Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Aug. 5, 1965, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, August 5, 1965 THE TAR HEEL Page 3 3 Interest Groups Accept Invitations To Panel Meetings Representatives of three organizations principally concerned with the Speaker Ban Law will appear be fore the study commission next week as public hear ings open in Raleigh. Commission chairman David Britt told the Tar Heel that officials of the Southern Association of Col leges and Schools, American Association of University Professors and the American Legion have accepted invitations to speak before the nine-member panel. Officials of the Southern Association will appear first from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday. Representa tives of the AAUP will speak from. 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Thursday. The Legion will have its turn Thursday after noon beginning at 2 p.m. Britt said he hopes to have a spokesman from the U. S. Office of Education address the panel Wednesday after noon. Britt said an invitation had been issued the office, but no reply had been received. The office would supply the commission with information on the effect loss of accredita tion would have on grants to state schools. The AAUP's general secre tary William P. Fidler will represent that group at the hearings. Dr. Bertram H. Da vis, AAUP deputy secretary general, said in Washington that others would probably accompany Fidler, but he did not know who they would be. Dr. Emmett Fields, dean of Vanderbilt University in Nash ville, Tenn., and chairman of the Southern Association's Committee on Colleges, will appear at the hearings. Britt said he had no list of speakers from the American Legion. The commission is sued the invitation to State Commander J. Alvis Carver of Dunn. It is expected that Car ver will appear and probably Taylor Is Named To Advisory Unit Dr. Isaac M. Taylor, dean of the School of Medicine, has been named a member of the National Advisory Research Resources Committee of the Division of Research Facili ties and Resources, National Institutes of Health. The appointment was made by U. S. Surgeon General Luther L. Terry in Washing ton. Taylor becomes one of 12 members of the committee. His term is for four years, ending Sept. 30, 1969. The committee was estab lished two years ago to assist the Sufgeon General on mat ters relating to programs of the Division of Research Fa cilities and Resources. The programs include animal re sources, general clinical re search centers, special re search resources and general research support grants. Taylor has been a member of the UNC medical faculty since 1952 and became dean of the medical school last September. THIRSTY? QUIK FOOD MART 6-Pack $1.25 Half a Stone's Throw from call other witnesses for the Legion's case. Each organization will be required to submit a summary background or each of its speakers and a brief on the topic each will take before the panel. The hearings will be tele vised live by WUNC-TV, chan nel 4. Britt said he was "very glad" for the opportunity to televise the proceedings. Officials of the three organ izations which have accepted invitations to speak are ex pected to give varying view points of the law. Southern Association offi cials will tell the commission why accreditation is endan gered by the Gag Law, and what the loss of accreditation would mean to the higher ed ucation system in the state. At its organizational meeting last month the panel agreed to hear first from the South ern Association so commision members can be briefed on the problem of accreditation. The AAUP is expected to approach the subject from the angle of academic freedom and perhaps cite possibilities of problems of hiring and re taining professors. The Legion has supported the ban since its passage by the General Assembly in 1963. Carver has indicated that he intends to call University per sonnel to defend the law. Last week he wrote Univer sity President William Fri day asking a written state ent that no reprisals be tak en against any students, pro fessors or employes of the Uni versity who might appear in support of the law. University officials quickly countered the letter, saying that no such re strictions are placed on the personal affairs of University personnel. VILLA TEIIFESTA LUNCHEON 12-3 p.m. 75c to $L95 Sandwiches Salads Homemade Soup Spaghetti Lasagne Cannaloai Tine Choice of WHILE IN DURHAM, BE SURE TO VISIT THE BOOK EXCHANGE Five Points Durham, N. C. "The South' s Largest and Most Complete Book Store" Spectators Will Choose Best One-Act Production Want to be a drama critic for one evening? You'll get the chance Wed nesday and Thursday when the Department of Dramatic Art in . conjunction with the Carolina Playmakers presents the 208th bill of new student written plays. Malcolm Seawell 'Convinced' Gag Unconstitutional Malcolm Seawel, former state attorney general and a top appointee of Gov. Dan Moore, said yesterday he is "convinced" the speaker ban law is unconstitutional. Seawell, In an interview with the Greensboro Daily News, said that the law lacks "definite standards or criteria for determining who is and is not a member of the Commu nist Party." The law forbids three cate gories of speaker on state -supported campuses. Among them is "known Communists." "Who can determine who is a known member of the Com munist Party?" he asked. "What does it mean known to whom?" "The word 'known' calls for a definite knowledge. Yet I doubt if the combined Univer sity of North Carolina Board of Trustees and the General Assembly could name five known members of the Com munist Party in North Caro lina." He questioned another pro vision of the 1963 Speaker Ban Law which would bar speak ers who advocate "overthrow of the Constitution of the United States or the State of North Carolina." Seawell noted that "no one would deny the worth of a law aimed at the illegal or force ful overthrow of the govern ment." But he said the wrong word had been used in drafting the bill. "You can overthrow gov ernments by force but you can't overthrow the Constitu tion," he noted. 75c STUDENT SPECIALS DAILY DINNER 5:30-9:30 p.m. $2.50 Veal Parmlglano Prime Ribs of Beef Roast Leg of Lamb Tour Choice Served with Spa ghetti, 2 vegetables, tossed salad, hot rob ft batter. Imported Wines" mldiowa CHAPEL HILL iac 1822 Three plays, all written this year, will be presented at 7:30 both evenings in the Play makers Theater, Admission is free. Authors of the plays will be introduced prior to their pres entation. After the perform ance members of the audience will be given a chance to ask questions about the plays. At the end of the evening, the entire audience will be asked to vote on which play it liked best. The three plays are "No Other Gods," a domestic dra ma by Paul Crouch of Colum bia, S. C; "Purgisnacht," a symbolic drama by William R. McDonald of Reidsville; and 'The Woman From Vip er," a folk comedy by Paul Byron Baker of Clintwood, Va. "No Other Gods," which is directed by Reginald Spauld ing, delves into the relation ship between a stern minister and his sickly son. The cast in cludes Anne Helm, William McDaniel, Christopher Jones LEVERING TO SPEAK Sam Levering, chairman of the Friends Committee on Na tional Legislation, will speak on "An American Way To Peace" at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 104 Peabody Hall. The ad dress will be sponsored by the YM-YWCA. It will be open to the public. - I 1 I ,v 1 - f t f f Jowolry wplr I .7 ! oxporU Will --'4 . rtstoro your I J i proud posMtsion t to their original bttirty and utfuln. T. L. KEMP Jewelry 135 E. Franklin Ph. 942-1331 Home of The Old WeU Charm V I BUY 1X1 SEEDS AT THE SEED STORE Jo n 'SrJLJfif5 if and George Spelvin. Paul Ba ker is stage manager for the play. Wonbock Lee will direct "Purgisnacht" with Ronald Spainhour as stage manager. The symbolic drama is set in a boxcar of a train going from an unknown point of departure to an unknown destination. Members of the Jewish fam ily riding in the boxcar are played by Chuck Wrye, Alfred Reasar, Susan Hair and Ellen Barrett. "The Woman From Viper" presents the story of what happens when a gentleman tries to marry his fifth wife. The final play is directed by Barbara Hannah with stage management by Sandra Lincoln. r. Book Haws from Tha Intimate THIS WEEK IN THE OLD FEATURE CASE Books in Foreign Tongues Mostly made up of duplicate from a great University library, but including oddments from North Carofiaa private collec tions, this lot includes books in Spanish, French, Dutch, Ger man, Russian, Polish, with smattering of more exotic tong gues. Prices are low. COMING MONDAY Religious Books Here's the library of a preacher-collector. While this lot is outstanding for a nearly com plete collection of the little mor al tales published in the last century by the Presbyterian Board of Publications, it also contains books on theology, and general religion. Prices are low. AND REMEMBER Our Study Aids Improve Your Grades The Intimate 119 East Franklin Street Open Till 9 P.M. AND MY STUDIO CARDS AT Franklin St. the Zoom-Zoom
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Aug. 5, 1965, edition 1
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