U.J.C. Library
Serials D-pt,
daPvar,c,0y and windy to-
JTo men's Coordinator
Istriews for Freshman
Women's Coordinator w ill be
held from Wednesday until
Friday. 3-5 pan. la the WKC
nice en Use right meiiasin
of Graham Memorial.
f lA A
I I i I Mr
-W-i v
75 Years of Editorial Freedom
-. Volume 75. Number 96
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 10, 196S
Founded Februarv 23. 1S93
raiwrrqiein
n
Uu
O jO
Car Fees
tii
Ni l tm
LP
i5
motorcycle and a car will have
to "decide which they want."
He also added, 'Temporary
permits will be harder to get.
In my oDinion. thev will be
By RICK GRAY
The Datlu Tar ?ri r
Rector of Traffic and Safe
ty Alonzo Squires said Friday,
1 jeve that it will be safe to
v. say that mnfnr uahiu
& win? fees next semester issued only in ermegency and
:::: will be uniform." hardship cases, not because we
: Tn u i don't want the students to have
making this statement, cars, but because there is no
:::: Squires was speculating on ac- place to put them."
f::tions which will come before
fvlhe Traffic and Safety Com
gmittee in their upcoming
: meeting to consider "traffic
&: regulations for next fall.
ft He based his prediction on
J:: the fact that the "parking
: sticker" is not a parking
f permit, but is for registration
purposes only. Various
i: registration stickers are valid
g only in particular zones.
Squires also stated that next
fjryear he will begin enforcing a
grule which has not been en
? forced in the past. That is the
: regulation stating that single
: students may register and
have, in the Chapel Hill vicini
ty, only one motor vehicle.
: Violation of this rule occurs
: mostly when students have
.both an automobile and a
::: motorcycle. Squires said that
jtfnext year students who have
$ peviously registered both a
Clarifying confusion that e has
arisen concerning students' liv
ing more than a 30-minute
walk from campus, Squires
asked that students who are
not sure whether they are
eligible to register a car under
such circumstances come by
his office and talk to him. He
added that the regulations
state that students living off
campus must have a 2.0 q p.
average, like all others
students, before they are
allowed to register a motor
vehicle.
"Students living more than
30 minutes from campus, and
not have a 2.0, must show that
sufficient housing is not
available on campus or within
a 30-minute walk," Squires
said.
He also noted that 40 cars
have been sent home this year
tfor various violations.
i ri :' J
k . - f V.
J V.
i
r'"- . ::
...
Ad !
v ::::
W-
' I
- - - f V.
f O
(LDEI1 li
o
v.v.'.v.v.v.
How Will Bikes Be Counted
. . under next year's parking regulations?::;;
i
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Some information presented
in the debate over the Carolina
Talent Search was criticized as
being false in Student
Legislature Thursday night.
Student Party floor leader
George Krichbaum, from
lower quad, charged the pro
ponents of the bill with "in
competnence and ineptness" in
presenting information about
programs similar to CTS.
An appropriation of $640 for
the Carolina Talent Search was
passed 33-13 Dec. 14.
Krichbaum told legislature
' that he found that the in
formation given about pro-
. grams at the University of
Kentucky and University of
; Georgia "was in gross error in "
stating the purpose and the ef
fects of these programs."
He said he had written the
University of Kentucky about
' their program 'and got a reply
from the director of ad
missions, saying there was no
.' program of that nature
there.
He also said he had written
the - University of Georgia
World News
BRIEFS
By United Press International
6New Im
age
Off
N
.Follows CIA Fray
about a program there and
found that the program there
was "an economic program
that informs students about
financial aid, and not one to
recruit Negroes."
Phil Clay, director of the
Carolina Talent Search, said
Friday that in the debate he
had not alluded to a program
at the University of Kentucky
but had said it was in the state
of Kentucky.
He said it was possible that
someone else speaking in favor
of the bill might have said the
University of Kentucky, but
that the program he was refer
ring to was at Western Ken
tucky University.
Clay also said that "what the
Carolina Talent Search pro
gram has in common with the
Georgia program is that both
encourage students outside the
recruiting network to apply to
college."
The difference between the
two, he said, is that CTS, as
funded by legislature, is aimed
predominantly at recruiting
Negroes, while the Georgia
program is aimed generally at
the underprivileged and seeks
Hemophiliac
Needs Blood
From Frats
to direct them to financial
help.
The appropriation for the
CTS was -later amended, on
Jan. 4, to include all un
derprivileged high school stu
dent in North Carolina.
Krichbaum said he found out
about the Georgia and Ken
tucky programs in writing to
the two schools to find out in
formation so he could amend
the Caroiiaa Talent Search to
include all persons.
Krickbaum said he intended
to carry the matter no further
but that he "simply uncovered
an error in information and
wished to expose it to
legislature."
UNC Group
Gathers To -
B
11
llSa-
lNiL
Riots Create 'Emergency State9
" ORANGEBURG, S.C. A "state of emergency" and dusk-to--dawn
curfew was imposed Friday in hope of avoiding repetition
of the battle between police and Negro college students that left
three Negro teenagers dead here Thursday nlight.
Gov. Robert McNair, his face grim as he 'announced the ex
ecutive order at Columbia, 35 miles from this farm center, called
it "one of the saddest days in the history oi South Carolina."
"Black power advocates" were blamed by the Governor for
sparking the clash at the adjacent Negro college campuses of
South Carolina State and daflin. McNair said a force of 50
highway patrolmen opened fire on 'Negroes only after repeated
firebomb and sniper attacks.
The battle, which left two South Carolina State College
students and a high school student dead and 36 persons injured,
was the South's worst racial clash in modern times in terms of
lives lost.
Pueblo Crew Near Talk Site
SEOUL Crew members of the seized U.S. intelligence ship ,
Pueblo were reported Friday to have been moved to the North
Korean city of Kaesung, just 10 miles north of the Panmunjom
truce village where U.S. and Communist negotiators' have been
discussing their fate.
The South Korean newspaper Shin-a Ilbo said its report came
(from "informed government sources." It said the Pueblo crew
was moved to Kaesung to be ready for any progress that may
come at the secret Panmunjom negotiations.
The newspaper said the 121st U.S. Army Evacuation Hospital,
located at Ascom City, 20 miles west of Seoul, was all prepared
for the repatriation of the 83 crewmemibers of the Pueblo, seized
by the North Koreans Jan. 23 off the North Korean coast.
It added that Gen. Charles H. Bonesteel III, commander-in-chief
of the U.N. Command in Korea, had instructed the hospital
to stand by for the turnover of crew members.
There was no confirmation of the newspaper's report.
Lindsay Asks For Guard CalhUp
NEW YORK Gov. Nelson A. Rockefller was under strong
public pressure Friday to call out the National Guard, as re
quested twice by Mayor John V. Lindsay, to clear the city's
streets of 80,000 tons of garbage and rubbish piled up during an
eight-day garbage collectors' strike.
The governor conferred day-long with officials and advisers in
his city office and National Guard officials were reported alerted
here and in Albany. Rockefeller was disappointed early Friday by
Lindsay's refusal to accept the recommendation of a five-man
panel appointed by the governor to find a solution to the health
imperilling dispute.
The panel suggested a $425 annual pay increase Ifor the 10,000
striking members of the Uniformed Sanitation Workers' Union
and the union immediately voted to accept.
Khe Sanh Communists Get Supplies
SAIGON Communist field commanders, taking advantage
of the gaping hole in U.S. lines at Lang Vei, Friday poured
troops, ammunition and food across the Laotian border for the
building battle of Khe Sanh. American iforces at least partially
plugged the flow with fearsome artillery and air attacks.
UjS. Navy pilots flew a rare mission in South Vietnam,
blasting ai convoy of 20 camouflaged North Vietnamese trucks
and tanks which had just unloaded reinforcements at Lang Vei
the American "Green Beret" camp which fell to the Communists
Wednesday, opening up a major infiltration route.
The Navy fliers, including Lt. Gary Holmes, 23, of Tillamook,
Ore., and Lt. A. Gene Corsini 26 of Pittsburg Kan., reported
destroying two tanks and two trucks and seeing several North
Vietnamese bodies in a grove along Highway 9 the main route in
the area. - .
U.S. Air Force B52 stratoforts dropped tons of bombs into the
border mountains.
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
. The - National Student
Association is taking on a new
look as a result of the exposure
of its involvement with the
C. I. A., says David Kiel, who
is on its National Supervisory .
Board
The new trend is "towards
more regional initiative," Kiel
said.
As part of the new 'trend
NSA is holding a Southern
Area Conference on Educa
tional Reform the first NSA
Southern, regional meeting
Feb. 22-25 in Atlanta, Ga.
The emphasis on regional in
itiative, Kiel explained Thurs
day, comes because "NSA now
realizes that if they are to be a
truly democratic, group, their
strength will hve to come
from student governments
across the country."
Formerly, he said, NSA
didnt need to depend on stu
dent governments for strength
because they could, rely on file
CIA.
The southern regional con
ference is being held because
workshops at the conference.
puck Ctoldstein, ' (director of
the Experimental CoUege,-wilr"
lead a worshop on "The Ex
perimental College and Free
Universities."
Bob Manekin, chairman of
the Student Stress Committee,
heads the discussion of "Stu
dent Services."
; "The Residence College"
workshop will be led by Parker
Hudson, governor of Morrison
Residence College.
"Carolina's Student Govern
. ment is among the leading stu
dent governments in the South
and nation," according to Kiel,
"so we have a great deal to of
fer at the conference."
Howeveri that still doesn't
, mean we dont have a lot to
learn," he added. :
--Kiel cited the University-'nof
. Alabama, Georgia Tech, and .
Duke University as Southern
schools with some programs'
more advanced than what UNC -has.
,
Kiel hopes to get enough
money from Student
Legislature to send 1 5
delegates to the conference.
Interviews to select 15
delegates will be held today
and Monday from 3:30 to 5
p.m. in Roland Parker HI.
Interviews to select UNC's 15
delegates to , the conference
will be held Monday from 3:30
5 pjm. in Roland Parker HI.
w
e're 'Worldng'
On Hours Change
All UNC fraternity brothers
and pledges, as well as any
other students, are asked to
donate blood to a hemophiliac
-in Memorial "Hospital, ac
cording to Randy Myer,
; Chairman of the Inter
Fraternity Council.
The recipient, Alexander
. Lewis, 16, son of a UNC
graduate student, needs 40
pints of blood in the next two
weeks.
Donors of all blood-types are
asked to give so that the blood
bank can maintain a sufficient
amount of blood for all cases.
Donors in this case should be
sure to tell those at the bank
that the blood is for Lewis's
case. .
The IFC blood bank, now in
its second year, claims a
registration of two-thirds of all
UNC fraternity members. '
By BRIAN CLAIMING and
FRANK BALLARD
Of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Richard Nixon's ideas are
"in the evolving stage," but his
platform is easier to grasp
than other Republican
hopefuls', the UNC Students
for Nixon president said Thurs
day might at the campaign
group' s or ganizatio n
meeting. v
"He speaks more clearly
when he gives his positions in
speeches and articles," Jeff
Gayner, a graduate student in
the history department told the
five men students who at
tended the meeting in the
lounge of Graham Memorial.
On Feb. 1, Nixon announced
his candidacy in. the New
Hampshire primary in a letter
to all registered Republicans in "
New Hampshire. Gayner said
portant issues in "several ma
jor speeches hell make while
campaigning."
Now that Nixon has an
nounced his candidacy, "a lot
of his stands will be coming
up," he added.
People working on the local
level will decide the presiden
tal election, Gayner said, call
ing North Carolina
"significant" in the national
political scene.
"This is especially true at
the Republican National
Convention; North Carolina
somewhat of a swing state in
elections it was close in '60
and '64."
i I
3 Suspended By HC
Dean of. Student Affairs CO.
Cathey said Friday his of f ice
'there are many problems that was "working on" the proposal
to abolish closing hours for
senior women and those over
21. -
Cathey blamed the delay on
the fact that the University is
a public institution.
"This "is not a private
imiversity, responsible only to
a board of trustees," said
Cathey. "I am responsible to
tiie five million people of this
state. If this were a private in
stitution, there would be much
faster action. We don't have
the freedom they have at a
private institution."
Cathey said he was in favor
are unique to me South," ac
cording to Kiel.
"It's good for Southerners to
get together and .talk about
their own situation," Kiel
said.
The national staff of NSA, in- .
eluding two UNC graduates
will be on hand to provide the
Southern member schools with
information about what's hap
pening across the nation, ac
cording to Kiel.
Former Student Body Presi- .
dent Bob Powell and former
NSA cordinator Teddy
O'Toole will be on a panel
discussing "What's Wrong with of giving coeds who are 21 "the
Higher Education." full rights of an adult" but ad-
Three UNC students will lead ded, "we can't always do what
we'd like to do."Cathey said
the argument of adulthood
does not always adequately
support a proposal.
"Last month I tried to get a
liberalization of the drinking
rules. I used the fact that 8500
of our students are over 21 to
support my argument. I fail
ed." said Cathey..
Cathey said his office was
working on the proposal but
said he was not free to say
anything about it at this
time.
"It would not be fair to the
people who are working on this
with me," said Cathey. "At the
present time all I can do is
urge you to be patient. I will
make an announcement at the
proper time."
Two junior men and one
freshman woman were suspen
ded Thursday night in honor
court trials.
s The men were suspended for
cheating one in a B.A. 122
course, and the other in Math
134.
The freshman woman was
charged with leaving her
dormitory on a Thursday night
and not returning until Sunday
without signing out. She was
further alleged to have travel
ed after closing hours, and to
have lied to her housemother,
dormitory p resid e nt , and
graduate ocunselor upon her
return.
After being found guilty, she
was sentenced to indefinite
suspension. She will be able to
petition WHG for reinstate
ment at the end of this
semester.
In another Thursday night
case, MHC found a senior male
guilty of a campus code of
fenseurinating in public view
beside a fraternity house. The
occurrence was noticed by two
couples walking past.
He received an official repri
mand. Another senior male was
charged with (1) entering a
private hallway in a women's
dormitory, (2) entering a
coed's room, and (3) entering
the room against the coed's
will.
He was found not guilty of
the third charge, but convicted
on the first two and given a
court reprimand.
Uichard Nixon
. . .gets support
"The state will be a highly
contested area. A close
gubernatorial election will
enhance interest 'in the
Republican- "Par t y
nationally.' " '
Gayner also discussed past
campaigns, recruitment plans,
future tactics and upcoming
meetings.
"We're working under Youth
for Nixon in Washington but
to the campus. Since there is
no presidental preference
primary in North Carolina,
we'll get -Nixon out into the
public. There's an information
gap as compared to other can
didates and we'll set up tables
and distribute Eterature."
At the group's next meeting
Feb. 26 in the James social
room, Gayner will play a tape
recording of Nixon's ap-
. pearance on the Merv Griffin
television show several months
ago.
Using the tape and some of
Nixon's articles, the discussion
will center on his positions on
Southeast Asia and urban af
fairs. Gayner said that "Nixon
- himself' . will be viewed,
especially his "loser image."
Gayner and three appointees
plan to draft a constitution and
set of by-laws for the organiza
tion. They will be proposed and
officers elected at the Feb. 26
meeting.
1 1
'jfDufce Spirit
fcot Violent!
v y.:m
fSuit Claims 1
Supper-Discussion Symposia To- Begin
By FRANK BALLARD
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
The Cutting Edge Symposia,
a series of five supper
discussion programs for the
University community
members interested in new
development of different study
areas, has openings for 40 ap
plicants. The Symposia will provide
opportunities for UNC faculty
to discuss theiw own
disciplines at the "cutting
edge" where breakthroughs
are being made and - new
values applied.
- Settings for the serious
academic discussions will be
five light buffet suppers begin-
ning at 5:30 p.m. in the homes
of five professors. The talks
and discussions will follow at
7:00 p.m.
Persons interested in
participating may apply at 102,
Y-BuildingbyFeb. 15.
Walter A. Sedelow, Dean of
the School of Library Science
and professor of Information
Science, will deliver the first
talk Feb.. 16, in the home of Dr.
and Mrs. Charles Wright, 113
Keith Drive. His topic will con
cern the impact of information
science and computers on
education.
The Symposia is the result
iasi
Danforth Associate Program.
The Danforth Foundation is a
philanthropic organization lo
cated in St. Louis.
Dr. Wright stressed the fact
that the meetings are "for all
the community of the Universi
ty administration too." He
said the membership selection
will seek a "high degree of in
dividual expression at the
discussion," and "a balanced
distribution from the diverse
fields."
of olans which began
October, by tri-chairmen Dr. "The title for the program
Charles D. Wright, professor of developed out of our early
. planning for meetings where
English; Norm Gustaveson, people from different
UMCA director; and William disciplines could get together
Coates, Episcopal chaplain. and talk about where their
Dr. Wright is one of two Dan- areas of study are at the 'cut
forth Associates on campus ting edges " Dr. Wrright ex
and the Symposia is a special pia
cne semester project of tne "Informally and w i t h o u t
structure these talks do happen
over coffee, for instance.
But there are some things you
can achieve by structuring the
situation."
"There's a limit to what the
University can do in small
group study. This structuring
adds to what the university
community can do together'
he continued.
"To achieve continuity, the
applications are understood to
be for participation in the en
tire set of five symposia.
If these symposia are as suc
cessful as we hope they will be,
well submit a proposal for
similar symposium next fall to
the Danforth Foundation."
The other speakers schedul
ed include Religion Professor
Ruel W. Tyson, who will speak
March 1. on new trends ,in
religions. Dr. Robert Wilson,
chairman of the Department of
Mental Health, School of
Public Health, will be. we'll
submit a proposal for similar
symposium next fall to the
Danforth Foundation."
The other speakers schedul
ed include Religion Professor
Ruel W. Tyson, who will speak
March 1, on cew trends in
religion. Dr. Robert Wilson,
chairman of the Department of
Mental Health, School of
Public Health, win discuss
4tSocial Medicine" on March
8.
Dr. Michael McVaugh of the
History department will speak
March 29 on his speciality,
"The History of Science." New
trends in sociology will oe
viewed b UNC sociologist
Hubert M. Blalock on April
5.
GREENSBORO (UPI) g
The father of an Atlan- '&
ta youth filed a $151,000 :
suit in federal court Fri-?:
day against a Dnkef?
University student h e jjj:
claimed hit his son in the
face after a Northg
Carolina-Duke basketball :
game last year. :
AT sT1tti TlrtTi!px-i nt'A
Atlanta brought the suit in :
W W. A A A
M mm mj mm j mWAM.- W w
- . A mm m -m m
rT 1 T rm rr y I mmm - vwr m mrm. m
I P Wft I 1 I 4 II III lilllilll
: was a guesi z a uuice :::
; fraternity house March U, S
: 1257. and was watchin?:::
r? mm nnvna yd i DV rin m r
" AA A. E I A m mrm m
mr
I Clin W f 1 I 9 mrm gmmmy A
; game rtewman nil tne.;
; youth in the face in an?
' csstairs room of th hfm: :
r H a
i f i aril niTin .-r ninT namnfr
A