cpax nut, n, c. Tt Continued Warm PPer 70's Sh 2hJS la tt .Friday. tinned warm Nixon Movie The Stsdents For Nixon will sponsor the film "A Time To Begin" concerning the 1SCS elections tonight at 8 p-m. in Carroa Hall. I) 76 Y of Editorial Frggrfnm 7lume 75. Number 136 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH 'CAROLINA. THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1958 Founded February 25, 1893 r r o iinie JisiM ofeu v, US 1L 1 fear -,-s TED '1 tf I,. x - 4 i ;7 Asks i Withdrawal Fro Viet Nai w ar to ... . . - .' ; j . - - 1 - -y.....imi 1. --iii.i 4 ' ' Carolina Basketball Coach Dean Smith climbs trfbntions behind the wheel of his brand new 1968 Carolina page 5. Blue Cadillac given to him through con- frora Carolina fans. See story on Penalties Bill Re turned Student Legislature To By RICK GRAY of The Daily Tar Heel Staff The Judicial Committee Wednesday re-approved the student court penalties bill sen ding it back to Student Legislature with virtually no changes. The bill was reported to SL favorably by committee last week, but the body voted to recommit the bill for word changes which would make the bill more clear. 'The main objection" voiced"4" to the bill by SL was the definition of court reprimand which said, in the original form, that while the penalty was not recorded on the bation calls for the student receiving the penalty to be barred from all extra-curricular activities intra mural athletics student government, pledging fraternities or sororities and representing the University in any official capacity. Pete Powell, legislator from Everette, introduced a bill "directing the elections board to hold a survey on changing the academic calendar" to "aTIowexams to ' be ad- ministered before Christmas. Powell stated that the same proposal was voted on at UNC G and on the Greensboro cam pus in an effort to present . student opinion puses of . the Consolidated University and was passed "overwhelmingly." '. The proposal, if eventually ratified by the University ad ministration, would set up an academic year similar to that at High Point and Phieffer Colleges where fall exams are taken before the spring semester begins, and school ends early in May. The fall semester would begin in August By TODD COHEN of The Daily Tar Heel Staff We are devoting ourselves building an independent political power in this country in the hope of everauauy changing thesyste m." So -said Fred Holstead, Socialist Worker Party can didate for president, in an in terview prior to in Howell Hall night. . "International Society" Halstead, a cloth cutter by trade, feels that the ideal system would be an "in ternational society, but there can be no internationalizing unless the oppressed nations and peoples of the world are able to express and develop themselves and control their own destinies." In order to bring about this ideal situation, which h e believes is a long way in the future, Halstead feds that some necessary changes must be effected by this country, bearing in mind the reality of the present. . The two basic parts of his platform call for an immediate withdrawal of American troops from Vietnam and "black con trol for black communities." Halstead wants Americans to withdraw from the Viet war because he believes that "we should let the Vietnamese set tle their own differences." Myth A "Fallacy" He does not insure that the basis of that country would be capitalistic, but he claims that the myth concerning the dominotype spread of Com munism is a "fallacy." He hopes that the National Liberation Front would not them." I-He hopes that the National Liberation Front would not "k21 everybody who opposes them." ! Halstead says that revolu tions in foreign- nations are his speech evaable, regardless of th Wednesday presence or absence o f American troops. tie sees a fear among big business leaders in America of a threat to the American economy, should the United States withdraw forces around the world, but says the system here is on the ebb. ' He denies the validity of the belief in a "Communist plot" tooverthrow the world piece by piece. Black Control Halstead is in favor of black control of black communities because he believes that the United States is basically a "racist society." He sees the American Negro being forced to live in a white man's world and play by the white man's rules. Quie aside from this aspect of American society, Halstead that there are people in this nation with certain, ethnic and cultural differences. He maintains that a policy of "separation, rather, than segregation" is in order. Halstead believes that the : conditions which led to the uprisings in the ciies last summer are going to be worse next summer. He says that if elected, he believes he would be able to decrease the number of riots, by the institution of two basic policies. First, he would allow no shooting by police or national guards because he feels that is not the way to solve the problem. Secondly,- he would have the com munities in which they live, the police would be aware of the problems which exist and would thus be able to handle them better than those who are not aware of the situation. I w I C Sets iRtdW iest " DTU Staff Photo by STEVK ADAMS Fred Halstead, Socialist ... outlines own presidential campaign For ;lacoguiffi;oeds Students Meet student's permanent record, it could be considered by the Dan of Student Affairs in making a recommendation for a student who had received the penalty. The phrase stating that the Dean of student affairs could consider the penalty was deleted by SL, and the com mittee debated whether the clause should be restored to thbilL The committee decided that SL did not have the power to regulate whether the ad ministration had the right to look at a student's files, chairman of the Men's Honor Court Howard Miller pointed possibility of wit Vhx nprmanpnt recorus wuerauun. VUb Vfc V w and disciplinary records are kept in the administrative of fices and. that the Dean of Student Affairs, the Dean of Men and the Dean of Women had access to those files. The committee did not restore the clause. Student Legislators, last Thursday, voiced opipion that definite probation was too stiff, and that objection to the bill was the main reason for its re-commitment. The committee made no changes in definite probation as it was originally written in the bill. A sentence of definite pro- on the cam- The committee passed tne bill favorably with the stipula tion that Powell conduct a poll on the feelings of the faculty. Student legislature will con changing the system. -The Wm e n & Redsnce- a, Council has set the rules test vletnntiqg women students. . Committee Rejects Travel Tax Plan WASHINGTON (UPD The House Ways and Means Com mittee Wednesday turned down President Johnson's tough travel tax plan except for two of its mildest provisions. But while rejecting the pro posed graduated tax on American travellers abroad, the committee left open the later con- As a substitute for that tax one of Johnson's major legislative proposals to keep dollars in the United States the panel sent to the House a bill containing a 5 per - cent ticket tax on all airline flights outside the coun try and a reduction from $100 to $10 in the amount of purchases an American can bring home duty free. Ways and Means Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., said the tourist tax is not necessari ly dead but may be considered at a later time. Treasury Undersecretary Joseph W. Barr, who was in the closed door meeting, said essentially the same. ; ; Barr told newsmen that the tourist spending tax may be considered when, and if, the administration proposes some form of import tax on products shipped into the United States. The administration's tourist tax was proposed to discourage for incoming students- for the Thursday after Orientation Week. In the past it has been given during Orientation Week. ." Students who fail the first test will not be campused for a Friday night retest as they were this year. They will instead be asked to participate in group discussions of the rules and will be given other chances to pass the test without cam pusment. The new plan is another at tempt of WRC to emphasize a positive approach to women's rules. "The tests are to check on the students' understanding of the rules rather than just to make sure they learned them," Heather A discussion of : rules will instead be held in hall meetings the first Monday night following Orientation Week. Red Cross Sets Course In First Aid VP M Ralmgh Americans trom vi siting Ness, Assistant to the Dean Europe and Asia through a v of Women erolained. 15 per cent levy on daily spen ding above $7. A 30 per cent Y tax would apply about $15, but no tax would be attached on travelers visiting Canada, Mexico or Latin America, or for spending below $7. Barr said the administration will decide whether to propose import taxes after the outcome of current "negotiations between special U.S. trade Ambassador William Roth and Western European countries. Presumably, a tax would be proposed if negotiations are unsuccessful to lower trade barriers to U.S. goods erected by some countries, including West Germany. A recommendation by the WRC Executive Board to do away completely with the rules test was not accepted. The recommendation had suggested that the rules quiz be substituted by extensive discussions and perhaps skits explaining the rules at house meetings. Many of the WRC members felt that the rules test is necessary, but all agreed that a positive attitude toward it would be emphasized. Although there have been numerous rules changes made this year which will go into effect for the first time next or A First Aid Instructors' Course will be offered at the Red Cross from April 1.-5. The five session course will be taught by Jon Martindale who is the National Red Cross Safety Services Representative Airport for this area. The course will stress im portant measures for accident prevention as well as train people for First Aid action at the scene of an accident. The class will meet at the Red Cross Chapter House, 211 West Main Street in Carrboro from 7 to 10 p.m. Any person holding an effective Advanced First Aid Certificate is eligible to enroll in the course, which will prepare him to be an instructor. To register for the Instruc tor's Course call Mrs. Lindsay Neville at 942-4862 or mail a postcard to the Red Cross Chapter House. Bv MARY BURCII of The Daily Tar Heel Staff V i c e - P r esident Hubert Humphrey will be met by both supporters a nd ., dissenters when he speaks in Raleigh today. The Vice-President will ar rive at Raleigh-Durham airport at 12:45 this afternoon. He will be met by Gov. Dan K. Moore who will go with him to Memorial Auditorium where the Vice-President will speak before the Agricultural S tab ilization-Conservational Service (ASCS) at 1:25 p.m. The Young Democrats Club will go to the Raleigh Durham to show support for Humphrey "as Vice-President-and as. a person" according, to Jerry Rutledge, YDC president. at in attend Humphrey's speech Memorial Auditorium Raleigh. The group plans to demonstrate against the ad ministration's policy "in .Viet nam, possibly with a walkout during the speech." Coogan said he ' expected from 50 to 300 students to turn out to show their disap proval of the administration's policies. The head of the ASCS department said Humphrey's speech will be an "agricultural speech on farm problems which will be of interest to ASCS department." There will be reception the Vice-President before departs for Washington 3:15. for he at "We hope to have about 20 30 students to go witn us to the airport for Humphrey's departure," said Rutledge. ; Anyone interested in going with the YDCs should meet the group in the Grail Room, in Graham Memorial at 1:30 p.m. William Coogan announced that a group of concerned graduate and undergraduate students will organize at the sundial in front of Morehead plantarium at 9:15 a.m. to The head of the ASCS department said he was not aware of any demonstrations planned by N.C. State or any other schools in connection with Humphrey's appearance. Enters Choice 6S Halstead, who is ented on the Choice '63 ballot, is in terested in the outcome of that vote for two reasons. Halstead likes the idea of the vote because, first, it con tains a referendum on the war. Since this is the first national referendum of its kind, he feels that a significant vote against the war would have a great impact on the nation. Secondly, Halstead is in terested in stirring up interest in his campaign, as well as his own showing in the vote. Choice '63 is a mock presidential e lection sponsored by Time Magazine to behe Id April 24. He would like to see students becoming interested in the political process, especially in areas where response has been backward. Such reaction, he believes, would "benefit the country." Conrning the presidential campaign of Robert Kennedy, Haltead says, "Kennedy ap pears to be rather an op portunist, but I'm not challeng ing his personal integrity." Faeidty-Staff Rec Assn. Begins Drive The . UNC-Chapel Hill Faculty-Staff Recreation Association is conducting a membership-fund drive i n order to expand its facilities. The Recreation Association, with a current membership of 150, has a twenty-tive acre site east of Finley Golf Course to be developed into a recrea tion area. A fifty meter Olympic-size swimming pool and a wading pool head the list of . desired, facilities.. .,Also pro- -posed are tennis court?, playing fields, and . picnic areas. A farmhouse on" the site will be converted into a clubhouse on a do-it-yourself basis. The breaking of ground for a swimming pool this summer depends on the support of at least 100 more families in the next few weeks. The initiation fee is $150 and can be paid in $25 installments. Monthly dues, beginning . when the facilities are ready for use, will range from $7.10. Application forms can be ob tained from any Recreation Association member. They should be sent with the in itiation fee to Prof. Wesley Wallace, Swain Hall. A threeMiimeusional model of the tentative site layout has been designed by Arthur Cogswell and is on display in the lobby of the Wilson Library. Interested persons are urged by the Recreation Association to visit the site at any time. The project organizers hope that this new facility will act as a unifying center to a grow ing and increasingly varied university of some 3,000 fulltime faculty and staff and their families. Huhmam By NANCY STANCILL of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Lectures by Roger Hilsman, concluding speaker .for the Carolina Symposium, March 31-April 3, reportedly caused army colonel Earl Brown to change his viewpoint on the Vietnam War. Brown, who presided last May over Captain Howard B. Levy's court-martial for op posing the war, has become an opponent of the war himself. Brown stated, "A number of things served to change my mind. Among these were lec tures at Columbia Umversit by Roger Hilsman." Hilsman is one of the six authorities on China from Yugoslavia, India, Great Bri tain and the United States to form part of the Carolina Symposium. To 1 ; ,f. orecast China 9a Fuiuir ROGER HILSMAN Hilsman's address, "Red" China: Prospectus for the Future" will be given April 3 at 9:00p.m. Hilsman served as Director of the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research , and later as Assis tant Secretary of State for Far Eastern affairs during the Kennedy administration. ' He held State Department posts through the Buddhist crisis , in South Viet Nam and the coup against President Diem and the ideological dispute between China and the Soviet Union. In 1962 Hilsman made the . first official United States statement of the Sino-Soviet dispute and in 1963 h e delivered the first major policy statement in recent years on Communist China. He is regarded as one of the foremost . authorities on Red China. . "National Perspectives on Red China" is the topic to be. discussed April 1 at 8:00 p.m. Participating in the panel discussion will be Robert Barnett representing the United States, Mirko Bruner, Yugoslavia, P.K. Banerjee, India, and Michael Wilford, Great Britain. Barnett, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs, is an alumnus of UNC. Born in China, Barnett received his bachelor's and master's degrees from UNC before doing graduate study at Oxford and Yale Universities. After the war, Barnett serv ed as U.S. representative of the Economics and Reparat ions Committees of the Far Eastern Commission, responsi ble for occupation policies towards Japan. He was appointed the Department of State's Of ficer in Charge for China Economic Affairs in 1949 and for '. Western European - Economic Affairs in 1951. Barnett is the author of several monographs and books on Far Eastern relations. Dr. Bruner is the Minister Counselor of the Yugoslav Embassy in Washington. Bruner joined the Yugoslav diplomatic service after the war and has since served in Rome, Washington, Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo. Dr. Banerjee is foreign minister from the Embassy of India and is concurrently accredited Ambassador .of India to Costa Rica. Dr. Banerjee has held em bassy positions in Canada, East Pakistan and Japan, served as India' Minister and Charge d'Affairs in Peking. In 1963, he was awarded the "Padma . Shri", an India n decoration for meritorious work done in China. Dr. Banerjee has published several books on disarmament and the different aspects of the United Nations. Wilford has served as Counsellor to the British Embassy in Washington since September. Some of his previous posi tions were First Secretary of the Commission General for South East Asia and Counsellor and Head of Chancery, Office of the British Charge d' Af faires at Peking. Dr. Zagoria will address the symposium on "The Sino Soviet Split and the Vietnam War," April 3 at 2:00 p.m. Dr. Zagoria is the Director of the Research Institute of Modern Asia at New York's Hunter College. His lecture will include many of the ideas of his recent book, Vietnam Triangle: Moscow, Peking, Hanoi, and the War in Viet nam. Besides intensive research and writing, Dr.Zagoria work ed for: the U.S. government ten years as Analyst of Com munist Bloc Affairs. Ugly Man Of The Day

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