u.iuc. Library
Sariiis DopU
Box 670
ChiTi-l Hilt, !1.C.
Partly Cloudy Today
t dudy and mOd today
HiTh ginC?iCr Ulis
nartlv Ithf 0s' Thursday
?S udy and a mi
SP Candidates
There will be a meeting ef
all Stadent Party legislative
candidates tonight at 19 pja. ia
Roland Parker I. Bring photo
for posters and SI candidate's
fee.
76 Years of Editorial Freedom
Volume 75, Number 117
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA,; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1963
Founded February 23," 1893
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Rv TERRY GINGRAS
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Two more incidents involving
prowlers were reported at
West Cobb and Winston
dormitories Monday night.
According to Chapel Hill
Police Chief William Blake, the
incidents took place at about
three in the morning.
Blake said his department
got a call for assistance from
the campus police at 3:04
a.m.
"A girl on the first floor of
West Cobb was walking down
the hall to go to the bathroom
when she saw a man walking
ahead of her," Blake" said.
"The man immediately disap
peared after she saw him and
she couldn't tell where he
went."
Blake said a thorough search
of the dorm failed to locate the
prowler.
The - prowler was described
as a white male wearing blue
, jeans and a drab-colored
sweatshirt. Blake said he was
wearing a white handkerchief
or rag over his face.
. The girl who saw the prowler
immediately went back into
her room,' according to a resi
dent of Cobb. She woke up her
Racism Reported
WASHINGTON President Johnson's riot commission was told
tnat "the summers will remain long and hot" until Negroes,
especially their embittered middle class, can break out of the ci
ty ghettos. '
Historian Richard Wade of the University of Chicago said that
race is "the explosive question of our time" because the Negro
h3 hflPn tranned in citv slums by his color and not his ability.
"By confining Negroes to the ghetto we have deprived them of
the chance to enter American society on the same terms as other
groups before him," Wade said.
"And they know increasingly that this exclusion is not a func
tion of education, training or income. Rather it springs from the
Color of their skin."
Nixon Promises To 'End The War9
HAMPTON, N.H. Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon
pledged Tuesday that if elected president he would "end the war"
in Vietnam. He did not spell out how.
Nixon told an audience of some 200, "I pledge to you the new
leadership will end the war and win the peace in the Pacific. That
is what America wants."
Nixon, campaigning for votes in New Hampshire's earlybird
primary seven days hence, said he was not suggesting.
vithdrawal from Vietnam nor "any push button way" to end the
hostilities.
"I am saying to you it is possible if we mobilize our economic
and political and diplomatic leadership. If the war can be ended,"
he said.
Red Conference Calls For Summit
rt TD APEST The consultative meeting of 66 Communist
l;;c fmm around the world
Llld a "unanimous" appeal for a world Red summit in Moscow
U November-December despite dissent from delegations from
Li wovuuuw ponnion
Tuesday when Commumsts from ..Reunion supported maverick
Romania's walkout from the meeting.
i-
DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS
Art classes are notorious for wanting to go outside, but not to
frolic in the amazingly warm weather. Mostly they want to draw.
At any rate, Jaonna Hill went to McCorkle Place along with the
rest of her class.
InLit
Cobb, Winston In Same Night
roommate who began yelling
'man on the hall'. The rpwoler
apparently got away in the
confusion.
Blake said a second call was
received at 3:17 a.m. in
dicating a man had gained en
try to the first floor of Winston
Dorm.
'The man gained entry by
raising a' window on the ground
floor," Blake said. The prowler
apparently stood on a rock to
reach the six foot high win
dow. B.-: . 'A girf sleeping - near - the-
. window woke up feeling cold. ,
She said she felt someone
touch her and then she started
screaming.", i "
' Blake said the prowler never
really entered the dorm, that
he just stood in the window.
No description of the prowler
was available, but Blake thinks
both dorms were entered by
the same prowler.
"Because the two incidents
were just a few minutes apart,
I would think it was probably
the same person both times''
said Blake. ' .
Two doors were open in Cobb
after the incident and Blake
said the prowler probably
IIr Daihi Ear ijrcl
World News
BRIEFS
By United Press International
Cause Of Violence
ended Tuesday night with what it
'i
A
Two
TPK
escaped through one of them.
"The doors were checked
about two hours before the in
cident by a campus policeman
on his regular rounds and both
were locked. We don't know if
the person hid in the dorm
before the doors were locked
or not, but it is not unusual for
a prowler to open two doors
and allow himself more than
one way to escape," said
Blake.
There was not sign that
either of the doors had been
Jorced open. . . -
Heather Ness, Assistant
Dean of Women, said her of
fice was "extremely con
cerned." "This has got to be
something you face up to and
react to," said Mrs. Ness. "We
are trying to make the dorms
as safe as possible. People
from the Buildings and
Grounds department have been
over today checking the
dorms, the screens and locks
on the doors."
"This matter has gone all
the way to the Vice presiden-
tial (of the University) level
today," said Mrs. Ness, marked by faculty, graduate
"We're terribly disturbed and and undergraduate students
concerned." and University administration,
Student Legislature
To Consider Funds
For Carolina Greek
By TODD COHEN
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Student Legislature will vote
Thursday night whether or not
to allow the Carolina Greek
funds to resume publication
after a four month lay-off.
Pending SL approval, Nat
Norton, recently appointed
Editor of the Interfraternity
Council and SL publication.
plans to send the paper to
press Monday.
SL voted last fall to allocate
ihe Greek $250 an issue for a
period of ten weeks.
The paper folded after two
issues, however, due to what
Norton calls, "a lack of staff
and bad management."
The SL , appropriation re
mains in a fund for the Greek
but is unavailable due to the
wording of the bill passed last
fall.
A favorable vote Thursday
will merely change the
wording of the bill, extending
the time SL funds will be
available for the Greek.
The new wording was
unanimously approved yester
day by the Ways and Means
Committee. .
Necessary finances above
the limit set by the bill will be
provided by the IFC and
Panhellenic Council, Norton
says.
Norton, a junior English ma
jor and brother in Sigma Alpha
Epsilon fraternity, feels that
- the Greek will try to eliminate
the Prblems which he believes
caused the failure of the first
and only two editions of the
paper to present in-depth
coverage of campus-wide news
in
Rv KICK GRAY
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
The University Party Tues
day night nominated by ac
clamation Supreme Court Chief
Justice Ken Day to run for,
the office of President; of The
Student Body.
The slightly more than 100
delegates to the convention
picked Charles Mercer, Presi- .
dent of State Student Legis
lature, to run as their Vice
Presidential candidate. Mer
cer's nomination was also by
acclamation.
In accepting the nomination.
Day, a special assistant to
president Bob Travis, said,
"The kind of University we
want is going to have to be
built brick by brick in the,
, heat of the day by men who
have taken time to learn how
iJ)(OFm
This is the fourth time this
semester that dorms havev
been invaded by prowlers.
Prowlers visited Joyner andi
Conner Dorms in February.
Mock SMdemt Primary
Piamue&IJFor Tuesday
By FRANK BALLARD
of The' Daily Tar Heel Staff
If you're frustrated about not
mm m m
bemg awe to dacK your
favorite in Tuesday's New
Hampshire presidential
primary, the YMCA and
YWC A have a solution.
At a Y cabinet meeting Mon
day night plans were approved
for a mock Dresidential
preference primary scheduled
to coordinate with the New
Hampshire vote next Tues-
day.
The 15.00& ballots can be
able to present due to the
pressures of daily publication,
he says.
The Greek will be a sup
plement to the DTH and will
tend more towards magazine
coverage than newspaper
which the Daily Tar Heel is not
reporting.
The Greek will include in
terviews, critical commentary,
features, photography studies,
a syndicated student cartoon,
as well as campus news,
sports, and editorials. -
Norton has organized a.
managing staff, but is still "uv
desperate need of people to do"
all kinds of work." -
He needs workers to write,
type, sell advertisement, and
help with layout, and asks for
any interested students to
help.
The paper is not restricted to
fraternity people, he adds. ,
Norton emphasizes that the
Greek will not be, solely a
fraternity based paper, but will
"work for the interests of the
entire student body." ,
. He believes that the
'greatest attribute for the
Greek will be that it has no
precedent."-
He says that since the Greek
is in its first publication, it will
be flexible and will change
with criticism.
Any criticism or letters-to-the-editor
are welcome and
should be addressed to Editor,
Carolina Greek, Graham
Memorial, Norton adds.
The Greek, which will
usually run eight pages and
use the same format as the
DTH, except for size, will
have the same circulation as
the Tar Heel.
TTTi o
Men
it operates." ,
Day presented the conven
tion a five point outline of the
"kind of University we want."
- "Self - selecting activity
groups" to work in areas of
student concern.
"parallel committee struc
ture" which would have an ac
tive lobby crouD to tirnvide
faculty and administration with
m w- r i
information
on student view-
point.
; continuity of student gov
ernment to guard against the
loss of ideas when the admin
istration changes.
a south campus transpor
tation system that will iebQ
effective tomorrow and five,
years from now."
improvement of communis
cation between student govern
ment and students through the
publication of a booklet to
summarize student government
activities.
Day continued to say that a
six-member cabinet would be
established to allow more at
tention to specific problems.
The cabinet members would be
of the rank of special . presi
dential assistant and would
work in the areas of residence
reported Elinor Upton, of the
YWCA. ;
All students must present
their identification cards when
mm mm ' aw
they vote. The cards will be
stamped to avoid voting
twice. ' ' '
The names of those can
didates who have either an
nounced or are generally con
sidered possible candidates
will appear on the ballots
under the appropriate party
label.
Five thousand, ballots for
each party in the Presidential
race have been printed, for the
Democratic, Republican and
American Independent Par
ty. A mock North Carolina
gubernatorial election will also
be held at the Y polls. The
gubernatorial . ballots are for
Democratic and Republican
Party candidates and may be
used by Voters from outside
the state, as well as North
Carolinians.
The Y cabinet had con
sidered holding closed
primaries, but decided against
it. .- . -.
"It wouldn't be feasible to
have a closed primary here
because of the lack of party
identification in most
students," said Dr. Earle
Wallace, who was consulted by
3
-S,
f
f
4 . f
r
fx-.
Being greedy isn't really so bad, after all. Just look at the seven
gift packs this fellow is carrying- Watch for him on campus car
rying his three thousand, seven hundred, and fifty-four pounds of
Jnk mail back to the post office tomorrow and the next day.
11 C)
colleges, education reform,
judicial reform, IFC and.Pan
Helenic Council, graduate stu
dent concerns and communi
cation with the administration.
Calling for a revolution of
"our whole concept of student
government," Day said that
the coming year would be an
"age of great questioning and
of re-evaluation of our goals."
He stated his prime goals as
continuation of the residence
college system and the educa
tional r ef o r m movement,
among others.
Proposing a liberalization of
women's rules, he said that
the present rules are "anti
quated and Victorian."
Judiciary reform could best
be begun, Day continued by
the creation of the post of as
sistant attorney general for
graduate students. Any person:
named to. this office, he said,
would have to be a grad stu
dent. On the problem of high
prices downtown, Day said,
'the students face a daily
fleecing by Franklin Street
felons," and he promised that
tne student stores be used to
the cabinet . about the mock
primary."
Dr. Wallace is an associate
professor of political science
and associate chairman of the
political science department."
"Besides, without party
registration you can't really
have a closed primary," he
concluded.
The polls will operate at Y
Court from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., in Lenoir Hall from 8:30
a.m. to 6:30 p.m. and at Chase
Cafeteria from 5:00-7:00 p.m.
" Any students who would like
to assist in tending the polls or
counting ballots Tuesday
should sign up at the Y office
or contact Miss Upton at 929-2546.
For WMC diairmaiflL
By WAYNE HURDER
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Nancy McCharen, chairman
of the freshman rules com-
srm
i
-
J-DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS
stabilize prices and that the
stores sell all merchandise
that they legally could in or
der to regulate the prices
charged downtown.
Accepting the party's nomin
ation for vice president. Mer
cer, former UP floor leader,
said he thought, that the office
could be more effective and
pledged to work to make the
office more effective by work
ing closely with the legislature.
Sally Spurlock was picked to
run tor tne post of secretary
by acclamation, as was Miles
Wilhelm for Senior class pres
ident. Haywood Davis defeated
Appalled Anarchist
Withdraws His Name
By RICK GRAY
of The Daily Tar Heel Staff
Michael Hollis announced
Tuesday that he is withdraw
ing from thepresidental
race.
iioiiis witnarawai leaves a
three-way
race for Student
President. Candidates for the
office are Bruce Strauch, in
dependent; Jed Dietz, Student
Party nominee; and the
University Party nominee.
In a written statement,
Hollis said, "During the past
few days I have gained enough
political experience to last me
for a lifetime."
Hollis then indicated a conspiracy-
. "so diabolical id
purpose and so vast in its im
plications" that it caused
to withdraw from the race as a
write-in on the "anarchy
ticket."
He cited two reasons for his
withdrawal: The "collassal"
support from the ad
ministration "aroused m y
suspicious, and my mistrust
grew like a hurricane over the
weekend."
Student government ofGcials
offered support to the cam
paign, and "I was appalled to
learn that the very villains
whom I hoped to. liquidate
were looking forward to my
triumph." ,
- The statement continued, "I
have concluded, from the
.harem In
mittee of the Women's
Residence Council, announced
Tuesday she will run for
Chairman of the WRC. -
Miss McCharen, in an
nouncing, said she feels it is
"important to keep the WRC
moving i n the direction it's .
going."
"I want to pursue the self
limiting hours proposal," she
said.
The stude nt-f aculty
adininistrative committee
established Monday is a step in
the right direction. "Beginning
with seniors and women over
21 I hope to get self-limiting
hours extended to un
derclassmen," Miss McCharen
said.
Miss McCharen will be run
ning against Andi Stein and
Libby Idol, who declared their
candidacies on Saturday, in the
spring elections.
Miss McCharen wants coed
residence colleges started, in
order, she said, "to make rela
tionships on campus less
artificial."
In her platform she calls for
the WRC to evaluate the
changes that have been made
this year to see how they are
working out.
She would have a study-done
of attitudes towards women on
campus, the effect of the dou
ble standard on women, and
discrimination against women
on campus.
She also wants to eliminate
the rule prohibiting un
derclassmen from visiting the
apartments of senior women
overnight. -
.Race
Rick Urick for Senior Class
Vice President, and Roy Hon
eycutt was named Senior Class
social chairman.
Sam Jones was picked to
run for treasurer of the class.
Duke Stone defeated Jeff
Perry who was trying for a
double endorsement to take
the nomination for president
of the Carolina Athletic Asso
ciation. The NSA delegates nomin-
ated were Dick Levy, Charles
Jeffress, Randy Myer, Tom
Webb and Harry DiffendaL
Student Legislature nomina
tions had not been completed
by deadline.
above reasons, that the ad
ministration is at this very mo
ment plotting to step full force
into the vacuum which would
be created if I destroyed stu
dent government. Various
campus politicos, either fearful
that their records are soon to
be laid bare, or that the advent
of Mr. Strauch will spell their
certain ruin, have unabashadly
joined with the schemers of the
administration, hoping that I
will serve as a convenient tool
to destroy the government
which they have created and
corrupted, so that they can
later pick up the pieces and
commence a new, unblemished
career-of exploitation," -
In conclusion Hollis said that
he is "willing to sacrifice my
political career in order to
destroy" those whom he said
were plotting against the
students.
"Let them dream of greater
glories," he added, "but I will
be no part of it! In death
I and all anarchists will bring
them down to their inevitable
ruin!!"
Hollis entered the campaign
last week on a platform
designed to "destroy student
government." His campaign
was based on "some wise
words I found scribbled on a
wall in Oxford, England . . .
Anarchy is Freedom."
M.ae
Miss McCharen feels that the
WRC should "work closely
with the administration on the
self-limiting hours proposal
because," she said, "when we
have worked closely they have
shown they are receptive of
our ideas."
. Miss McCharen, a freshman
from Nashville, Term., feels
her being a freshman is "an
advantage since I still have the
enthusiasm and time t o
work."
She is the WRC represen
tative from Granville East and
a member of the freshman
honors program.
Pulitizer Prize
Winner Talks
Here Tonight
Vermont Royster, a UNC
graduate and editor of the Wall
Street Journal, will deliver the
1963 Weil Lecture today on
"Liberty and Responsibility: A
Delicate Balance."
Royster will give the talk at
8 p.m. in HOI HalL
Royster, a Raleigh native
and 1935 Phi Beta Kappa
graduate of UNC, is a Pulitzer
Prize winner.
He has worked for the Wall
Street Journal since 1S35 and
has been editor since 1933.
He is a former president of
the American Society of
Newspaper Editors.
The Weil Lecture series on
American Citizenship were
started in 1915.