Library L;x 87 0 O . ., ' '11 Wm Sat (siar wtt Handbook Interviews Carolina Handbook Inter views for section editors and associate editors from 3-4 p.m. in the Grail Room. Sabicas Tickets There are still good seats left for the Sabicas Concert Sunday in Memorial Hall. Pick up tickets at GM Information Desk. The Smith's Largest College Newspaper Volume 74, Number 100 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 u ivith Ed Freakley Show Your Appreciation Uhh . . . about the cheerleaders. After spending the weekend in the Queen City of Char lotte watching four basketball teams and occasionally eyeing all the different cheerleaders I have decided that perhaps I was a bit wrong in my opinion of our girls. c It has been said by many Carolina Gentlemen that the cheerleaders add nothing to a ballgame with the exception a little leg here and there. We were wrong. During the second half of Saturday night's game against the Gamecocks our cheerleaders were right in front of me. I could have reached out and ... It was a bit nerve racking. At any rate I discovered the girls do know something about the game of basketball and they yell loud and long. In fact they rarely stop yelling. Two or three times one of them came over and asked how many points one of the players had. One young lady kept yelling for our defense to stop a certain South Carolina player from shooting a long jump-shot. He hit about three straight before they started guarding him outside. He didn't get any more after that. Well what I'm trying to say is that the girls do a good job and that they deserve credit instead of abuse. I can think of a lot of things they could be doing that would be a lot more fun than sitting on a hard floor for two hours. It's hard to appreciate a cheerleader. So I think every free man on this campus should call the Chi 0, Pi Phi or Tri Delt house and ask these young ladies for a date to show your appreciation, of course. . jutm n. - -Li-Jrl -ft MAUREEN SHANNON, Judy Fleming and Wlnborne Shaffer are three of the cheerleaders who deserve recognition for their fine efforts this year. SP To The Student Party will meet tomorrow night to elect can didates for spring elections. The meeting will be at 7 in rm. 8 Peabody. Candidates for the offices of school president, vice - presi dent, secretary, treasurer, wo men and men legislators, sen ior class president, vice-president, secretary, and treasur er, NSA coordinator and edi tor "of the DTH will be voted on. Any student is eligible for the SP endorsement for any position if he or she attends the convention. All persons seeking party endorsement should bring a good picture of themselves to the convention. GM Seeks President Applications for the presi dency of the Graham Memor ial Activities Board are avail able at the GM Information Desk. Deadline for applications is noon Wed., March 2. Applicants should sign up to be interviewed by the Nomi nating Committee of the Activ ities Board when they return ed the applications to the in formation desk. The president presides at weekly meetings at the GMAB, is chairman of the GM Board of Directors, coordinates GM committees, aids in planning the GM program, selects mem bers of the incoming Activities Board and plans the GM orien tation program. Pick Candidates Job Interviews Kurt Salmon Asociartes; REA Express; Vick Chemical (Summer work); Montgomery Ward; Prentice Hall Publish ing; and Roadway Express will have representatives on cam pus today to interview stud ents. Tomorrow, Chubb & S o n ; Jewel Box Stores; Dow Corn ing (summer work); Cone Mill; and Xerox will talk to students interested in jobs. Anyone that wants an inter view should come by the Placement Service, 211 Gard ner, to make an appointment. Society Elects 10 Ten of the 34 new members elected to the Southern Socie ty for Clinical Investigation are on the faculty of the North Carolina School of Medicine. They are Dr. William D. Blythe, Dr. Keneth M. Brink hous. Dr. William J. Cromar tie, Dr. Harold J. Fallon, Dr. John B. Graham, Dr. Morris A. Lipton, Dr. Joseph S. Pa gano, Dr. Harold R. Roberts and Dr. J. K. Spitznagel. NSA Scholarships The U. S. National Student Association will award 15 full scholarships for the 14th annu al International Student Rela tions Seminar to be held in Washington, D. C. from June 13 to Sept. 2. Applications must be sent in by Mar. 15. They may be pick ed up from Eric Van Loon, NSA coordinator, at Student government headquarters, or by writing USNSA, Polish Scholarship Program, 2115 S St.. N. W.. Washington, D. C. Optimistic On Speaker Rules, Says Sitterson Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson expressed confidence this week that the Cpnsolidat ed University board of trustees will assign the administra tion of speaker regulations to University officials. Sitterson assumed the post of Acting Chancellor Feb. 15. He had served as a Vice Chan cellor since September, 1965. Asked whether implementa tion of the newly - adopted speaker policy would be left to the administration when the board of trustees meets here on Feb. 28, Sitterson replied: "I'm hopeful. Until the con trary takes place I believe they will. I'm not going to be pessimistic until the matter is settled in a manner which I'd regard as undesirable." Regulations and procedures governing visiting speakers on the four campuses were adopt ed by the trustees' executive committee at a meeting on Feb. 7. The regulations and amend ments formulated by a three man subcommittee of the ex ecutive committee will be sub mitted to the fall board for approval on Feb. 28. Sitterson said that he was hopeful the executive commit tee's regulations would be adopted. He conceded that regulations could be enacted "which constitute censorship." "But I don't think the trustr ees are insisting on that," he said. The Acting Chancellor noted that he was personally disap pointed in the failure of the executive committee to allow speaking engagements on the University campuses for per sons banned under the speak er ban law, until the new reg ulations are adopted. "But we must remember," be said, "that the trustee meet ing will be the first full board . meeting since the special ses sion which amended the speak er law. The trustee board is the only one authorized to adopt these regulations." Sitterson declined to discuss the consequences which might result from trustee regulations which either failed to entrust University officials with their implementation or amounted to censorship. "Of course it would be very discouraging to the faculty, students, administration and (Continued on Page 6) Training Program Student body president Paul Dickson and Vice president Brit Gordon will discuss stud ent government and students at the fifth meeting of the In Service Training Program for staff members of the office of the Dean of Women and for associates. The discussion will be held in rm. 105, Hanes Hall, at 4 p.m. on Thursday. Unveiling Of Nymph Ehringhaus will unveil a 35 foot high drawing of a bikini clad nymph at their Duke Weekend Combo party Satur day night from 8-12. Music will be by the Seduc tives. Cost is $1 per couple. Sexual Imprinting Dr. Erich Klinghammer of the University of Chicago will speak on "Sexual Imprinting in Mourning Doves" today at 4 p.m. in the faculty lounge of Morehead Building. The talk is open to the pub lic. Duke To Hear Yang Dr. .C N. Yank, a co - win ner of the Nobel Prize in Phy sics, will deliver the 10th an nual Fritz London Memorial Lecture at Duke on March 1. He will speak on the "Sym metry of Physics." The lecture is open to the public. u Ifvxil Light L u)ti In i i T v - . vljH' ELECTIONS BOARD member Alexa Smith is shrouded by ballot boxes as she helps prepare for today's referendum vote on a constitutional amendment. A light turnout is ex pected. DTH Photo by Ernest Ilobl Writer's Program Prompts Criticism By CAROL GALLANT DTH Staff Writer "We're trying to break away from the chocolate-chip cookie syndrome," said Armistead Maupin, Chairman of the YMCA Writer-in-Residence Committee. "The Writer - in - Residence Program should offer some th'ng more than insipid recep tions at which wide-eyed stu dents share Kool-Aid with a Great Man of Letters. "There ought to be an oppor tunity for the interested stu dent to receive professional guidance through personal con tact with the writer," Maupin said. Tonight students will have this opportunity. The first Writer-in-Residence Workshop will be held from 8-10:30 p.m. in 107 Howell Hall. Opening re marks will be made by Betty Smith, author of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Joy in the Morning. The wxrld premier of the movie "Joy in the Morning" was held in Chapel Hill last year. The writing workshops, were initiated by Maupin and Betty O'Bryan, chairman of the YWCA Writer - in - Residence Committee, at the suggestion of this year's Writer-in-Residence, Leon Rooke. Rooke was recipient of the 1965 O'Henry Award for his novel, If Lost, Return to the Swiss Arms. He has demon- Board Will Quiz Pub Candidates The publications board will hold interviews Thursday in the Grail Room for positions of editor and business manager of the Course Evaluation book and the Yackety-Yack. Candidates for editor of The Da;Iy Tar Heel are asked to make appointments for inter views, which will be from 3:30 6 p.m. Interviews will also be held for Business manager of the DTH. Interested students should make an appointment at the GM information desk. Mem bers of the publications board are required to attend Thurs day. Questions should be address ed to Dave Heacock at 968 9215. Yack photography con tracts will be awarded at the same meeting. Students interested in filing for the DTH editorship are asked to come by for inter views. No one may run for the office without the approval of the board, or without a peti tion containing a required number of signatures. So far, only Alan Banov, a junior from Charleston, S. C, has announced his intention to run for the editorship of The Daily Tar Heel. Um, strated an interest in meeting and working with students. The workshops will be con ducted on an informal basis. Students may come in any time, write as long as they ,ish, and have the assistance and advice of a professional writer if they desire it. The workshops will be conducted on a weekly basis. This is the first year for Writer-in-Residence Workshops, but the Writer - in - Residence Program itself is several years old. Past participants include Reynolds Price, author of A Long and Happy Life, and John Knowies, author of A Separate Peace. Myriad Items Cross Border By LYTT STAMPS DTH Staff Writer An exchange program be tween Escuela Normal Super ior of Mexico and UNC which began in 1957 is continuing this semester with three Mexi can students studying here. The project is sponsored here by Phi Delta Kappa, men's honorary education fraternity, and the Frank Porter Graham chapter of Student National Education Association under the guidance of the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education. The program has exchanged more things that just students. For example: Letters between students at ENS and UNC. Photographs ranging from small "snapshots" to framed enlargements. Tape Recordings one for prospective visitors to UNC telling about living conditions, food, clothing and other infor mation helpful to them in plan ning for their trip. Slides depicting education in each country with recorded commentary. Motion pictures UNC stu dents produced a 40 minute sound movie showing univer sity life. Phonograph records The Mexicans sent records of their folk music and UNC returned recordings of American folk music, jazz and English lan guage records of poetry. Textbooks UNC set all texts used in basic courses in the School of Education. Professional magazines. Student newspaper The School of Education prepared a Spanish education The Daily Tar Heel. ENS sent copies of English Tidings. Art exhibits ENS sent an outstanding piece of sculpture which was placed on display in Peabody Hall. Maps M arker s A tree was planted beside Peabody in 1963 by 22 ENS professors. In 1964 a marker was placed at the base of the tree. .Referendum Vote By GLEX.V L. MAYS DTH Staff Writer Voter turnout. is expected to be very light today as North Carolina students vote on a proposed constitutional amendment which will affect future elections of the student body president and vice president. John Winborne, temporary elections board chairman, said, "Very little interest has been shown in this election. As a matter of fact there has been less interest in this than in any election I have seen here in the past three years." He said there was much more interest in the campus radio referendum last fall than has been shown in the constitutional amendment. The amendment, if passed, will provide for the election of the student body- Speakers For CFI By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer The Committee for Free In quiry will sponsor a meeting of the student body, faculty and administration Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall concerning the speaker policy procedures tne trustees will be The policy also belittles discussing at their meeting students, because the execu next Monday tiVe committee assumes that Student body president Paul a student can not evaluate Dickson, who is also chairman an opposing point of view, of the CFI, said yesterday that rhe policy also shows prior the meeting will feature speech- censorship, es concerning the speaker pol icy procedures recommended CCT Ii to the trustees by the execu- lQSSeS live commiuee ana ine wi. Speakers will include SDprrofet airman of A vid Lapkin, economics sor; Bob Powell, chairman the UNC state affairs commit tee; and Richard French, head of the Graduate Students Com mittee for Free Inquiry. Dickson will preside at the meeting and will also speak. He is negotiating with a well know alumnus to secure him as an additional speaker for the meeting. Dickson said, "Invitations were extended to members of the executive committee. One member contacted personally turned down the invitation and said he thought the other mem bers would turn down the invi tations also. "The meeting will emphas ize the aspect of a free uni versity. It will also empha size academic freedom and in tegrity and their importance to the University." Dickson listed the objections that the CFI has to the proce dures of the speaker policy p ro- posed by the executive com- mittee of the board of trustees: The discrimatory policy will not apply to all speakers but only those in certain categor ies. We consider the policy to be arbitrary. There is no rea son why the speakers should not be allowed to speak. "We consider the policy to Beauty Queen To Be Picked March 26 7 II 3f, Penny Clark Constitutional Amendment Turnou Chosen Meeting be unconstitutional and in vio lation of the Fourteenth Amend ment guaranteeing equal pro tection of the law. The policy allows the Chancellor to violate the First Amendment of the freedom of speech. Free Speech Resolution A Resolution in support of free speech at institutions of higher education in North Ca rolina was passed Saturday by State Student Legislature meeting in Raleigh last week. The representatives from North Carolina colleges pass ed the bill by a vote of 90-2. The Resolution was introduc ed by Salem College at the suggestion of the University of North Carolina. Bob Powell of UNC spoke to the motion. The Resolution said in part th't ?nstitutions of higher ed ucation must serve as an open forum for different views and opinions, even if they are un pODular or divergent. "It is through the criticial examination of all alternatives that the fullest understanding of significant issues can be achieved," it said. The Resolution also express ed opposition to Communist doctrines. A copy of the resolution was sent to the Governor, the Pre sident of each institution of higher education represented by the Student Legislature, and each member of the Board of Truestees of the University of North Carolina. J ii i een president and vice presi- dent on the same ballot rather than on individual tickets as they have been in the past. Most of the present stu dent body leaders from both political parties have endors ed the change as well as many past student body leaders. Today is the first time that North Carolina students have had the opportunity to vote on the amendment change al though it has been presented in Student Legislature several times in the past few years. The proposal was brought up ast fall in the 33th Assembly but did not carry the two -thirds majority necessary for constitutional amendments to be put before the student body for a vote. The proposal was introduced again this spring by SP Ma jority Leader Don Wilson and Don Carson, legislator f r ojpa Craige, and carried the neces sary two - thirds vote in the le gislature. Britt Gordon, student body vice president, said, "This is something that is . definitely needed. Many times when the president and vice president are elected from different par ties, some disharmony occurs and the executive branch of student government is wea kened." Gordon said candidates from the same political party and similar philosophies of govern ment would strengthen the ex ecutive branch. "Most of the objections to the amendment have been mainly political ones," Gordon said. "Some people say the mi nority party would be hurt in its chances of getting a can didate into office if the presi dent and vice pres. are elec- ted on the same ballot. Others say the president would have too much power if the two were elected on the same bal lot." The polls will be opened from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. All students are eligible to vote, according to Winborne. He -said the results of the referen dum should be known by 9 p.m. today. The annual Orange County beauty pageant will be held in Memorial Hall at UNC March 26. Carolina coeds who are Orange County residents are in vited to enter. Contestants must have nev er been married, must be be tween 16 and 28 years old and must have been a resident of Orange County for six months. The winner will receive a $250 scholarship from Pepsi Cola Company, a wardrobe and the opportunity to compete for the title of Miss North Ca rolina later this year in Greens boro. The pageant is sponsored by the Chapel Hill - Carrboro and HUlsboro Jaycees. A tea will be held Sunday, March 20 in honor of the con testants and their mothers. Sat urday. March 26, parades will be held at 11:30 a.m. in Chap el Hill and Hillsboro. Saturday evening the contes tants and judges will attend a dinner. The pageant will be gin at 8 p.m. Special guests expected to attend the pageant will be Penny Clark, reigning Mis3 North Carolina, Patti Fields, reigning Miss Orange County, and Burl Ives, who is present ly a resident in Orange Countv. Tickets for the pageant are being sold by members of the Jaycees and may be purchas- ed at the door.