"' .... ... i i ii I 11 " 1 ' " "' ' ' 'a. 7SI First Free Flick Stars Liz CarIi.niV,S Ffee F,ick Present at 7 and 9 p.m. in Fl hI.u ' WiU "Suddenly Last Summer," starring rr tI ,0r' Katherine Hepburn and Montgomery .7 The screenplay is by Gore Vidal and Tennessee "imams. In just two short hours the show offers the lewer a psychotic heroine, a procuress mother, a can nibalistic orgy, and a sadistic nun. mm The South's Largest College Newspaper i'.'.v. Mm vol. 74, No. 2 Dickson Newcomers Indoctrinated By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer Student Body President Paul Dickson called for re peal of the state's speaker ban law at a special orientation assembly Wednesday night and drew a standing ovation from nearly 2,000 freshmen and transfer students in Me morial Hall. Attacking the law as "both un-American' and un-Constitu-tional," Dickson .described it as "one of the largest prob lems facing the University to day. "We are students of the Uni versity of North Carolina would definitely favor repeal of the speaker ban law," he said. The speaker ban was passed during the closing minutes of Cheerleaders Lead Parade For Vietory UNC cheerleaders will lead a pep parade across campus tonight, ending with a pep rally on Emerson Field in preparation for the Tar Heels' tilt with the University of Michigan here tomorrow. According to Jerry Houle, head cheerleader, the parade will be organized in the Plane tarium parking lot at 8:30 p.m. From there the group will move eastward on Franklin St. and down Raleigh St. to Woollen Gym, picking up stu dents from all the residence halls along the way. Then the paradersi",wilrprJ ceed past the Bell Tower and through Scott College (Parker, Teague, Avery, moving to ward Morrison, Ehringhaus and Craige. The last leg if the victory march will carry the group by Memorial Hospital and Caro lina Inn and finally up Cam eron Ave., past South Build ing, and onto Emerson field for the pep rally. 6 .Ban All Except 100 By DAVID ROTHMAN DTH Staff Writer Art Buchwald thinks that the North Carolina speaker ban law is a blow for truth, justice and the American way. The famed syndicated hu mor columnist recently told the Daily Tar Heel that he "not only agrees with the State Legislature and the American Legion about the ban, I also think all speakers Communists and non-Communists alike should be barred from state - supported o r . - - - r iff tf&i , . I ' ',?2Z3r- rA; r- y OPINION tt doesnt matter If UNC loses Its graduate students and accreditation, just so the remaining students are 100 per cent American." Takes Ban Stand; the 1963 North Carolina Gen eral Assembly. The law prohibits known Communists, members of the Communist Party, and those who have taken the Fifth Amendment of the Constitu- tion in connection with subver- sive activities from speaking at state supported institutions Accreditation Dickson cited the Univer sity's possible loss of accredi tation from the Southern As sociation of Colleges and Uni versities because of the speak er ban's restrictions on aca demic freedom. "The Association, as well as many prominent North Caro lin educators, fear and con demn control of the education al process by a political body," he said. Law Reversal Dickson called for a revision to a 1941 North Carolina stat ute which prohibited speakers at state institutions from ad vocating the violent overthrow of the government. He said there were no vio lations of the 1941 law or any prosecutions under it. "The critical difference be tween the 1941 law and the speaker ban law," Dickson said, "is that the former al lowed noted world figures to speak , on non-political topics and the latter does not." Dickson said that while campaigning for the student body presidency last spring he met only one student who fa vored the speaker ban. "I want it known," Dickson said, "that as long as I am student body president, Stu dent Government will not fear to riskt&-veEy-eing in - i'iHW in8 iui icpcai ui tuc pCmCi ban law." Dickson also told the new. students of plans for campus judicial reforms, improvement of undergraduate instruction, and a proposed campus car rier current radio network which would broadcast music and news of student interest. He called for the expansion campuses; that is, all speak ers except state legislators and Legionnaires." For good measure, Buch wald agreed to be photo graphed (without his cigar) waving an American flag on behalf of the ban, but he would not pose with the "Stars and Bars" even as a gag. He said North Carolina is the only state with such a law "because Tar Heel students, as the State Legislature has made quite clear, are the only ones in America susceptible ifiiU CHAPEL of this year's course evalua tion booklet to cover as many of the University's 1,200 courses as possible. 7' Thrtrtit S LJ"itlt Names Aides Mrs. E. Jackson Flahum and Mrs. Larry S. McDevitt have been appointed assist ants to the Dean of Women. They replace Mrs. Peter Walk er, the former Daryl Farring ton, and Miss Sue Ross. Mrs. Falghum graduated from Carolina in 1958. She is past president cf the Valky rice and was chosen "Miss Alumna" by her class. Mrs. McDevitt is a 1964 graduate of the UNC School of Nursing. She served as secre tary - treasurer of the Order of the Old Well and secretary of her freshman class. Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael also announced three changes in dormitory administration. Mrs. Celeste Leffingwell, Spencer Hall host ess, replaces Mrs. Allen Thur man; Mrs. Sam Carrington re places Mrs. Hal Mixon as third floor Nurses hostess; Mrs. Mixon is Winston Hall hostess. Miss Carmichael also an nounced the appointment of 15 graduate counselors who will serve in women's dormitories this year. They are Sandra Asher, Fontaine Belford, Mary Chisholm, Mary Evans, Elizabeth Griffin, Joan Heigh es, Susan Hinman, Margaret Jackson, Margaret Ann Smith, F a t m a Ramazonah, Judy Rockefeller, Patricia Waties, - Anne"Vickr.MargaretwWhitte - Car. and Nancv Walker. 'This office considers the position of graduate counselor very important to the welfare of our women students," Miss Carmichael said. "The gradu ate counselor is young enough to see life through the eyes of a student, and yet sufficient ly old enough to give another demension to student activi- ties. to subversion by foreign ideologies. "In my opinion, it doesn't matter if UNC loses its grad uate students and its accredi tation, just so the remaining students are 100 per cent American." The nationally syndicated satirist will soon have a rec ord out called "Sex and the College Boy." To collect the necessary information, he questioned 200 students. He found that none of them ad mitted "having an affair" which "greatly restored my confidence." Buchwald, how ever, confessed he did no re search on the UNC campus. "When I hiked down to see my girl in North Carolina on my way to joining the Ma rines, I stayed at a Carolina fraternity house. I was there long enough to get the feel of the place before I left." Buchwald views formal ed ucation as "baloney, but I don't knock it" although "now adays there are more and more phoney educated peo "REPUBLICANS are not as important as they used to be. I believe in the one and a half party system." HILL, NORTH CAROLINA TTTN Jrrotesti SPU Pickets r Vl - .X,x1-l. r ; . n?- - Mi, . TWO SIGNS, TWO STUDENTS AND A HOUND DOG The Hound Dog Won. Chuck Schunior, (left) chairman of the Student Peace Union, and another student demonstrated against "American militarism" and President Johnson in Parking Rules Try The Impossible: 3, 900 A. utomobiles In 2, 1 OO Spaces By ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer If you are among the 3,900 lucky people allowed to park on campus the odds are al most 50-50 that you won't be able to squeeze into one of the 2,100 available spaces. According to Robert F. Kep ner assistant to Dean of Men William G. Long, an esti mated total of 5,200 cars have Per Cent Americans ple." He himself dropped out of high school, spent some time with the Marines, re sumed his education and soon abandoned his studies at the University of Southern California. He is quick to dis tinguish between formal edu cation and knowledge. Constantly in demand at $1, 500 a talk, Buchwald regrets that the big colleges "don't pay you to speak since they consider your speaking there a big honor. The small col leges do." Thus, he thinks lit tle New Haven College is a much better institution than, say, Harvard. "After all, the only way to really honor me is to hand me a check." According to Buchwald, the President's attitude toward him probably hasn't changed since a recent Newsweek in terview. "Some of my inside sources at the White House tell me that President John son reads me and chuckles. Other equally informed sourc es tell me that LBJ does not read me. I suspect the truth lies somewhere in between; be FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, .Begin been registered during this first week. Of this number, 1,758 cars belong to students living on campus and have 1,500 avail able parking spaces. Com muters, those living farther than 20 minutes walking dis tance of classes, have regis tered 2,200 cars for 600 avail able spaces. However, com muters will also be allowed reads me but does not chuc kle." Vice President Humphrey is "a big fan of mine," and Bar ry Goldwater is "one of my regular readers. We're very friendly." Richard Nixon and Buchwald "get along well. It's his secretary who gets mad for him." On his office walls he keeps the crackpot letters he re ceives. He exhibits these sou venires of his trade as mem bers of a German dueling team would display their scars, a fisherman his biggest catch, or a press agent a photo of his best stacked client. Jews, he said, "have a great tradition of turning unhappi ness into humor. They find it's easier to laugh than to cry, and besides, it pays better. He uses the column to blow off steam, confessing that if he weren't writing for his 235 papers, he'd "be a mean man, perhaps rob a bank. On the other hand, who knows? May be without my column I'd be a great lover." "WITHOUT MY COLUMN I'd be a mean man. perhaps rob a bank, or maybe a great lover." -DTH photos by David Rothman. 1965 Ag Honnd NoNation CANPLAY MANKIND! Y-Court yesterday. The missile Is an Air Force exhibit used for the AFROTC program on campus. The Air Force re cruited 106 freshmen; the SPU recruited no one. Communication Center Photo to park in all other student parking areas. Town Students Town students, who are not allowed to park on campus during restricted hours, have registered an estimated 1,200 cars. Kepner said there have been about 1,200 more cars registered than last year's first week total of 4,000. He Buchwald, though, will prob ably stick with the column. "I made $155,000 last year," he told Newsweek, "and I'm now negotiating a loan to pay the taxes. I remember walk ing past Cartier's with my wife and I said, 'Remember when I used to buy stuff there when we were poor?" Buchwald's a liberal, "but I don't like labels. I wish I could be more a political." He doesn't lambast Republi-, cans these days as much as he formerly did, since "they're not as important as they once were." He's a firm believer in "the one and a half party sys tem." At times, Buchwald is hated even by his enmies. One column drew this comment from "A Frankford Christian Woman": "I was absolutely sickened by the enclosed col umn ... I would not even tell my husband I am writing to you; I am ashamed I have even read your column. Next time I will know better." ain At TUNC ; Dos Missi C7 mm V said the figure at the end of last year grew to about 6,000. Motorcycles are not includ ed in any of these figures. Kepner said that over the summer there had been an over all decrease in the total number of parking spaces. Kepner has worked this summer zoning the' parking areas and attempting to fit all the cars in their allotted spaces. Regulations Here is a run down on stu dent stickers and where you may park on campus during the restricted hours which are 7 a.m. through 6 p.m., Mon day through Fridays, and 7 a.m. through 1 p.m. on Satur days. For the purposes of park ing on campus the campus is defined as the area bounded by Franklin St., Battle St., Country Club Rd., Ridge Rd., Manning Dr., Hibbard St., Mason Farm Rd., Pittsboro St., Cameron Ave. and Co lumbia St. Those with "G" stickers may park in "G" areas only which included the Craige, Morrison and Ehringhaus lots, Ridge Rd. and the parking area in front of Scott Col- Irfnce. " " Those with "H" stickers mav Dark only in "H" areas including Country Club Rd., w the areas on the road direct ly behind Everett and Lewis Halls, the road behind the tennis courts, South Rd., the Monogram Club lot and the Rams Head Lot. Those with "K" stickers may park in "K" areas only which include the Carolina Inn dirt lot, McCauley St. in front of Whitehead Hall and Pitts boro St. in front of Nash Hall. Those with "C" stickers may park in "C" areas only which consist of the main Bell Tower lot, the Rams Head lot, and the lots on the en trance road leading to Scott College. "C" stickers are al so valid in G, H, J, and K areas. Those with "T" stickers may not park anywhere on campus during the restricted hours. Staff members with stickers lettered B, D, or E may park in their designated areas and in any student area. Single freshman students may not have motor vehicle privileges in or around Chap el Hill. Single non - freshman un dergraduates having less than a "C" average may not have motor vehicle privileges in or around Chapel Hill. r n h Founded February 23. 1893 le 'It Surprised Only Frosh' By WILL BERN ARDIN UNC News Bureau Student Peace Union pickct ers staged a two - man parade in front of a U. S. Air Force "Hound Dog" missile in Y Court yesterday. But the picketing of the UNC's Air Force ROTC dis play was a decided flop. The missile was on display to recruit freshmen into the AFROTC unit here. The Air Force recruited 106 students. The SPU had set up a table to recruit members also, dur ing their demonstration. They recruited no one. Two students, Chuck Schun- ior, a sophomore from Park Forest, 111., and Chairman of the SPU, and Gary Waller, a graduate student from Ver sailles, Mo., and not a mem ber of SPU, carried the signs. The students were picket ing in an attempt "to get peo ple to think about the world situation" and "to give out more information than John son and the State Department do." Schunior said, "Johnson is well meaning, but he's gotten caught up and he hasn't real ly got too much control over the situation." One of the signs read, "Johnson promised peace. Who won the election?" In reply to the statements about President Johnson, Jer ry Rutledge, secretary of the Young Democrats Club, which had a recruiting table about ten feet from the picket line, said, "we support Johnson's stand on Viet Nam." Rutledge unconcernedly commented about the demon stration, "picketing has be come an accepted thing. No body pays much attention to it anymore. Some of the fresh men were excited, but that's about all." Another demonstration against SPU was scheduled for later in the afternoon, but it never came off. There were two signs pinned to a table near the SPU display saying, "Let's Hear it for the Hound Dog," and "support USA, Op pose SPU," but the rumored larger scale show never oc curred. Picketer Waller, who is not an SPU member but who sym pathizes with this cause, said that the Air Force display was against the national interest. He also said that he wanted "to show that we can speak freely." The basic purpose cf t h e purpose (Continued on Page 3) Child Taken FvO 1X1 ScllOOl A UNC student and father of a 3-year-old girl swore out a warrent Sept. 13 against a man for the alleged kidnap ping of .his daughter from a local nursery school, accord ing to Chapel Hill Police Chief William Blake. Blake said Hugh Heigh, 26 Willow Dr. Apt., swore out the warrent for Michael Cary af ter Cary and Heigh's former wife Joan Heigh supposedly took Sharon Heigh from the nursery school. Blake said the father told him that he and his wife were divorced and that a Mississip pi court awarded him custody of the child. The child's nursery school teacher told police that Mrs. Heigh came to the school about 2:30 Monday afternoon to get Sharon. She told Mrs. Heigh that she could net take the child. Mrs. Heigh then told the teacher she would call her husband and see if it was all right to take the girl As they walked to the phone the wom an allegedly turned and, grab bing the child ran out the door. Chief Blake said that copies of the warrant had been sent to the sheriff in Madison, Wis., after Mr. Heigh told him he believed that is where the cou ple and child had gone.

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