadeusz Zdzislow Gasinski has been named assistant pro fessor in the Department of Linguistics, Slavic and Orien tal Languages. He presently teaches at the University of Pittsburgh. S. Kenneth Howard will be come assistant professor and assistant director of the Insti tute of Government. He now FreshmenThemes To Be Published Themes by two UNC fresh men will be published in "Themes for Study," a volume of model themes circulated na tionally for study on college campuses. The students are Steve Bal com of San Diego, Calif., and Tony B. Owen of Salisbury. Balcom,.a pre-medical stu dent, wrote on "The Case for Advertising." Owen, a chem istry major and graduate of Salisbury's Boyden High School, entitled his work "Sat urday Night." Both wrote the themes for a freshman English course. "Themes for Study," published by Holt, Rhinehart and Win ston, is a compilation of model themes by undergraduates. teaches at . the University of New Hampshire. A visiting member of the faculty this past year will be come an assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy. He is William Winslow Shea, who was educated at Yale. Richard Grey Smith, alum nus of the Universities of Alas ka and Wisconsin, will join the Geography Department as as sistant professor, and Daniel Andrew Textoris, a consultant for the Illinois Coal Co., will join the Geology Department as assistant professor. Robert James Troyer, fac ulty member at Indiana Uni versity, has been named as sistant professor in the De partment of Mathematics. Three lecturers have been appointed for the School of Business Administration for three - year periods each. They are Robert Wesley Phil lips, William Robert Sherrard and James Andrew Wilde. All three are candidates for the Ph.D. degree. The Law School, has an ad dition of one associate profes sor and four assistant profes sors. The associate professor, Walter D. Navin Jr., is a Interviews For Summer SG Today Interviews for 27 positions on the, Summer School Student Government will be held to day from 2 to 6 p.m. and Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m. in the Student Government Of fices, second floor GM. Applications for positions may De picked up then in the Student Body President Paul Dickson noted that they pre ferred persons planning to come to both sessions of sum mer school but emphasized "this is not necessary." "Prior experience is welcomed but certainly not mandatory," he added. Interviews will be held for assistant attorney general of the Men's Honor Council and for assistant attorney general of the Woman's Council and for their staff. These two peo ple will act jointly to direct action of the attorney general's staff. Other positions available in clude nine on the Men's Coun cil and nine on the Women's Council and seven on the Stu den Government Board. The Board is the legislative controlling body which ap proves action and transfers funds of the Student Govern ment during summer school. Dickson noted that any reg ular member of the men's and women's councils who plans to be in summer school will be automatically appointed. Other vacancies will be filled Thursday night by the Student Legislature. He pointed out that time involved for the Attorney Gen eral positions depends on the number of cases that arise and that the Honor Council re quires about one evening a Week. 'You Can Expect By EDWARD VICK "You - can expect a free Cuba by March." This is the prophesy of Frank Edward Casuso, Finan cial Secretary of the Libera tion Army of Cuba. "We are training 20,000 boys in South America and have 4,000 more in the mountains of Cuba." Casuso, a sincere young Cuban, was selling cut - rate magazine subscriptions on the UNC campus last week to raise money for the liberation movement. He lives in Durham and earns money teaching judo and giving demonstrations of both : judo and karate. - "Our boys here in America are taught kinds of unarmed combat in the Florida Ever glades and in Louisiana," he said. "We are not allowed to teach armed combat in the states." ' His home was Mira Mar, a town near Havana. He fled the member of the faculty at Washburn University, Topeka, Kansas. Charles E. Dameron III, will serve as assistant professor and assistant dean of the law school. The other three assist tants are Michael P. Katz, Martin B. Louis and Philip C. Thorpe. The resignations follow: Prof. Robert White Linker of the Romance Languages De partment is resigning in Oc tober to accept a position at the University of Georgia. Pro fessor Ruth Gilpin Wells, School of Social Work, will re sign next February in order to iviire proiessionaliy. Psychology Professor Doro thy Adkins Wood will leave in August to accept a position at the University of Hawaii. Vin cente Cantarino of the Ro mance Languages Department will go to the University of Indiana in August. Also leaving in August are Lewis Levine of the Depart ment of Linguistics, Slavic and Oriental Languages; Donald K. fcpnngen ot the English De partment; and Harry Jennings Crockett Jr. of the Sociology Department. - Levine is going to New York University, Springen to Brook lyn College, and Crockett to the University of Nebraska. Donald Joseph Reeb of the City and Regional Planning Department will leave in July to accept a position at New York State University in Al bany. Faculty members granted leaves of absence and their schools or departments are as follows: Herbert R. Baer, Law; Charles E. Bowerman, Soci ology; Edward A. Cameron, Mathematics Frank Wysor Klingberg, History; Arnold S. Nash, Relgion; Robert A. Ru- pen, Political Science; Alec T. Stewart, Physics; Henry Charles Boren, History; Thom as Harland Jerdee, Business Administration; Richard W. Lieban, Anthropology; How ard Cook, Mathematics; Jo seph A. Cima, Mathematics; Mark Reed, English, and Gor don N. Cleveland, Political Science. Three at the UNC Health Center, including the adminis trator of the Division of Health Affairs, were granted leaves of absence, four resignations including a department chairman were accepted and one leave of absence was extended. Medical School faculty mem bers promoted to associate pro fessors were: Dr. William B. Blythe, Dr. John C. Herion, Dr. William E. Lassiter, Dr. Charles E. Morris, Dr. James R. White and Dr. William G. Wysor Jr. OPEN QUALIFYING SET Qualifying for the U. S. Open Golf Tournament for area play ers will be held at the Ala mance Country Club, Burling ton, next Tuesday. Play will be 36 holes in one day, with 33 players seeking six spots in the Charlotte sectional in two weeks. Says country when he saw the on coming Castro dictatorship. "At first I was really for Fidel Castro, but then I saw what him and his brother, Raul, were doing, and I got out." Casuso said he witnessed the execution of 40 Batista follow ers after the revolution. None of them had been given a trial. "Raul just lined them up and took a machine gun and When Casuso left Cuba, he attended school in Texas for a short time. He has learned to speak fluent English, though he retains a strong accent. During the interview, he fre quently used quotations from Karl Marx to emphasize a point. - His brother remains in Cuba today in prison "because of his belief in God. "We are planning this with three things in mind," he said. "God, people and the relation ship between the two. There are about 50 Cubans .Bradlen AC .'"J1M "i 1 f a - VISTA COMES TO UNC Dr. W. D. Weath erford of Swarthmore talks to a fascinated group of students about the . Volunteers in Service to America, a domestic peace corps. VISTA Recruiters Move Into Final Day On Campus Today is the last day VISTA will be on campus recruiting in Y-Court and Lenoir Hall. e ' 'The . response has beien r ter- rif ic ,' ' spokesmen said yester day, "but we've been beseiged with people who are amazed at the 'washout rate. " . VISTA , Volunteers ' for Serv ice in America, is the . work ing force of the "domestic Peace Corps" whjch was cre ated under the 1694 Economic Opportunity Act. Due to a misinterpretation in an interview Monday, it was erroneously reported that there has been only one VISTA ac ceptance in North Carolina. There have been well over 200 applications in the state but, spokesmen said, only one VISTA volunteer is out in the field. Many from North Caro lina are now undergoing train ing. Philip W. Conn, field repre sentative for VISTA, said yes terday that spokesmen have been visiting about 25 classes a day to speak for VISTA. "We have spoken to over 60 classes so far," he said, "and we expect to see about 10 or 15 classes today." Leo Kramer, Associate Di rector of the Office of Volun teers for VISTA, took time off to come to UNC this week to speak to classes. Kramer, 39, is an author, scholar, trade unionist and in ternationalist. He has been as sociated with four AFL - CIO unions and has been a mem ber of the State Department. VISTA volunteers have come mostly from young people and Liberation Army Leader A Free working in the United States," he said. "The money is de posited in a common fund FIDEL CASTRO ... to be ousted? Denounce 9 KICK 4T f ' - , many are college graduates; ' the bulk of VISTA is drawn from retired people who can . .toffer .,, skills -and technical -knowledge to depressed areas.' The youngest volunteer, an - Senior Wins Wolfe Award A UNC senior from Wilming ton, N. C, received the Tho mas Wolfe Memorial Award Monday night for his short story about a boy - girl re lationship and the mutual help they receive from each other. As winner of the Pi Kappa Phi annual creative writing competition, Raphael Mac Ira Jones was presented an in scribed silver plaque and a check for $100. Jones, an English - Psycho logy major, said that "Abso lute Control" is the first of his writings to receive ama teur recognition. The presentation took place at a reception for the contes tants in Peabody Hall. Ap proximately fifty people, in cluding judges Betty Smith, Bill Hardy and Reynolds Price, were on hand for the occasion. The award was to have been made several weeks ago, but according to a Pi Kappa Phi spokesman, the high quality of the writing submitted demanded an exten ded period of time for the judges to make their decision. Cuba By, and every three months, the Friends of Cuba will get $50, 000 from it." He would not say where the Friends of Cuba is located, but zation which will be selling goods to the rising army. Food, supplies, and weapons are purchased for the rebels-in-training. "We have about $3,600 now in arms and need about $200, 000 more. We can get a B-26 or a B-29 for $100 on a 99-year lease. Under United Nations regulations, they can't just give them to us." He said his organization, working out of Atlanta, Ga., does not ask for donations be cause, "We want to give back something for the money giv en to us. "In Santo Domingo, your Marines are being killed and it is our fault and we are sorry. Communist Cuban teams have infiltrated Santo Domingo. Our boys in Cuba wanted to stop them but couldn't." Audi AdmiiiBtration Weatherford studied sociology here. Today is the last day that VISTA booths will be in Lenoir Hall and at Y-Court. Photo by Jock Lauterer 18 - year - old girl from Irving ton, N. J., is now assigned to Operation Independence in Las Vegas, Nevada. . . , "Many people are surprised to find that, poverty exists in places like this,", spokesmen said. . The oldest volunteer is 82-year-old, Miss Elizabeth M. Brown, now serving in Welch, West Va. She holds a BS from Pea body College, a Masters from William and Mary and has done advance work at Colum bia University in the field of psychology. VISTA may be contaced by mail at the Office of Economic Opportunity, Washington, D.C. More Yacht Coming An unexpected number of students braved the lengthy lines Monday and yesterday to receive their 1965 Yackety Yacks on the first two days of distribution. And as a result there were many disappointed students who heard the sad words yesterday aft ernoon: "Sorry, we ran out." A new shipment has been ordered, and dis tribution will be resumed today at 1:30 p.m. March' Casuso does not think this will happen much longer. He feels that most people in Amer said only that it is the organi ica support the liberation movement and he has no doubts about its eventual suc cess. "We can prepare boys with guns and bombs," he said. "They are willing to give their lives so their children can play in a free Cuba." The Liberation Army of Cu ba plans to have its forces pre pared by December. When they invade the island, they will "establish a beachhead for at least 72 hours and set up a government." But the revolution will not be merely a shoot-'em-up af fair. Casuso recognizes the dangers involved in dealing with Fidel Castro. "The real communists are using Castro," he said. 'And we are afraid that if "we just go in and kill him, other com munists will take over."- Beaker Talk In Church Picketed By YAF By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH News Editor Civil rights leader Carl Braden denounced the House Un-American Activities Committee, the Speak er Ban Law, the North Carolina state legislature, the Ku Klux Klan and University administrators Monday night in an NAACP-sponsored speech at the Episcopal Chapel of the Cross. While Braden spoke, between eight and 10 pickets representing the Young Americans for Freedom marched outside with placards attacking him as "a communist" who "betrays a good cause." Braden had been denied speaking privileges on the UNC campus by University admin istrators over a week ago be cause he allegedly would have come under the jurisdiction of the North Carolina Speaker Ban Law. The law prohibits known communists, persons who have pleaded the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution in connec tion with subversive activities, and persons who advocate the violent overthrow of the gov- -ernment from speaking at state supported institutions. "I want to make one thing clear," Braden told the crowd of nearly 75. "I am not going to stand here and say I'm not a communist to get to speak at this place. Free Speech "This is a matter of free speech," he said. Braden told several hecklers inAhe, crowd that theywould get their only chance to speak during the question and an swer period. "If there are any hecklers present they can go and hire their own hall," he said. Braden outlined his past ca reer up until his current ac tivities as Information Direc tor of the Southern Conference Educational Fund, a civil rights organization. After the 1954 Supreme Court decision outlawing school seg regation, Braden said he was instrumental in securing a house in a white suburb of . Louisville, Ky., for a Negro family. "I haven't had a moment's peace since," he said. 'Trumped Charges Braden said charges were "trumped up" against him by Kentucky authorities, and he was sent to prison for com mitting sedition. After being freed by a Su preme Court ruling, Braden went to work for SCEF. "I have worked with the Southern Conference Education Fund to help bring white peo ple into the struggle for inte gration," he said. "We are very unpopular with people in the South." Braden said he had been denounced by Governors Ross Barnet and George Wallace, and by several state commit tees on un-American activities. "There are more un-American activities committees than there are fleas on a dog that hasn't been washed in a year," he said. Braden said the U. S. Con gress' House Un-American Ac tivities Committee "called me up in Atlanta and tried to get me to be a stool pigeon. "I told them my beliefs and associations were none of the business of the committee," he said. No Power "Congress has no power to investigate in an area in which it has no power to legislate." Braden was found in con tempt of Congress by HUAC, and he appealed the - convic tion to the Supreme Court on the basis of First rather than Fifth Amendment freedoms. "In 1961 the Supreme Court balanced away my liberties," Braden said in commenting on the court's action to uphold his conviction. "I have been a newspaper man for over 20 years," he said, "and I have seen this kind of thing happen under Hitler and Mussolini. "You've got to take away the rights of the people for the protection of the state." After further outlining his personal activities in the field of civil rights, Braden un leashed an attack at HUACs recent decision to investigate the Ku Klux Klan. 'To try and get off the hook and restore then respectibility, Mr. Willis and Mr. Tuck say, 'Wouldn't it be nice to go down South and investigate the Klan,' " Braden said. HUAC Attacked He referred to Congressmen Edwin Willis of Louisiana and William Tuck of Virginia, the chairman and vice chairman respectively of HUAC. "To set HUAC out to inves tigate the Klan is like send ing the fox to watch over the chicken coop," Braden said. "HUAC lives on favorable , publicity. "In the end they'll decide it isn't the entire Ku Klux Klan that is at fault, but the 'holy terror' squads within tho KKK,"hesaid. "Already they are laying the groundwork to make the civil rights movement the real targ et of their investigation." Calling HUAC "a racist group," Braden said, "It at tacks the same organizations the Klan does. He said there was an "urg ent need to prosecute some Southern people. "We can't let the Klan run . around like it does," he said. Braden quoted Dr. Martin Luther King as saying the HUAC Klan investigation was a "smokescreen." 'Slick Politicians' When he was reminded that liberal Congressman Charles Weltner of Atlanta, Ga., was on HUAC and supported the Klan investigation, Braden said, "Charles Weltner has been taken in by the slick pol iticians who have been on the committee for 10 years or more. "He is sadly mistaken and he will find out before long," Braden said. Turning his remarks to the Speaker Ban Law, Bradea (Continued on Page 3) Miller Is Shocked, Disillusioned In making his introduction of speaker Carl Braden Mon day night, Charles Miller, pres ident of UNC - NAACP, said that "the men who run this University are so petrified of doing anything which will of fend the state legislature that they are willing to trample both facts and fairness in their haste to build a reputation for the University as a 'safe' in stitution." Miller said that the events of the past week, concerning Braden's being refused a for um on campus, "profoundly shocked and disillusioned me." After recounting the events leading up to the meeting's be ing scheduled off campus at the Episcopal Chapel of the Cross, Miller said, "We still do not know on what grounds Mr. Braden has been denied a cam pus forum. "We are told that several agencies were consulted, but we have yet to hear what thev have charged or how they have substantiated whatever charges they have made." Miller charged that "this University has failed in the past to produce or cultivate many leaders who will cham pion a freer, more just Noith Carolina. "Witness the state legisla tors. I stand here, and I am appalled at how silent each and every one of us has been."

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