Sarials Dapt, . Box 870 Ch-iml Hill, H.C. Orientation Interviews Today is the last day to in terview for positions as orien tation counselors. Interviews will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. in RP I. Judicial Committee Judical Committee of Sia dest Legislature will meet to day at 4 poo. ia Roland Parker HI in G3L 76 Years of Editorial Freedom Volume 75, Number 129 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1963 Founded February 23, 18D3 Tickets To 6 Game 1 77''y & s s v ' & kius Are All Sold Out By RICK GRAY of The DoUy Tar Heel Staff If you want a way to the NCAA finals in Los Angeles this week but don't already have tickets, forget it. Two charter flights are scheduled to carry students to University the finals, and both are filled almost completely. Of the 963 tickets that Carolina got for the NCAA's final round this weekend, 300 were allocated for student use, and all of them went to the students who were booked on charter flights. The remaining tickets went to the Rams Club, team members' parents, President William and Governor Dan i II- A . Dean Cathey Boosts Team In Nationals The following is an open letter to all students who will be attending the NCAA finals this weekend in Los Angeles from Dean of Student Affairs CO. Cathey: "Carolina fans all over the nation will be glued to their TV sets this weekend as our basketball team fights for the National Championship. "As members of the University Pep Band,' cheerleaders, team and general supporters who are happily preparing for the trip, I should like to remind you that a portion of your conduct will be aired on national television. The attitudes of persons in Los Angeles gained nationwide towards this University will be af fected by how you conduct yourselves while there. "We wish our team well. We wish you all safe travel and a great weekend. We expect all of you to make our friends and admirers all over the nation proud." C. Friday K. Moore Officials in the ticket office said that the students would not sign up for the charter flights unless they were guaranteed tickets. The charter flights include the price of round trip transporta tion and admission to the games. Joey Aiken and Dusty Rhodes organized the first flight. Aiken said that they began organizing the trip after the ACC tourney, and that when the Heels defeated Davidson, "We knew we were going." Their flight is for 96 people, and they have a waiting list of 20 people. The group will fly from Raleigh Durham airport Friday and will go straight to L.A. on a Boeing 727 Whisper jet with a stop in Denver to refuel. -The organizers are making no profit on the deal, according to Aiken. They do, however, get free plane tickets. Eddie Bagwell started organizing his charter flight Monday morning and by late afternoon Tuesday he had sold all 200 places that included tickets. Some 23 additional people paid money to fly out on one of the two planes chartered, but without tickets, taking the chance of picking up tickets in Los Angeles. The two planes one a jet and the other a prop jet will be leaving Raleigh Durham airport Frida.v i , it' A 1.1 YV XvA - rf "i - 2 a O A rt ?S Attack Viet W 1 - t J.I bRO t-' ' , By WAYNE HURDER is scheduled for 9 a.m. in o The Daily Tar Hei sta Chapel Hill Recorder's Five UNC coeds, dressed as Court Vietnamese peasants, carried The 15 persons cine of them cardboard coffins, and infant- students were charged with style dolls Tuesday as they law which prohibits a person marched through campus in or group to enter a public protest of the Vietnam war. building and disrupt the The demonstration followed business conducted in the another one Monday during building, which 15 persons were arrested The 15 sat in the doorway of as they set-in to impede Dow the room in which the Dow Chemical Co. recruiting on recruiter was interviewing ap- campus. pli cants. They were arrested Two of the coeds marching by campus police, in the "Guerilla Skit" carried The ' "guerilla skits" were signs. . one of them readin? started a month ago. About ' DTH Staff Photo by Gene Wang . SDS demonstrators pray in Polk place ... the cardboard coffins symbolize children killed in Viet Nam 6 Ugliest Mam ' : Contest:, To Aid Camnus Chest MM JTrjr Dally (Ear Qrrl World News BRIEFS By United Press International Rules Committee Stalls Rights Bill WASHINGTON A rebellious rules committee Tuesday struck down the plan of House Democratic leaders to bring the Senate's open housing bill unchanged to a showdown, floor vote next week and perhaps at all. By an 8-7 vote that shocked the leadership, the committee decided to delay its own action on the civil rights package until April 9 just two days ahead of Congress scheduled 10-day Easter recess. Even then, there were signs the panel would refuse to authorize the up or down vote the leadership wantd. If it did, the House vote would in all likelihood fall past the April 22 start of the Rev. Martin Luther King's "Poor People's Crusade" in the capital. Gold Price Drops - Dollar Gains PARIS The price of gold dropped anew Tuesday on European markets and the American dollar and British pound recovered more strength in the wake of last week's severe monetary crisis. In London, where the Labor government introduced a severe austerity budget, the pound soared to its best level on the foreign exchange market since Feb. 26, just before the great gold rush bgtn. The closing rate was $2.40 1-2 per pound. On the Paris market gold was down to $39.04 an ounce amid a war of nerves by speculators still trying to cash in on quick pro fits. The price was almost a dollar an ounce less than Monday's closing figure of $40.01 and sharply down from last Friday's record high of $44.36 an ounce. British Tax Raised Ten Per Cent LONDON The Labor government Tuesday staggered Britons with . a jolting 10 per cent tax hikeiighest in the nation's history and coupled it with an 18-month wage freeze. It warned thw whole grim package will slash living standards by as much as three per cent for the next two years. Chancellor of the Exchequer Roy Jenkins, presenting the government's annual budget to a hushed and gloomy House of Commons, said the moves were necessary if Britain was to climb back up the painful road to recovery after develuation of the pound, a continuing international payments deficit and the gold crisis. "These are burdens we cannot shrug off," Jenkins said. "I believe the British people understand and are willing to make the necessary sacrifices." VC Claim Security Breakthrough SAIGON The South Vietnamese command Tuesday displayed two Viet Cong defectors who said North Vietnam's spy network had cracked security on B52 raids giving Communists 24 hours warning on time and target for the giant U.S. bombers. "That's baloney," U.S. Brig. Gen. Winant Sidle said in a prompt and firm denial. "Many of our strikes are not even plan ned that far in advance." Sidle is Gen. William C. Westmoreland's information chief . Even as the Viet Cong defectors were telling of the alleged security leak, the B52 Stratofortresses were dropping tons of bombs on North Vietnamese forces surrounding Khe Sanh. By TOM HILDEBRANDT of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Campus Chest solicitations will be done on campus this April 1-10 through Alpha Phi Omega's Ugliest Man on Campus contest, APO Chairman . Vincent Townsend announced today. Townsend said that formerly the drives were done separate ly but will be united this : year to facilitate operations. Campus chest is t he university's . answer to the United Fund drive in larger communities. The money collected by the contest to select the worst looking male on campus will be distributed among six organizations: the O ' B e r r y Center in Goldsboro, the NC Heart Association, the Murdoch School in Butner, the classes in connection with Greek Week. Hopefully,, the "ugly man" would get the sup port of the women's residence by campaigning in the lobby of the dorms. Letters outlining organiza tion are being mailed to all UNC-YMCA, Project Hope and the UNC Foreign Students Emergency Fund. Townsend said that since UMOC would be the only solicitation made on campus the participation from the men's living units should be close to 100 per-cent. The goal house presidents this week so is to be a contribution of $.50 inter-dorm competition can for each University student. a start next Tuesday. ' The two "divisions for this r . : ... n years contest are me fraternities, to be judged ton total contributions, and the Residence colleges to be judged per capita basis. The winning "ugly men" in each division will received an all-expense-paid date in ad dition to trophies for their residence's trophy rooms. Townsend said the fraternities drive would be the responsibility of the pledge 'Napalm saved my baby from Communism, a fate worse than death." The five walked silently through Polk Place and Y Court, down to Lenoir Hall, through it to the Pine Room, and up to the flag pole in Polk Place. There they knelt for a few minutes and left the three coffins. The "guerrilla skit," as the actions are termed by anti-war demonstrators, are sponsored by the Students for a Democratic Society and the Southern Student Organizing Committee. The groups sponsored the picketing of Gardner Hall and - South Building Monday, at which time they presented a request to Dean of Student Af fairs CO. Cathey that Dow recruiters be forced to debate the morality of their pro duction of napalm. They held a meeting Monday night at which they collected $75.44 in contributions for bondsman fees of the 15 persons arrested. . The demonstrators also decided to hold a vigil outside South Building during the trial of the 15 on Tuesday. The trial five have been held since then. Roger Wells, one of the organizers of the skit, ex plained that they are used "as another way of bringing the war to the consciousness of people who might not otherwise think of it." Judy Weinberg, organizer of Tuesday's skit, said the group laid the coffins before the American flag "because most of us feel America is doing something very immoral." The flag pole seems to us to as a place of gathering for Americans so we thought we'd leave them there. 'A A CM M oynihan To On Urban Problems peak DTH Staff Photo by Cent Wang eniors Cited Bv Frat Connci Reed Cunningham, Randy Worth, and Sterling Phillips received the Outstanding Fraternity Senior A wards at the IFC meeting Monday night. The award is new this year and is given to a senior to recognize contribution to the fraternity system. It was established to "give an incentive to work harder in IFC," according to Randy Myer, former IFC Chairnan. "There are many fraternity people who have contributed in areas other than just fraternities, but the IFC wanted to recognize those who made the contribution strictly in the area of fraternities," he said. Cunningham is from Spartanburg, S. C. and is a past president of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity and Chair man of the IFC Rush Commis sion. . Worth is from Raleigh and is a past president of Phi Delta Theta and Chairman of the IFC Judicial Reform Com mittee. Phillips is from Greensboro and is a past Rush Chairman of IFC. He is ia member of Beta Theta Pi. Nominations for the award were made by IFC, and the final choice was made by the Executive Committee. Plaques were awarded the three members chosen. John F. Kennedy's Assistant Secretary of Labor for Policy Planning and Research will be the speaker at the YM-YWCA Poverty and Affluence Sym posium to be held this Friday evening on the University of North Carolina campus. Daniel P. Moynihan, presently director of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, will speak about "Change and Stability in American Cities" at 8 p.m. in Howell Hall. School of Education, and Senior Member of the Institute School of Government, Harvard University. He is also currently serving as Chairman of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Seminar on Poverty, and is a member of the Massachusetts Advisory Committee, United States Commission on Civil Rights. Moyihan holds a B.A. degree from Tufts Collegs, and the M.A. and Ph.d. degrees from Fletcher School of Interna tional Law and Diplomacy. He UNC coeds protest the war ... in an1 SDS sponsored demonstration GM Board Begins Interviews Monday Dr. Moynihan is Professor of was a Fulbright Scholar at the . ... t t Education and Urban Politics, Harvard University Graduate of Politics of the Kennedy No Pep Rally Scheduled For Finals London School of Economics and Political Science in 1950 51. A noted lecturer, Moynihan is also the author of numerous articles and books including Poverty in America (with Margaret S. Gordon) (Chandler, 1965), Beyond the Melting Pot (with Nathan Glazer) (M.I.T. Press, 1963), The Negro Challenge to the Business Community (with Eli Ginzberg) (McGraw-Hill, 1964), The Defenses of Freedom, The Public Papers of Arthur J. Goldberg (editor) (Harper and Row, 1966). Interviews for positions on the 1963-69 Graham Memorial Activities Board will be held Monday, March 25, through Friday, March 29. Applications and sign-up sheets are available at the Grahm Memorial Information Desk. The Graham Memorial Activities Board is responsible for planning and executing the social, educational and cultural programs sponsored by Graham Memorial. Positions open include secretary of the Activities Board and chairmen of the Current Affairs, Drama, Films, Games, Music, Publici ty and Social Committees. Descriptions of the activities of the various committees are at the desk in GM. The new chairmen will select their committees and plan their individual programs for the 1963-69 academic year. In addition to serving as chairmen of the individual committees, they will also serve as members of the Activities Board where they will participate in the coordination of the over-all GM program including the GM Series and the program for Jubilee 1969. Any full-time student who is interested in one of the posi tions and who has an academic average of "C" or above is en couraged to apply. Selections will be made on the basis of in terest, experience and leadership ability. An nouncement of appointments to the positions will be made in early Aprfl. ympo&iiiiEii Fdot On Reel Qainai By MARY BURCH of The Daily Tar Heel Staff "Red China and the West" is the theme of the 1968 Carolina Symposium to be held March 31-April 3. Edgar Snow, Han Suyin and Alexander. Eckstein will be among the speakers" at the Symposium. Snow, an author and journalist, was a foreign cor responent in China, Burma and Indochina for the Chicago Trubune, New York Hearld Tribune and London Daily Hearald. Through his associa tion with Mme. Sun Yat-Sen he was the first .news cor respondent . to enter Red China. Han Suyin, a pseudonym us ed by Dr. Elizabeth Comber, is a writer and speaker. Her many books and articles have made her one of Asia's most eloquent spokesmen. Alexander Eckstein is a member of the National Com mittee on U.S.-China Relations and presently working on a study of economic retardation in China. Other speakers include Robert Barnett, Mirko Bruner, Kenneth Michael Wilford, P.K.: Banerjee, A. Doak ' Barnett, Donald S. Zagoria, and Roger Hilsman. The traditional C a r o 1 i n a Symposium, a biennial forum on a topic of serious interest to the University community, had its origins in the Human Rela tions Institute which held its first seminar March 20-25, 1927. The purpose o the Sym posium is to present speeches and activities which sharpen the intellectual inquisitiveness of the University community and the entire state of North Carolina. The Symposium has tradi tionally been on a oublic ar 'eminent expertise to a problem The committee was faced which is both unfamiliar to with two main problems in most Americans and of press- choosing the speakers ac cording to uie cnainaaa. xue ing importance." . Red China was chosen as the focal point according t o Branch because "it is the area least under stood in our Asian policy ." - Most people who discuss Red China speak in vague terms of the country's background in connection with Viet Nam, ac cording to Branch. "The Symposium Committee hopes to treat Red China in a broad perspective," Branch mnhiicWoH "We have UV mam prooiem was nnoing speakers who were experts on Red China. The second pro blem was persuading them to speak. "Those who do know a great deal about Red China and who hold public office are reluctant to speak because of the present controversy between U.S. and Chinese relations," said Branch. "If anyone is going to speak rationally on Red China, he has sights and creative approaches Split and the Vietnam War." for the latter. Zagoria will be replacing The Symposium is scheduled previously schedued Franz for two speakers per day with Schumann. The final speech afternoon and evenings sessions. On Sunday, March 31, Edgar Snow's movie "One Fourth of Humanity" will be shown in Carroll Hall at 2 and 4 pjn. That evening Snow will speak on "Red China Views the West" at Memorial HalL 8 p.m. in will be delivered by Rogers ffneman He will speak on "Red China: Prospectus for the Future." All of the speeches will be carried on WUNC-TV and WUNC radio. The Symposium is sponsor ing an Intercollegiate Seminar Monday, April 1, the 2 pjn. composed of students from 34 . ... .! eluded the cultural, political, a lot agamii aim w uc&m StnAino cai.' Me must uxt uvcituuic w organizational and historical elements in an overall picture of the Asian nation." The committee is depending fairs issnA anr-crAino tn Tflvlor more on the nature of the topic Branch nh airman, nf fhA 1963 to attrarf: the student's interest Symposium "The topic, "Red China and the West," seems especially appropriate for a program con cerned with Dublic affairs," said Branch. "It brings Branch pre-set emotions of most Americans towards Red China," he said. Once the speaker has overcome the basic problems, he is faced with the difficult than the nrestiee of the tasK Oi sumuaung wua sSkers Thrsntakers are un- layman and the relatively in SSSStoSir field, formed in their, respective i3rrrr S TT-niar fields. He must interest the KarJXZr former with basic facts and session will feature Han Suyin on "Cultural Confrontation." The 8 pjn. session will be on "National Perspectives on Red China" with Robert Barnett replacing William Bundy as speaker. Tuesday Alexander Eckstein will speak on "The Dynamics of Development" in the af ternoon sesion. "China in Asia' will be A. Doak Barnet t's topic for the evening speech. Wednesday, the final day of the symposium, Donald Zagoria will deliver the 2 p.m. ideas, while providing new in- speecn on "The Sino- Soviet colleges and universities m U.S. and Canada. The students will discuss their ideas with the speakers after each speech. The speakers will hold taped press conferences in GM following the seminars. Joel J. Schwartz is faculty a d v i s o r for the seminar. . . Robert A. Ruper will be mod erator for the Symposium. The Symposium is operating on a budget of more than $15,000. The money came from GM, Student Government and private donations. -