v, uiorary SsriaLs Dopt. Box 070 Chaorsi Hill, li.C. Fair And Cool tl!Sn"raI!y,!air aad cl hi?!,. 2 ,coUer M evening. Highs In the lower rot Considerable cIou with light coming by davra. 27514 India And Its Cnliurc A tte first clsss cf India And Its Cfclisrre will meet at 7:23 I If I i ft cyjui y E .a. ia lit Sassier this erea- a- 75 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75. Number 102 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1963 Founded Febrenrv 23. 1S?3 T! J J Q7 Jf KJf(UZit UOKMU VJLL VVLOuw iuskasu (QUI nfl M 1 1 f 11 2ml M - . 7 . ' .J i S ' . , x . , '" ' i i jV; "ill V , I'M : ' K J 1 .in i ,,. ,r , .ii.. i null, r 11 mi t.rt- - n - i nniiiM J By BILL AJILOXG oj The Dofly Tar Heel Sta A second Negro protest Mardi through downtown Chapel Hill climaxed Friday night with the burning of an ef figy of South Carolina Gov. Robert McNair on the steps of the Post Office. A crowd of some 100 persons mostly Negro members of the militant Black Student Movement, with 40 or so white sympathizers cheer ed louy as the flaming dum my fell to the ground. . "This is Gov. McNair," BSM member Juan Cofield shouted from the steps. "The system 111 uot to Columbia Street, north to Franklin Street, across Colum bia, across Franklin, to the police station, across Columbia again and back to Franklin. . Up and down Franklin Street the marchers crossed at each crosswalk. The line stretched out so long that the front of the line would be in one crosswalk as fee rear of it was in another. Friday night traffic halted along Franklin Street as police stopped it from breaking through the line. A few cars along the march route honked their horns, but there were few taunts yelled. Bystanders mostly just stood the Black Student merit. "All I can say is We did it again,' " Dobbins told them. This is not the end of our pretests, though," he con tinued. "We will not let Orangeburg be forgotten." William Rittick, a faculty member in fee School of Social Work and the BSM's faculty advisor, then spoke to the group about the arrest of former instructor Howard Fuller in Durham Thursday night He said Fuller had been ar rested for no reason, and bad Move- been beaten by police there for being the "head nigger." Rittick then told the group that there would be a second protest march in Durham Fri day night, and if anyone should go over there, "Go prepared." "I was in on the planning of this march tonight," he said, "and I hope thereH be no blood, shed. But if there is, I hope it will be bonkies blood that flows." At that time, a -white man burst through the crowd and asked in impassioned tones: "What .happened at Orangeburg? I ask my people, but they won't tell me. What happened at Orangeburg?" -Rittick stepped up to him, pressing his face close to fee man's, and told him about the police slayisgs of three college students during demonstrations-turned-riots there last week. The man later identified himself as James C. Lewis, 47, a cataloguer in the University's law library. Dobbins told the group that next week there will be a fund-and-food drive to support a Negro boycott of .all Orargeburg stores. About 150 onlookers pressed silently, or commented among nrmmd the formation oi marchers as Cofield shouted a speech to them. "If we must die," he told them, "let it not be as dogs Love themselves. One besan singing. "I A Parade." The marchers were given heavy protection by Chapel DTU Ssjf Photo by 1S2S2 UeGOWAlt Governor McNair is burned in effigy on post office steps In last night's demonstration against Orangeburg deaths. For everv 1.000 of their blows, Hill police, who turned out in . .... i ii . r .. - .i let us strike back witn a aeaur blow. "Tf we must die wife our backs to the wall, let us die fighting." Except for fee single cheer, the marchers were silent. Following the burning and Cofield's speech, they began their parade back to Y Court. The march route Friday night was fee same as it'hadT been Thursday: from Y Court about the same force as they do for home basketball : games. There were no incidents. - Back at Y Court, feejgroup gathered around Preston Dob bins, a 22-year-old junior from Chicago, who is chairman of Black Power Defeated; Drug Resolution Passes n nt? 1 ( J.- 9674 SDS Views War's Effect On Colleges Tar Heels Face South Carolina Tomigh By LARRY KEITH of Ths Daily Tar Heel Staff CHARLOTTE Clemson's scrappy but rugged Tigers pulled third-ranked North Carolina down to their level before the Tar Heels jetted away for a 96-74 North-South Doubleheader basketball vic tory (here Friday night. Carolina, apparently more "'the second half, -finished ' witih 18 points. 12, in the final 20 minutes:. Rusty Clark had 13 anid Bill Bunting 10, 8 in a very good first half. With each team shooting much less than 50 per cent" from the floor UNC made 41 of 89 and CeLmson 25 of 62 the Tar Heels' height advantage A special discussion of fee War and the College cam pus" wil be held Tuesday at 8 p.m. in 111 Murphy. . - ' v. - v. JfTbe'scassioii, sponsored Jby Trip i Jonesnshared game re- ffee ll-3 charge feat made fee fee - UNC Stmdents for a bounding honors ' with Scott score 65-53 and killed the Democratic Society, will with 14. Mahaffey had only 4, Tigers' hopes. center on the effects of fee thanks to a fine defensive job by Bunting. The game was tied three times wife Clemison leading on ly once at 2-0 on two Zattezalo free throws when Carolina went ahead for good. -W-v " "11. 11 . 1 T- - . m a uoaen uean snmn puuea mis aratt on graduate ana un to ench with 2:05 remaining and dergraduate lafe, according to Carolina leading' 91-70. The Jim Kahani of SDS. reserves, gave UNC dtls biggest margin of fee night 25 points at 95-70. The Tar Heels. 19-1 overall, The effects of channelling research money from fee U.S. Defense Department- into the University and fee morality of v By. WAYNE HURDER of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Two National Student Association resolutions con cerning fee draft and blacks power were soundly defeated and a third cn drugs passed in Thursday's referendum. A maniority report of the NSA Congress concerning fee draft, calling for Universal Alternative Service, was nar rowly defeated, 962 to 817. A constitutional amendment . making fee office of Student Body Treasurer appointive and creating a Department of fee Treasury was Bassed 1,285 to. 554. No results have been tabulated on fee honor system survey because of fee length of it and numerous comments that were written in on the surveys, according to Elections Board Chairman' Norm Zet tel. The surveys will ibe turned over to fee Honor System Commission for tabulation, Zettel said. Turnout was only about 18 concerned with Saturday night was a big difference. Gerald! Tuttle'is high-arched and 9-0 in the ACC, have now doing some of their research, per cent of fee eligible voters," opponent South Carolina, let a 16 point haiuitime lead diwindle to four with 13:30 remaining before pulling away for good. Larry Miller, the husky All 'Scott was Carolina's top retriever. He had 14 while Clark had 13, Bunting 11 and Miller 10. Cemson kept it interesting American, was the best player by putting two players at fee 20plus level, Sophomore Butch Zatezalo, who came into this game tied wife Miller for second place in the Atlantic Coast Conference scoring race, scored one less than fee UNC star. Richie Mahaffey, the Tigers' biggest starter, at 6-7, sup ported fee little Zatezalols 28 taking with 21. Only 12 of those came off in from fee floor, however. on fee court. lie scored 29 points on 12 of 18 field attempts and 5 of 7 from the free throw line. Twenty-three of those points came in fee first half when 'Miller missed only 3 of 10 outside tries. The Tar Heeb put three other starters in double figures. Charlie Scott, over where Miller left Select ive service Drops Deferments For Most Grads snots with, tour minutes gone did fee trick, 9-7. The rest of the Tar Heels took the incentive and quickly ran fee lead to nine by outscor ing Oemson 11-2. Miller, who hit his first five shots from way out, made four of those points. When North Carolina doubled the score at 32-16, Clemson brought the Heels to a halt. Mahalffey and Jones each scored four points to cut fee lead to eight, 32-24 with 5:08, but fee rest of fee first 'half belonged to UNC. The Tigers, with Zatezalo and Mahaffey doing the scor ing, came very much alive ea ly in the second half. Wife 6:30 gone the Tar Heels' advantage had been hacked and sawed to four points, 54-50. Two and half minutes later, wife the type of scoring spurt that has made Carolina such a thrill to watch, the Tar Heels were back on top by twelve. Scott scored five points in won 17 straight. Clemson is 4-14. 'Several hundred (tickets still remaiQ for next Wednesday might's basketball game with Maryland!. Pickets may be picked up at the ticket office in iCarmichaei Audiotrium begin ning at 8:30 ajm. .Fuller what it means to have ROTC on campus, and fee role of military recruiters on campus will be considered, Kahan said. Plans of what can be done in relation to these problems will also be doscusseid. as good as could be expected, considering fee circumstan ces," according to Cliff Tuttle, assistant chairman of fee Elections Board. The Black Power resolution was defeated 1,210 to 613; fee Draft resolution, calling for abolition of fee draft, was defeated 1,143 to 693. Charles Jeffress, campus NSA co-ordiantor, called passage of the drug resolution the "most significant" return. The Drug resolution calls for legalization of marijuana and re-evaluatation of laws con cerning use of hallucinogenic drugs. The vote was 1,009 to 814. . He felt feat fee "draft and fee black power resolutions were sufficiently vague so that people could read things into them." A number of people wrote on the ballots that the phrase in fee black power resolution calling for unification of all black Americans "by any means necessary" , wasv fee main reason feey .voted against the resolution, according to Tuttle . The minority report on the 1 draft that failed called for abolition of fee selective 'service system and establish ment of an alternative com pulsory uniyersal service pro gram. , . This program, which would include males and females, would allow persons to serve a minimum of two years in military or non-military fields. ; Jeffress was surprised feat there was such a small vote for fee draft resolutions. Referenda on the NSA resolutions are being held on Universities across the coun try, according to Jeffress, and resutls have been similar to those Ciere, he said. The pattern has been for fee drug resolution to pass, he said, and for fee others to f aiL If the resolutions fail at enough of fee 384 member schools of NSA, the resolutions will be removed from fee records of fee NSA congress. Jim Kahan, a member of the Students for a Democratic Society here, commented that fee draft proposals probably failed because of poor publicity and because students probably reacted negatively as soon a3v feey heard fee draft and NSAV connected. "In general," he said, this 4 is part of what Lrpsitz was talking about, fee people ac cepting what fee government says," rather than considering fee matter and being willing to stand up against them. Terhaps wife more debate the things would be different? he said. Student Body President Bob Travis was 'Very, happy"; about passage of the financial reform bill and called it a "certain help to fee financial system of student govern UNC Te&eMii OP oh Hinted Resignation Over Semester Break By United Press International W ASHINGTON The Selective Service system Fri day abolished draft deferments for men in critical jobs and for most male graduate students, freeing more than 800,000 previously deferred men for immediate callups. Only graduate students in medicine, dentistry and other medical professions and those who entered at least their se cond year of graduate study last fall would continue to be deferred until feey receive degrees. Local draft boards would continue to have discretion to grant individual occupational exemptions "on a showing of essential community need," draft Director Lewis B . Hershey said. Friday's order will cover 339,474 full-time workers and 41,161 apprentices who had oc cupational deferments Selec tive Service headquarters said. It will also make eligible for the draft, about 4 3 3,000 students, the Scientific Man power Commission, a non government agency created by scientific organizations, reported. The impact on college cam puses was certain to be con siderable. The Council of Graduate Schools estimated recently feat graduate classes next year could be cut by as much as 50 per cent if graduate student deferments were enided. The Selective Service order -will apply to Students graduating from college this year and those who entered fee first year of graduate school last September. The action was taken on the recommendation of the Na tional Security Council (NSC), composed of the nation's highest military and civilian Officials concerned with defense. The NSC noted many graduate students holding deferments, could be fairly cer tain of never having to don a uniform by staying in school or going into deferred oc cupations. 'This is unfair particularly in time of armed conflictto all the young men who do not have the opportunity or fee finances to attend graduate school," the Council said. The NSC said neither the armed forces, fee civilian economy nor the national in terest require continuation of the deferments. UNC Student Wins Corning Felloivship Daniel T. Cox, a senior at the University of North Carolina here, was named to day to receive a $5,000 Corning Glass Works Foundation Traveling Fellowship. The winner's name was made known today by Dr. Claude George of the UNC School of Business Administration arti chairman of fee final selection com mittee. Cox plans to use his travel ing fellowship to tour the Com mon Market countries where he will observe fee European Economic Community through the eyes of an American businessman. Commenting about the scholarship, Dr. George said, "Thus is a , most remarkable' program. The student cannot study in an institutions He must use his scholarship for travel and observation to broaden his horizon in general. And he must go outside the United States." Bv BILL .AMLONG of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Howard Fuller, a con troversial anti-poverty worker who became more con troversial as a part time lec turer in the School of Social Work, has resigned. The resignation, dated Wednesday, was announced Friday by Chancellor J Carlyle Sitterson. Fuller, who was arrested in Durham Thursday night on charges of assaulting a police officer during a Negro protest march, was unavavailable for comment. He is free on $300 bond. , " He quit his $l,000-a-semester lecturing job, because "the stress of my full time job is in crasing," Fuller wrote in a let ter to the School of Social Work. Also, he sakJ, "I really no longer . have fee time to prepare adequately for class presentations at the graduate school leveL" Fuller told his class Tuesday morning feat he was resigning. The course Community Social Work will now be taught by Mrs. Marjorie Kelly, a fulltime faculty member. , t , s- r i V, ' . UUc -.'IK-IP- : DTH Siajf Photo by GENE WANG Former Instructor Howard Fuller . . speaking in Durham last summer Dean C. Wilson Anderson said Fuller advised fee school during semester break feat he might have to quit lecturing this spring, because he was switching jobs. Fuller, who was formerly in charge of community organization for the North Carolina Fund, now wTorks for the foundation for Community Improvement. Anderson praised Fuller as a lecturer and said he was sorry to see him leave. "We thought he did a very good job as instructor," he said. "We regret fee necessity "for his resigning." Fuller and fee school both came under fire Sept. 21, when Gov. Dan K Moore called his being hired to teach, "a serious mistake." Anderson then admitted that Fuller was a "controversial figure," but defended fee hir ing. "I would agree he's con troversial, but I would defend his qualifications to teach this particular course sequence," Anderson replied at fee time; Fu'Jer received his BJS. in sociology from Carroll College in Wisconsin, and then took a master's degree in community organization at Western Reserve University in Ohio. He has worked as a community organizer in both Fayetteville and Durham. The reason Fuller was criticized by Moore was his in volvement with Negro rallies and marches in Durham this past summer to protest such things as employment and housing conditions. He was associated with one march during whsch rocks and bottles were thrown. Moore criticized him Sept. 25. fallowing his leading a picket-line protest of National Guard training maneuvers in Durham. "The Governor cannot understand why anyone would protest riot training for the National Guard, as ordered by the Pentagon, unless he was planning to engage in a riot," has office said in a statement. Fuller denied he planned to start riots, and said the picketing was to demonstrate to the Negro community that fee National Guard wouldn't harm Negroes during legal assemblies. C o n s o lidated University President William C. Friday defended the University's hir ing of Fuller to fee Board & Trustees at its Oct 6 meeting in Greensboro. Gov. Moore, who is chairman of the trustees, declined further com ment. Fuller has also been criticiz ed similarly by both Congressman James O. Gardner and Lt. Gov. Bob Scott. Both are gubernatorial primary candidates. Fuller's arrest at 8:07 p.m. Thursday came at the peak of a march through downtown Durham by 75-100 Negroes from North Carolina College who were protectir. the slayings of three Negro college students during an outbreak cf racial violence in Orangeburg, S.C., last week. Firemen, attempting t o douse a burning effigy of South Carolina Gov. Robert McNair, squirted some demonstrators standing between them and the effigy, said ' Durham Police Capt. Donald Schlitz. Fuller was arrested on fee assault charge and bookeS into the Durham County JaiL He - was later freed on $300 bond.

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