U.W.C. Library 'Serials Dept, Box 870 Free Flick Tbe free flick tonight is Sun set Boulevard, starring Wil liam Ifolden, Gloria Swanson and Eric von Strohein. 4 Mm w Freshman Grades A happy not to freshmen: tbe General College reports the midterm grades will prob ably be sent oat next week just La time to get home be fore Easter. s The South's Largest College Newspaper- All American Award Winner Volume 74, Number 133 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA. FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1966 Founded Fctoruacy 3, LE93 peaker Ban Suit Filed In Federal Court Wht Wmlg 5$ Beware By CAROL GALLANT DTH Staff Writer Last In A Series We students are a hardy lot. We are also h poor lot, so we tend to congregate together in less than exclusive clubs and restaurants in Europe. Let the "rich American tourists" (we start thinking like the na tives) have the Champs Ely sees area. We have Boulevard St. Michel. Constitutional Put Off Until The meeting of the Consti- tutional Council planned for ysterday at 3 p.m. was post- poned until after the Easter holidays because of the lack of adequate preparation by one of the involved parties. Bill Robinson, chairman of the Council said some of the parties involved in the appeal challenging an executive order by Student Body President Paul Dickson did not learn of the meeting until Wednesday night. Dickson's executive order with Ed Freakley Got You Faunts I've been waiting for this moment. It is now time to reveal FAUNTLEROY! To tell the truth he is not one person. He has been many. As you know he began during the football season. At that time he was Gene Rector, the DTH Assistant Sports Editor. After the football season Sandy Treadwell, manager of the UNC baseball team and sports writer, took the column over. It was during Treadwell's reign that Faunts had his roughest time. Like picking Duke over Kentucky, etc. Carol Gallant even wrote the column once. Now SEBASTIAN is taking over. VICTORY. Faunts is dead. Check The Date What a day for news. Beatniks, peacniks and otherniks announced today that they are in support of the U. S. stand in Viet Nam ... as long as someone else is standing there. The KKK asked the NAACP to join them in their fight against the Lumbee Indians. Carolina coeds were granted unlimited hours, while Caro lina gentlemen have to be in by 7:30 every night. Liquor has been barred from the state and the University lost 11,000 in enrollment. Chapel Hill Police solved two cases yesterday. Chapel Hill merchants have slashed all their prices 50 per cent. They are now only 23.2 per cent higher than else where. Lenoir Hall had a good meal. Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson's title has been changed to Permanent Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. "Silent Sam" fired a 21-gun salute when Otelia walked by. The UNC band had an excellent performance Some where. UNC cheerleaders where awarded trophies for being in the best of cheer at football games. The Daily Tar Heel lost a million dollar libel suit be cause of a certain column. It's All Over The last time around. Next time you open The Daily Tar Heel a new editor will be at the helm along with new staff members. It will be a different paper, for papers reflect the personalities of those who run them. I think that you will all agree that The Daily Tar Heel has had its Vdowns" this year. You probably won't all agree that we have also had our "ups." But we hope we have done a good job of bringing you the news and providing each reader with something extra even if it was only 'the crossword puzzle. It has been a lot of fun and those of us who are leaving wouldn't trade a moment, well maybe only one or two. I hope Carolina Style has been a success. Perhaps it will be carried on. This column was originally the idea of our managing editor, Pat Stith. If it is a success the credit belongs to the whole staff. It was their ideas and observations that made the column whatever it was. IF IT has not been a success then I'll take the credit for that. Thanks should also go to all the groups (cheerleaders, coaches, banks, etc.) for providing material, unknowingly of course. You can't win them all. But we think The Daily Tar Heel has had its share of victories. Goodbye Caroliaa we will miss you. You have a lot of Style. Of Roman Men! You'll find half the joy of traveling comes from the oth- er students you meet, foreign students (of course you are the one that is foreign now) and the older people also. This is nice because who wants to travel some 6,000 miles to meet a kid from N. C. State, or an insurance man from Poughkeepsie. By following your guide book for students, Let's Go To Council Meet After Easter prohibits fraternities and so- rorities with discriminatory clauses in their constitutions from receiving Student Gov- eminent funds for the pur- chase of televisions. The appeal being brought before the Council by Hugh Blackwell and Steve Salmony is based on whether the Pres ident of the Student Body has power which grants him the authority to unilaterally block the execution of legislative en actments. Steve Bennett f Europe, you can go to the popular clubs and restaurants, Better still. Don't be bashful, Talk to those students sitting next to you in the cafe or restaurant. istart a conversa tion over breakfast in your hotel. If you are alone, other stu dents in groups often will see you and ask you to join them. Girls as well as boys hitch hike around Europe. However, groups only is a safe policy. And since we American girls may be a little rusty at hitch hiking, I suggest the train. Travel by train in Europe, is not luxury, but it's easy and cheap. You can secure a "Eurailpass" (check Europe On Five Dollars A Day for addresses) for $180 for two and one-half months. This serves as your ticket any where. The train ride may be long, but this gives you valuable time to study your currency book and learn a few import ant vocabulary words you may need, like "Help . . . I'm starving ... I want my mommie." Sometimes your compart ment companions speak in for eign tongues, so you sit and smile at each other for sev eral hundred miles. If they do speak English you may be be seiged with questions. "I have a cousin in New York. Do you know him? Sometimes the response may not be favorable. On a train leaving France, I heard the word "Ameri- (Continued on Page 4) Med School To Renovate Eight Village Apartments By STEVE LACKEY DTH Staff Writer The eight Victory Village apartments on Mason Farm Rd. near Pittsboro Road va cant since Sept. of 1964 will be renovated by the Depart ment of Pharmacology and Toxicology beginning in May. Jim Turner, assistant dean of the UNC Medical School, said yesterday that plans for the renovation have been in the making since Jan. 3. He explained the long wait during which no students could live in the units by saying that the University had planned to demolish all the units. In fact, demolition had begun when the medical school saw a possible use for the struc ture and requested that they be saved. By the time the request was approved al the plumbing and wiring had been torn out of the eight apartments. Students living in other Victory Village apartments had been author ized to take the old water heaters and fixtures from the apartments and had done so. The result of the demolition is that the apartments have been standing, but uninhabi table since Sept., 1965. There were two alternatives open to the medical school: replace the units with trailers or ren ovate the existing structures. The latter choice was made because of the temporary na ture of the facilities. The pressure exerted by the medical school for the destruc tion of Victory Vilage apart ments stems from the fact that the Federal government and the National Institute of Health have given the medical school $17 million over the next sev en years all for research facilities in the fields of phar macology and toxicology. The most logical place for the tox icology complex to be located Bids Reviewed By Puh Board The Publications Board yes terday reviewed bids for print ing the 1967 YACK. Hugh Blackwell, board chairman, said all bids have not been submitted to the board but the chairman and editors of the YACK will open any others which are receiv ed during the holidays to con sider them, The awarding of the contract will be made after the spring vacation. Jlj. was to the south of the pres ent medical buildings, thus some of Victory Village had to go. Renovation contracts for the units have been approved and construction should begin by May 1 and be completed ap proximately four months later. Motorcycle Owners May Be Restricted By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer Don't be surprised to find a new set of motorcycle regu lations when you get back from Easter vacation. One of the new rules may be NO mo torcycles allowed for fresh men. Dean of Men William Long said yesterday that the Student-Faculty Committee on Traffic and Safety will meet the Tuesday after vacation to discuss a report compiled by the School of Public Health. Lanny Shuff, the only stu dent representative, said he had some proposals to submit to tbe committee concerning additional student parking spaces, a change in the time student cars are allowed on campus hiring the day, the extension of partial parking privileges to T St'cker hold ers, and the possibility of re quiring faculty members to pay for their parking stickers. Presently, faculty members receive stickers free, while students pay $5, and T Stick er holders, who cannot park on campus, must pay $2.50. Campus Security Chief Ar thur Beaumont indicated yes terday that when Shuff had at tempted to present his propos als at the last meeting of the committee, Dean Long had asked him to wait until the next meeting, at which time they would be the main topic of discussion. However, Dean Long stress ed yesterday that only the study from the School of Pub lic Health would be discussed at the next meeting. The study says that "al though 55 per cent of the ac cidents involved freshmen, this reflects only that this was the largest group at risk," since more freshmen own motor cycles. Freshmen are not allowed cars. All but $1,500 of the renova tion costs will be shouldered by the NIH. Since their grant does not provide for exterior improvements, the roof will have to be replaced by other unrestricted grants. No state appropriated funds will be used in the work. Most motorcycle accidents per 100 owners, the study says, involve seniors, with fresh men coming in second. Chief Beaumont feels the motorcycle problem would be alleviated by reducing the number of motorcycles at Car olina. He did not mention any single group of cycle owners. Long declined to say wheth er the committee would take action on motorcycle owners, saying only that the commit tee was an advisory body. phi .1,1 i.iiwnii.i i uipwpn.ii npimiiiiiii.il j.i .mi I iijjin i in i npfwiu.i ' , ' " wrmr-i- ' -""j, i" . . - ' ',J-jwjwr;r I , ..-.."ix . ' 'I II ' -viil -sr?- V-;"-1 I -t v - if V- --Tfje;. V 1 Lr1...- --- J:X If rz BEACH BOUND Tri-Delts hoist aloft their airline tickets in anticipation of a spring Tacation in Nassaa along with 38 other Chancellor Holds Speakers Barred By ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer Student leaders filed suit in Greensboro Federal Court yesterday against North Carolina speaker restrictions governing state supported institutions. Their action came immediately after Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson denied a request that Communist Herbert Aptheker and Frank Wilkinson be allow ed to speak on campus. Sitterson, Consolidated University President William C. Friday and the UNC Board of Trustees were named as defendants in the suit. The complaint, filed in the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, named 14 plaintiffs. They are Paul Dickson, president of the Student Body, Bob Powell, president-elect of the Student Body, George Nichol son, chairman of the Carolina Forum, Jim Medford and Eu nice Milton, presidents of the YM-YWCA. Also, Eric Van Loon, presi dent of the Carolina Political Union, Ernie McCrary, editor of The Daily Tar Heel, Gary Waller, and Stu Matthews, members of Students for a Democratic Society, John Greenbacker, president of the Di-Phi, Aptheker, Wilkinson, and two students, John Mc Sween and Henry N. Patter son Jr. The suit was filed about 5 p.m. Sitterson announced his decision about 4:30. In a letter to Dickson, Sit terson said that when he made his decision March 2 concern ing the two speakers he hoped that the matter would be closed for this academic year. "I wish to make it clear that this action does not preclude later consideration of either or both of these individuals or any other proposed invitation by any authorized student group," Sitterson said. In his letter to Dickson, Sit terson said that his decision was "in accord with the vir tually unanimous advice of both (advisory) committees." Sitterson also said that his original decision to ban Apthe ker and Wilkinson March 2 was endorsed by both the Student-Faculty Committee on Vis iting Speakers and the Faculty Advisory Committee. Sitterson explained his rea sons for refusing speaking privileges to the two in this manner: "The two speakers in ques tion have appeared and spoken in Chapel Hill this spring, al though under special circum stances, of which we are all aware. "Nevertheless, students did (Continued on Page 4) loser Improving After Accident The hospital has reported that Allen Moser, the fresh man who was injured in Wed nesday night's car-motorcycle collision, is improving. He has been aken out of the in tensive care unit of the hos- pitaL His riehl lw? was broken in the accident. NCSU Head Ok's Gus Hall, Jones RALEIGH (AP) Commu- are not covered by the Speak nist party chairman Gus Hall er ban Law. and Klan grand dragon J. Robert Jones will receive in vitations to speak at N. C. State University this spring. Announcement that State Chancelor John T. Caldwell had given the university's Young Democratic Club per- party, the university said. Un mission to invite the speak- der the amended Speaker Ban ers, both of whom would be Law and regulations adopted covered by the state's amend- by the University of North ed Speaker Ban Law, was Carolina Board of Trustees, in MADE Thursday. vitations for such speakers It also was revealed that the must come through the uni Young Democratic Club plans versity administration, to issue invitations to speak to Caldwell notified J. Leonai Yale University professor Farris, president of the Young Stauehton Lynd. who recently Democratic Club Wednesday, went on an unauthorized peace mission to North Viet Nam, and Robert Welch, head of the John Birch Society. The club does not need permission to invite Lynd and Welch, who Draft Board Lists Official Data On Deferment Tests G. O. Reitzel, Chairman of Local Board No. 69, Orange County, has just received in formation concerning the Se lective Service College Quali fication Test. Reitzel said the Director of Selective Service, Lt. General Lewis B. Hershey, has an nounced that additional cri teria will be provided for use by local boards in their de termination as to the retention or reclassification of students in Class II-S. Science Research Associates Chicago has been awarded a contract to prepare and ad minister the Selective Service College Qualification Test and to forward scores made to the local boards of registrants who are college students and high school seniors or any potential II-S registrants. The test will consist of 150 multiple choice items with 3 hours permitted for comple- tion. Generally, the test will UNC Sorority Girls, Firm 9 Again But official permission is necessary for both Hall and Jones since they pleaded the Fifth Amendment in congres sional hearings. Hall also is a member of the Communitst that he was approving the is- suance of invitations to Hall and Jones on the recommen dation oi the university's Joint student - faculty standing com mittee on visiting speakers. be divided into four basic cate gories: reading comprehen sion, verbal relations, arith metic reasoning, and data in terpretation. It is described as a general aptitude type test. Three dates have been set for giving the examination: May 14, May 21, and June 3 at 37 locations in North Carolina. Mr. Reitzel says that applica tions to take the test are avail- -able at all local boards, and a registrant may procure one, from any local board. The test will provide an ad ditional criterion for making reclassifications from the II-S pool in addition to the two which are now provided. At present, the two criteria are: (1) The registrant is a full time student, and (2) He is making satisfactory progress. The test will in addition pro vide an indication as to his aptitude with respect to other college students. DTH Pboto by Jock Lanterer.

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