Page 2
THE TAR HEEL
Thursday, August It, 1966
Agreement Clears Way For Ban Hearing
Attorneys for both sides in,
the Speaker Ban suit filed a
stipulation on points on which
they agree in U. S. District
Court in Greensboro Monday,
clearing the way for the case
to be heard. m x
The 34-page stipulation con
sisted mostly of documents
and papers and both sides said
they agreed that they were
Playmakcrs
Open Tonight
The, Carolina Playmakers
will present their 211th bill of
original one-act plays at 7:30
P.M. tonight and tomorrow
night in the Playmaker Thea
tre on the Chapel Hill campus.
The plays, written during the
first summer session, are
"Fly Away Home" by Becky
Engle, "Heaven Only Knows"
by Betty Setzer, and "Yankee
Stew" by Gene Corpening.
They are being directed by
Barry Startz, Alice Yeaman,
and Alex Nislick, respectively.
Following the performance
of each play, a discussion will
be held between the author and
and the audience under the
chairmanship of Frank Dur
ham, visiting Professor of
Dramatic Art from the Univer
sity of South Carolina.
Admission is free.
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Check Your
Special Field
-Art
Biography
Civil War
Detective Stories
English Literature
Fiction
German Books
History
Limited Editions
North Carolina
Poetry
Religion
Science-Fiction
Sociology
-Southern Literature
West and Frontier
Whatever you've checked,
there's a dusty treasure for
you in the Old Book Corner
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119 East Franklin Street
Open Till 10 P.M.
prepared by the persons who
said they prepared them.
On August 25, attorneys for
both sides will appear before
Chief Judge Edwin M. Stanley
for "further discussion of all
matters pertinent to a hearing
of the case on its merits."
A date for hearing of the
case by a three - judge court
is expected to be set at that
time.
Eleven UNC students head
ed by former Student Body
President Paul Dickson and
DAILY TAR HEEL Editor Er-
GI Checks Mailed
The first checks under the
GI Bill education program,
more than 16,000 of them,
were mailed out last month by
the Veterans Administration
to veterans attending sum
mer schools throughout the
nation.
The first payments were for
the month of June and most
of them were received by July
20.
Three Coeds Guilty
Coeds Tried
Three Carolina Coeds were
tried before the Women's
Council for two kinds of cam
pus code violations within the
past week, Mary Bruce Batte,
Attorney General for Wom
en, reported Wednesday.
One coed was charged with
bringing alcoholic beverages
into her dormitory. She was
found guilty and given an of
ficial reprimand.
Another coed, charged with
staying out all night in the
Chapel Hill area, was found
guilty and given a definite sus
pension for one semester.
A third coed was charged
with returning to her dorm two
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nie McCrary filed the suit last
March. The suit asks that the
amended Speaker Ban Law be
declared unconstitutional.
Two controversial speakers
Frank Wilkinson and Her
bert Aptheker also signed
the suit with the students. Wil
kinson and Aptheker were bar
red from speaking on campus
under provisions of the 19G3
law, amended by a special
session of the General Assem
bly in 1965.
The suit is against Chancel
lor J. Carlyle Sitterson, Con
According to W. R. Phillips,
manager of the Winston-Salem
VA Regional Office, payments
will be made only after the
VA receives the certificates of
attendance from the veteran,
or from the schools.
In addition, Phillips warns
students enrolling under the
GI Bill in the fall that it will
take about two months for
the first check to arrive.
News Review
hours late, found guilty and
penalized with 10 nights of
campusment.
Alcoa Grants
The Alcoa Foundation has
announced an initial grant of
$2,250 to the University for the
purpose of establishing three
scholarships in the amount of
$750 each. These have been
awarded to students who will
be entering freshmen this fall
intending to major in the lib
eral arts or business admin
istration. The check was pre
sented to the University by Mr.
W. B. Russell, Manager of the
Aluminum Company of Ameri
ca Works at Badin, N. C, and
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solidated University President
William C. Friday and G o v .
Dan Moore.
Aptheker is the director of
the American Institute for
Marxist Studies. Wilkinson is
executive director of the Na
tional Committee to , Abolish
the House Un-American Acti
vities Committee.
The law, as it passed origin
Former Student Jumps Bail
A former University gradu
ate student who had been char
ged with illegal possession of
narcotics has skipped bond.
James H. Cannon, 33, of 109
Carr St., Carrboro, failed to
appear for trial Tuesday in
Orange County Superior Court,
and is being sought by the
Orange County Sheriffs De
partment. Cannon's case went before a
grand jury in Hillsborough
Monday which returned a true
bill of indictment. When Can
non failed to appear for his
Of Code Violations
Mr. A. N. Doty of the Com
pany's Pittsburgh offices.
The Alcoa Foundation in
tends to continue to support
these scholarships in the years
to come, and the University
plans to include these scho
larships in the years to come,
among its distinguished
awards to be made to students
with financial need, with at
least one of the Awards being
made to a student from Stan
ley County or the surround
ing area in which Alcoa has
extensive operations.
New Division
A new Division of Education
and Research in Community
Medical Care has been estab
lished at the University School
of Medicine here to more ef
fectively plan and coordinate
the increasing activities in
community medicine.
Dr. W. Reece Berryhill, pro
fessor of medicine and dean
emeritus, has been appointed
director of the division and
Dr. Carl B. Lyle, assistant pro
fessor of medicine will serve
as assistant director.
Dr. Isaac M. Taylor, dean
of the medical school, said in
his announcement of the new
You'll Never
Strike Out
When You
Send A
STUDIO
CARD
From
ally, forbade known Commun
ists and persons who had plea
ded the Fifth Amendment in
loyalty cases from speaking on
campus.
In November of last year the
law was amended to place the
authority for regulation of
speakers in the hands of the
trustees and then into the
hands of the administrators.
trial at 10:30 Tuesday morn
ing, Superior Court Judge Ha
milton H. Hobgood ordered a
capias, the arrest and presen
tation of Cannon in court.
Barry Winston, Cannon's
attorney said Tuesday that he
hadn't seen Cannon and had
no idea where he was.
Officials searched for C a n -non
all Tuesday without find
ing him. Cannon's wife and
three children were still at
home in Carrboro, according
to Orange County Chief Depu
ty A. C. Maddry.
division, "As we define the
role of the new division in the
medical school and as its work
develops, coordination with the
Medical Program under the
heart disease, cancer and
stroke legislation will be im
portant. University Money
The University of North Ca
rolina at Chapel Hill received
$2,885,622 from alumni, par
ents, corporate matching- and
foundation gifts during 1964-65,
a study by the American Alum
ni Council reports.
Alumni donations amounted
to $731,906 of the total, com
ing from 10,522 donors.
Carolina trailed N. C. State
University slightly which re
ceived a total of $2,920,218, al
though alumni gifts amounted
to only $508,857, from 9,235 do
nors. The University of North Ca
rolina at Greensboro trailed
with $252,017 in total gifts.
In Massachusetts it is illeg
al to travel with a horsedrawn
sleigh "unless there are at
least three bells attached to
some part of the harness."