UTiC Library Serial3 Dept. Bo 870 Chdp3 1 SUldcnt& Z5oo An introductory Journalism student came into our offices yesterday complaining that his professor insisted he write something for the Daily Tar Heel before he received his final course grade. "They have 'publish or perish' in the Journalism School, too," he said. Iff (t ft Gel 9 Em If you haven't yet picked up year Vackety-Yack, you have three more days. No student distribution will be made after Sunday. Get them today from 1 to 5 p.m. at the basement door of GM. "The South's Largest College Newspaper" Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1965 Volume 72, Number 165 'Mew Restrictions" Placed On Parking By DAVID ROTIIMAN DTH Staff Writer Daytime parking will be re stricted to specified areas as signed according to student residence, curb parking will be eliminated on two heavily traveled streets, a limit of three parking tickets will be set, and auto registration fees will be doubled next year. Failures to comply with new regulations will result in Im properly parked cars' being towed to a compound near the University Airport, Dean of Men William Long said yester day in announcing the set of rules scheduled to take effect September 1. Long also said that student, faculty and staff parking will be restricted to specific areas indicated by special stickers attached to their windshields between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and between 7 a.m. and 12:30 p.m. on Saturday. Residents of Craige and Ehringhaus, for instance, would be restricted to the Craige parking lot during the designated period. Long said. He continued:. "Students will be required to pay a $5 reg istration fee." He said the fee was in creased from $2.50 to finance "the building of new parking facilities, the up-keep,of cur rent parking facilities, and the eventual establishment of a central traffic office." According to the new rules, students receiving three -tickets for campus violations will lose their automobile privileges for a full academic year. Curb parking. Long said, will also be prohibited on Raleigh Street from South Rd. to the lit Trials -By Council Five cases were tried by the Men's Residence Council Court during its last two meetings and all of the students were found guilty. One student was given in definite residence hall proba tion for participation in an egg fight which occurred inside the dorm. Another received a ten dollar fine and residence hall probation for one semester for participation in a water fight. In another case, a student pleaded guilty cf having his date in his room to change clothes and was sentenced to indefinite campus probation. The final twof. cases involved the possession and in one case the snooting ot nrecracKers. One of the defendants was given an official reprimand for possession of a pack of fire crackers, while the other was put on all campus probation ,for the firing of two firecrackers. Money And Clothes This Week Busiest By ERNEST ROBL DTH Staff Writer According to Campus Police Chief Arthur -Beaumont, the time immediately preceding summer vacation is one of the busiest times for thefts on campus. Beaumont said that this was largely due to the facts that parents send students extra money for the trip home and that thefts are almost impossible to trace after students have left. .'' The campus police chief advised students not to talk about the fact that they have been sent some money; to keep any money they have with them at all times; and to keep rooms locked. Beaumont said that clothes, the thing most often reported stolen, are often tried on for size before they are stolen. "We're so fortunate, though, that I hate to brag about it," Beaumont -said, explaining that this campus has rela tively few actual thefts. "I think it's just the attitude of the people here in Chapel Hill They don't fight and they don't steal." . Beaumont said it was difficult to estimate the total amount "of property stolen on campus because students who are quick E to report thefts, almost never report when items were recov-: ered. Often items that are only lost are reported stolen, Beau mont said, and then students try to use an alleged theft as a means of collecting insurance on these items. The chief said that when belongings are actually stolen, "most people don't have adequate descriptions, not to mention serial numbers." Beaumont said that if all students had re cords of the serial numbers on their bicycles, the job of trac ing bicycles reported stolen would be much easier. Serial numbers on bicycles are usually found under, the sprocket mount. , Beaumont advocated the registration of all bicycles, saying Cameron St. intersection and 80 ft. beyond the northern curb line of that intersection. Raleigh St., he explained, is parking must be removed. "Quite often," he said, "the pedestrians suddenly step out into the street from behind parked motor vehicles. "This type of action could easily result in a fatal or very serious accident." Long said he was eliminat ing the on-street parking on South Rd. between Columbia Si. and Woollen Gymnasium "for similar reasons. The street is wider but the volume of pe destrian crossings is much greater." Between 4,000 and 6,000 crossings in the Raleigh St. area are made each day by pedestrians, Long said. He es timated that between 20,000 and 25,000 pedestrians cross streets daily on and near parts of South Rd. "Motor scooters and motor cycles will be permitted to park s overnight only in desig nated lots," Long said. Long said that parking zones would be chosen for students "to be as near as possible to where they live." "Single students," Long said, "will be prohibited from registering more than one au tomobile at a time." Freshmen and all other un dergraduates with less than a "C" average will be denied vehicle registration privileges, Long said. According to the new rules, students receiving three or more violation tickets on cam pus will lose their automobile privileges for a full academic year. Graduate students, married students, veterans over 21 and commuting students will re ceive automobile . privileges without restriction,. Long said. He defined a commuting stu dent as "one who lives more than twenty minutes walking distance from the campus." Long said that the commuters will have to prove they could not live on campus at the time they took up residence in town because of a lack of campus space. Long said that short term parking spaces will be desig nated near South Building, Steele Building, Bynum Hall and Woollen Gymnasium. As of May 6, 5,974 student and 2,906 faculty and staff ve hicles had been registered, Long said. He continued: "In other words, each day 8,880 automobiles compete for 5,316 spaces. "For more than a year the University Planning Office, the University Committee on Traf fic and Safety, and the Build ings aiid Grounds Committee have t een studying the various problems attendant to traffic." Long said he will request the Town of Chapel Hill to outlaw left turns at the intersection of Cameron Ave. and Columbia St. between 12 to 2 p.m. and 4 to 6 p.m. QoYo Moore Ib ToM r I THE WATERMELON CAME and it went all too fast. Most of the crowd that gath ered in Polk Place went away hungry. Sopho more class organizers disappeared mysteri ously while students watched the lucky few Moore F avors To Expand Education Board RALEIGH (AP) Bills to enlarge the North Carolina Board of Higher Education and to redefine its function were introduced in the General As sembly Thursday with the strong.; support' of.Gov.,; Dan Moore. Look Out-Yoii Sleeping On A If you have plans to live in ; a residence hall next year, and . you have not yet made room reservations, you may be in ; for a disappointing surprise. James Wadsworth, Director . of Housing, said this week that the housing situation for ' next fall is critical and get ting worse every day. The announced deadline for old students to reserve resi dence hall rooms for next year was March 15. Yet, Wadsworth said, sever al students come into his of fice every day requesting hous ing for the fall semester. . Plans have already been made to put four men in each of the Battle - Vance - Petti grew rooms, and three per room in all other residence halls except Parker, Teague, ; Avery, Ehringhaus, Craige and . I Morrison. For The Trip Home For Petty that non - removable stickers: would provide the best means of identification. The Police Chief indicated that there was very little trou ble with university employes. He said that university property which is stolen is usually taken by former employes or con tract workers who return to 1 the camups expressly for this purpose. . Items stolen on campus are not the only type of theft which Beaumont's officers have to deal with. Beaumont cited cases where stolen property, such as highway signs had been found in students' rooms. . Student offenders, when caught are usually turned over to the honor council, while adults are taken to court. -Beaumont said that while the honor council is actually stricter than courts usually are, the effects of this action are not as permanent -as those of a court. Beaumont said that approximately 95 per cent of all bi cycles reported stolen are usually recovered. He said that in most cases someone is in a hurry to get either to or from the campus in a hurry particularly to and from the more outlying dorms and merely rides a bicycles once and then abandons it. If any number of money and wallet thefts are reported in the same area, Beaumont said, "We check to seeif there is any large -: scale gambling in 'that area. When people lose, they still have to eat, so they steal." Thefts due to gambling losses have declined greatly, ac cording to Beaumont, because resident advisers have been warned to be on the lookout for gambling. Beaumont also said that the general attitude today was better than it was several years ago. "Students are closer to day; they have more spirit they know more people and strangers are noticed in dorms." Beaumont also said that the law which prevents peddlers and solicitors in dorms is a great asset in preventing thefts. J Jeopardises UiiiTers viVW-'.J'." ' y.:-m-.:-.s.:-:- -I - ' r"' The governor indicated he was trying to head - off legis lation, to abolish the board. He said he had found "much support for this bill among members of the General As sembly ' : ; ; ' : In fact, Moore said in a long .. May End Up Park Bench But neither this doubling-up nor the 1,043 - man facilities of new Morrison Residence Hall will be sufficient, to solve Carolina's rapidly - growing housing problem, Wadsworth said. ' . '. He pointed out that fresh men will be required to live on campusTherefore, his of fice will be obligated to make room for them, even if it means shutting out old UNC students. Since the deadline for fresh men room deposits is not until mid-summer, Wadsworth said, his office cannot now determ ine how many students will be wanting to live on campus next year. - Therefore, he said, it is es sential for all students "who have not yet taken care of next year's housing arrangements to do so immediately. Thieves Liesisiat - 4 - r-4 munch happily on the few melons that showed up. The only thing to save the afternoon was a fblksinging trio which sang for entertain- ment. - - " " Photo by Jock Lauterer ion statement, the board "is under such heavy attack that I have concluded that unless some di rect effort is made to reconsti tute and strengthen the board, the bill ' for abolishment will, probably pass." "This "would . leave , the , state without any type of planning and coordinating, agency for higher education,'' Moore add ed. . 'J.' I"?'' Seal "- Ralph Scott of Ala mance introduced a bilj to car-, ry out the governor's recom mendations in' the Senate and Rep. R.( D. McMillan Jr. of Robeson, introduced it in the House. They are chairmen of the Legislature's higher edu cation committees. Moore said his recommenda tions are designed to "continue and strengthen the board's pri mary functions of long-range planning and coordination of our institutions of higher learn ing." ; ' Under the governor's bill, the membership of the Board of Higher Education would be increased from 8 to 15, seven of whom would be laymen ap pointed by the governor,, one would be a member of the State Board of Education. Five shall be members of the various boards of trustees of state supported four - year colleges and . two from . the University of North Carolina board of trustees. Moore said these changes would "unite the board and the various institutions of high er learning and commit them jointly to the implementing of' programs of statewide planning for higher education ' which they have participated in. for mulating." "To strengthen this union be tween, the board and the vari ous institutions of higher edu cation,'' Moore continued, "I am recommending that the president and -chancellor of the university and the presidents of all the state - supported in stitutions of higher education shall constitute an advisory body to be known as the presi dent's advisory council . . ." The. advisory council would meet "at least quarterly to re view the activities" of the Board of Higher Education. Moore also proposed that the (Continued on Page 3) Free Flick Tonight's Free Flick will be "Until They Sail," starring Jean Simmons and Paul New man. The movie at 7 and 9:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall is about four sisters in New Zealand,' whose Ionliness while the young men of their country are away in World War II is briefly relieved by the U. S. Marines there. Speaker Ban Southern Association Says Ban Law Has 'Detrimental Effect' On Education By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer Gov. Dan Moore said yester day the accreditation of North Carolina state - supported schools is in danger because of the speaker ban law. Moore issued a statement saying he received a telegram from the Commission on Col leges of the Southern Associa- tion of Colleges and Universi ties which indicated the law had "detrimental - effect" on the state schools. ; . ' Moore met with Dr. Emmett B. Fields, chairman of the com mission on colleges of the as sociation, and Dr.' Gordon Sweet, director of the Associa tion, last Sunday to discuss the effects of the gag law on ac creditation. - In his statement, Moore said he pointed out that the speak- 25 Trustee Nominations Go To House . Twenty - five of the 27 nom inees elected Wednesday by the General Assembly's Joint. Committee on University Trus tees were on the House group's list of nominees. . The State Legislature . is ex pected to vote today on the nominees. The nomination of Mrs. L. Richardson Preyer was not ex .pectsU huj;ban.d Jiad wop . posed Gov. Moore in two-bit-, ter Democratic primaries last year. - - The joint balloting session nearly adjourned when the leg islators heard reports that a secret House subcommittee, would participate in the selec tion of the trustees. Thomas J. Pearsall of Rocky Mount and, nine other present members of the trustee board were rejected in the balloting. The following is a list of the 27 nominees: . Roy Ro we, Lenox G. Cooper, E. M. Fennel, John P. Sted man, Mrs. Stewart Warren, Mrs. George D. Wilson, Mrs. George Ferguson and Addison H. Reece. Also Judge H. L. Riddle Jr.,' Thomas J. White, C. Lacy Tate, Cameron Weeks, Mrs. L. Richardson Preyer, Mrs. Al bert H. Lathrop, W. Frank Taylor and J. Monroe Council Jr. " r ' Also Fred Bahnson, Dr. Amos Johnson, Arthur I. Park, John A. Prevost, W. Lunsford Crew, Larry I. Moore, William K. Neal and T. L. Richie. And J. Brantley Speight, Her bert Johnson and Walter Jones. AF Drill Team - . - K Receives Trophy For Competition UNC's Air Force ROTC drill team added another trophy to its growing collection and 18 outstanding cadets received awards at a ceremony on Fet zer Field yesterday. The trophy was presented to the Rammers for their third place performance in the Cher ry Blossom Parade in Wash ington, D. C, last month. They have previously re ceived recognition, for winning the Area B-2 drill competition and placing 14th in the Na tional Drill Competition in Washington. Six seniors were awarded the Professor of Air Science Cer tificate of Achievement. They are John R. Cox, Walter R. Handy, James O. Harris, An drew S. Martin, Carol G. Pruit and Bobby D. Taylor. This year's Military Achieve ment Award for outstanding contribution and achievement within the cadet corps went to Robert R. Bandy, Alexander Loudon, Kenneth E. Worrell, Thomas Harville, Clyde G. Thompson. John P. Acree, Thomas Smoake, William T. Chaffin, James W. Crawford, Joel S. Porter, Ronald J. Short and Ronald Smith. Accreditation er ban is now on the books and that a majority of the peo ple in North Caroiira are in favor of it. In a meeting Apr. 26 with association officials Ed Ran kin, assistant to the Governor, told the representatives that "North Carolinians do not like communism and they are deep ly , aware of the present con flict between the free world and communist totalitarianism, and do not like the idea of having known communists or pleaders of the Fifth Amend ment as speakers" on state supported campuses. The telegram which was re vealed yesterday was com municated by Fields, the chair man of the commission on col leges, to Moore on Wednesday. Commenting on the speaker ban, Fields said in the "tele gram, "The l3w in question prevents specified classes of persons from speaking . . .'re gardless of the subject on which they might speak." The telegram continues: "The council finds that ... interference has occurred, with detrimental effect on the state supported institutions of high er learning in North Carolina. "The council gives notice that it will present its findings to the commission at its next meeting at which time the commission will determine the status of these institutions with respect to continued accredita tion." Moore said, "I have not yet had time to consider fully the implications of this telegram. i'HoweyjerH doesappear.. that the accreditation of our state-supported schools and colleges-is being threatened by the . .-. commission on col leges of the Southern Associa tion of Schools and Colleges." The Southern Association is one. of six regional accredita tion ! agencies in the United States which offer accredita tion to institutions that meet certain standards set by the association. Fields said that the speaker ban law puts North Carolina state supported schools in vio lation of two of the standards of the association. The speaker ban was rushed through the 1963 General As Two Law Faculty Members Named Kenan Professors Two members of the UNC Law School faculty have been named the University's first Graham Kenan Professors of Law. They are Professors Henry P. Brandis Jr., former dean of the UNC Law School, and Frank W. Hanft, who has been on the law school faculty since 1931. Brandis and Hanft were se lected for the honor by the University's Board of Trustees on recommendation of the Law School faculty and Chancellor Sharp. The new law professorships were made possible by a gift of $160,000 to the University last December from Frank Kenan of Durham, trustee of the estate of Mrs. Sarah Gra ham Kenan of Wilmington. . The professorships are named in honor of Mrs. Ken an's husband, the late Graham Kenan, brother of William 4 V T i 1 V If. 4 If 1 ; i ; i BRANDIS aw sembly during the closing min utes. It prohibits Communists and Fifth Amendment plead ers in loyalty cases from speaking on state - supported campuses. Students For Victory Have 1,300 Names Students for Victorv in Viet Nam has collected "about 1,300 names" on a petition support ing "a firm U. S. Viet Nam policy," Wilson A. Clark Jr., a spokesman for the group an nounced yesterday. "Our initial coal was 2.000 signatures." he said, "and as soon as we reach that we'll probably quit. "The first couple of davs SPU members heckled us a lot," Clark continued, "but the presence merely increased the number of signatures we re ceived." Clark said today is the last day the signatures will be gathered. Then, he said, the group will break up. "When we reach our quota," he said, "we will send the pe titions to President Johnson as an indication of our support for his firm policy in Viet Nam. "Between 40 and 50" faculty members have signed the pe tition," Clark said. : Paul Kins, who was manning rtheTitfe" Room booth, said that among the signatures on the petition was that of "Adolph Hitler, Reichstag, Berlin, Germany." "We had one person call us 'war-mongers,' another person call us 'child-slaughterers' and still another call us 'fascists,' " King said. "Just the usual stuff," Wayne Morton a freshman from Aberdeen joked. "I see you're 4-F," a passer by remarked. "It's the old salami game," Morton said. "The Communists slice off a little bit of land here, a little bit there; and it all adds up." Rand Kenan of Lockport, N.Y., who gave Kenan Stadium to the University. Brandis was educated at UNC and Columbia and joined the law school faculty in 1940. He held the deanship from 1949 until 1964, the longest pe riod any occupant has heid the position. Brandis is an authority in the field of procedural law. He came to the law school faculty from service in the state gov ernment, including a year as chief of the Research Division of the State Department of Revenue. Hanft was educated at the University of Minnesota and Harvard. He specializes in the area of debtor - creditor rela tionships and has made con tributions to state government. He is currently chairman of the General Statutes Commis sion. -4 ! tthvti&. .... ,-.Aat ILNFT

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