Sariala Dopt, Eox 070 7 ?T , o 1 . 196$ HOC Chumps ' . ..-..Ul, .1.1 II -1-1 IIBI llllllll I . Ull L 1 1 Mi 1 1 L III UmiHllllLII. Ill IM.H.IOJIJIl ! I " Jl I .11 IMI 1 1 HI I ,. Ill .I..,l,l.l. N, ti -m - - t ' t ' x ? j . . -J T IT i --f ; ! " 1 if ''- ? ' ' -' i V V I W - C" ' . " -. . ' -A ' i'V"-.., rr r "I ..""A ' . . - mm rx : -r-rt 7 Jul to W H V'.:-" r'V lF- i l ? 5. ..... J . ' f I - - r - - -T - - - i!aai g . mmmmmmmtimSt. -, - - - -a r - DTlt SP Board To Meet Student arty Advisory Board will meet today at 3:30 p.m. in the Grail Room. Volume 75. Number 122 Clark Postponed; 'We Had Say By TERRY G1NGRAS of Th Daily Tor Heel Staff Picketers showed up in Y Court Monday afternoon to demonstrate against U.S. At torney General Ramsay Clark and once again found that Clark had cancelled his ap pearance. About 40 people showed up to demonstrate, but they didn't bother to bring their picket signs because, according to George Vlassits, one of the organizers of the demonstra-' tion, "we had a feeling he wouldn't come." Judith Weinberg, a member of the Southern Students Organizing Committee, said SSOC had learned that Clark was scheduled to speak this weekend from authorities in the UNC. and Duke Law Schools. Clark was forced to cancel his scheduled round of speeches March 4 because of some developments in the civil rights legislation. According to Dickson Phillips, Dean of the UNC Law School, Clark appearance had "only been tentative since he was forced to cancel it the 300 Tickets Available For Tournament j Student and university staff tickets for the Eastern Regional tournament in Raleigh March 15-16 can be ap plied for at the Carmichael Auditorium ticket off ice before noon Wednesday. Students may apply tor only one ticket. Staff members may also apply for tickets for their spouses who have season's passes for the reg u 1 a r season. Tickets will be allotted for one night only. Three hundred ducats will be sold separately for both Friday and Satur day. " , . Names will be drawn at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday at Carmichael for those eligible to buy tickets. The first 300 names drawn will get tickets for Friday arid the next 300 will get Saturday's. Students will have no choice of which night they get tickets. Carolina received 1 , 00 0 tickets for the Regionals. The remainder of them went to .cheerleaders, pep b a na members, faculty athletic c o mmittee, university ad ministration officials and Rams Club members. Prote Staff Photo by GZlVSL WANG Feelimi tor first time." "This is just-one "Of those in stances where an important person has found it impossible to meet commitment," said Phillips. Michael Katz, an instructor in the Law School, said the civil rights legislation was pro bably forcing Clark to remain in Washington. "The President gets everyone around to lobby in a situation like this," said Katz. "It's not impossible that the civil rights legislation is what's keeping him. His speech has only been scheduled for some time this week anyhow. It wasn't definitely Monday. He might be down Wednesday or Thursday, but I really don't know." Vlassits had announced March 4, that the demonstra tion would be rescheduled for this Monday. According to him Clark was scheduled to speak at this time. The demonstration was scheduled to coincide with similar rallies at Duke Law school. The rallies were organized by the Southern Stu dent Organizing Committee to protest five major ' federal policies. The. group is protesting the prosecution of the Boston Five, a group including Dr. Ben jamin Spock, for their op position to the draft; the cooperation between the Justice Department and the selective service in recom mending reclassification as . punishment for protestors; the "illegal detention of Rap Brown"; the prosecution of young men who refuse to kill and the lack of action in con nection with the deaths of three students in Orangeburg, S.C. R. C. Lyon ass. College 'Dean Dr. Richard Colton Lyon, formerly associate professor of English and chairman of the American Studies Curriculum at UNC, has become Dean of the College and Professor of Humanities and Arts at newly chartered Hampshire College, Amherst, Mass., effective March 1. Lyon's major responsibilities in the next two and one half years will be in recruiting Hampshire's first faculty and in academic plan ning and curriculum develop ments . . - - Along - with 'the new Admissions - Director and the .Director of Development and CHAPEL ::: Spring Hits By RICK GRAY S Of The DTH Staff 8 Spring has at last arrived in Chapel Hill. S The air hangs heavy with the laziness that comes in with:? the humid air. . j$ The sounds of a banjo or a guitar drift across campus. :: Professors voices are heard as a jumble, and the:-':; jhitlesof birds almost drown them out es the students strain their ears either to 'hear the birds or the professors one. '. -;"',, :x Dogs run rampant in Polk Place, and occasionally plant jS a muddy paw print on a text left open while the owner dozes in the sun. $ - The tones of the bells in the Bell Tower and South :: Building are not as mournful as they were two weeks :: ag- , . ' . gj Three-piece suits are disappearing and are being replac- :: ed by lightweight sport coats. i The tables outside the . Circus Room are once again :: being used by someone other than the birds. The wind still roars about the windows of the dorms, but $ it sounds inviting rather than threatening as it was a month :: ago: Dresses are getting shorter back to the fall hemlines, ::: and the curve-hiding winter coats are disappearing from : the coeds. ij: Windows are open in the classrooms and the occasional :: breath of breeze sends papers fluttering from desks. : The trees are beginning to bud, and their progress daily : captures the gaze of a student dreaming of the f i r s t ig weekend at the beach. :$ Short sleeve shirts are coming on strong and socks are I rapidly disappearing. :: ' Frisbees are sailing through still bare branches, and :$ dogs are running off with them in their mouths. The long walk from South Campus doesn't last long enough any more and the walk back to the dorm after:-:; : classes it slow and easy. :: Radiators have been turned off and windows in dorms :: I are being opened to let in light and movQ the air. $ Toilet paper flutters as the wind passes through the ix : branches that caught the rolls as they drifted downward :: : after Saturday's Championship win in Charlotte. j:j: Hair doesn't stay combed long, but it looks better when i-j: ;: it's blow by a spring breeze ine squirrels are posmg for the art classes spread out all over campus. g And Silent Sam is beginning to smile. ? LU Orientation Interviews Set By LOUISE JENNINGS of The Dnilv Tar Heel Staff A goal of 550 orientatioi -counselors has been set for this Appointed Public Realtions Elizabeth Lyon will play a major role in moving. Hampshire College toward its opening date in September, 1970. Born in Los Angeles in 1926, Lyon earned a B.A. from the University of Texas while an Oldright Scholar in philosophy. He holds a B.S.' in philosophy from the University of Cam bridge (England), where. he was a Fulbright Scholar for two years. His other degrees include an M.A. in English from the University of Con necticut and . a Ph.D. in American Studies, from the University of Minnesota. 76 Years of Editorial Freedom HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, Campus J year, according to Joe Ritok, Men's Co-ordinator. "More counselors will be needed this year than ever before. More new students are expected, and the orientation groups will be smaller," he ex plained. - Of the 550 counselors needed .200 freshmen women's counselors have already been chosen, and of the remaining . 350, 250 are needed for men and 100 for women. . Interviews will .be held for freshmen and transfer men's counselors and transfer , women's counselors March 12 15 and March 18-20 between 2 a.m. and 5 p.m. in Roland Parker Lounges. . Interviewees will be asked questions similar to those a ,new -student jnight ask his orientation counselor, Ritok said. It is hoped that the Orien tation Commission will be - more involved with the residence colleges than ever before, according to Ritok. This year the importance of TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1963 "FiFF(BllMSll (0) By REBEL GOOD of The Daily Tar Heel Staff New Hampshire voters and Carolina faculty, staff and students go to the polls today to register their preferences in presidential primaries. While the New Hampshire primary will determine delegates to national . political conventions, Carolina's will merely be, an indication of political thinking on campus. The YM-YWCA is sponsoring the mock presidential and g u b e r natorial preferential primaries in order to "en courage political thinking on campus," said Elinor Upton, Y Projects Coordinator. The system used to select candidates placed on the ballot is similar to that of the Oregon primary. All announced can didates, plus those considered to be possible candidates, are included. The primary is "open." That is, one may vote for a can didate in either party, but must vote in the same party in both the presidential and gubernatorial elections. 1 The Republican presidential ballot lists six candidates: Richard Nixon, Charles Percy, Ronald Reagan, Nelson Rockefeller, George Romney, and Harold Stassen. T m4n TnVincvn "R A h P T I Kennedy and Eugene McCarthy are listed on the Democratic presidential ballot. the Orientation Counselor as a service to the university and the student body will be emphasized, he indicated. "It can't be stressed toq By RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Last "week's State Student Legislature was the biggest and best ever, according to the body's president Charlie Mercer. . "I think," Mercer said, "that this State Student Legislature, because of the legislation that was passed, because of the large attendance and because of the great number of state leaders who participated, has made its. largest step in becoming a real influence in the state. "It has begun to reach its full potential and I think is becoming a viable force and an influential voice in the state of North Carolina." DTH StalT Photo by CSNX WANG im1J George Wallace is on the American Independent ticket. Gubernatorial ballot lists Jim Gardner and John Stickley, while Mel Broughton, Reginald Hawkins and Robert Scott are on the Democratic side. Write-in votes will be counted. Students, faculty and staff may vote at Y Court from 8:30 to 4:30, Lenoir from 8:30 to tu. 5 These are the ballots to be filled out ... in the YM-YWCA Presidential and gubernatorial Biggest, x Best Ever The legislation passed by the group, Mercer said, was the most impressive and pro gressive legislation that the group has passed in its 31 years. Bills passed by the body pro vided for the establishment of regional medical centers, open housing, public kindprgartens and the making of birth control pills available to recipients of state welfare funds. The bill establishing regional medical centers at the sites of universities Western Carolina at Cullowhee and East Carolina at Greenville was in troduced and sponsored by the UNC delegation which was chaired by Bruce Jolly. It passed with little opposition in DTH TED 6:30, p.m. or Chase from 5 to 7 Students must show iden tification cards prior to voting, and staff and faculty will be required to sign a list at the polling station. Students interested in aiding in the tabulation of the votes are asked to come to Y Court at 4:30 p.m. Results should be completed by 8 : 30 p jn. 1AM either house. The Carolina delegation ban ned together late Friday af ternoon to defeat a bill in troduced by the delegation from N.C. State to move the offices of the Consolidated University from Chapel Hill to the Research Triangle Park. Dick Levy, who tied State's Bill Shiplay for best speaker awards, spoke out against the bill, asking the members of the UNC delegation to tell the body where the Consolidated University offices were in Chapel Hill. Only three or four of the delegates knew where - they " were, according t o Mercer, "and -the bill was soundly defeated. ' . . The open housing bill was in UNC s 1 fta Photo by CZXr WANG CPU Interviews Interviews for membership in the Carolina Political Union 3:00 to 5:00 P.M. through Thursday in GM's Roland Parker Lounge. Applications and interview times are avail able at the Information Desk. Founded February 23,' 1893 Jl JLilMCUJi. y Yiew The UNC Students f o r . McCarthy have appealed for a large turnout in the primary, "because a big vote in the Democratic primary will mean a big vote for Senator McCarthy," said Charles chairman. "I would wish to hope. . .those who express their dissent. . .would ask for a Democratic ballot and vote McCarthy," Moore added. DTH Staff Photo by U1KZ UeGOWAN primaries Mercer troduced by the delegation from North Carolina A & T State University in Greensboro. The original bill made the sale and rental of housing on a discriniinotory basis unlawful The bill was amended before it was passed. The final bill exempted residences which were a part of private homes. The public kindergarten bill introduced by UNC-G passed with no serious opposition. The bill on the distribution cf oral contraceptives had stiller going. The Meredith bill wcj passed in different forms bf the two houses, and the con ference committee did - n:'. resolve the differences until Saturday morning.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view