,.C. Library rials Dept. 870 ao5l Hill, II, C. 2751 -r Publications-Judicial Interviews for one position on the Publications Board will be held today from 3-4 p.m. in Roland Parker L The Judicial Committee will not meet today. Student Wives Club The first meeting of the UXC Student Wives Club will be held tonight at 8 in GM. Joe Augustine of the Chamber of Commerce will address the meeting. Volume 76, Number 12 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1963 Founded February 23, 1893 h:mmmM mm w kVA- 4'- f ' r SG Plans Series Of 6 Gripe-Ins' TTTT Tl rt 10 jnaiu .t; t 'r Elected. IDOmiDlIIl Skirl mm -A y Tin O TT O .g jut As long as the University continues to collect the nominal sum of $9 from every undergraduate and $7.28 from every graduate student under the mysterious label of "student activities fees," there will be those who will question the nature and criticize the leadership of those activities. Once again, student government has risen to the cause with a planned series of "gripe-ins" for those who know not-and know that they know notr-to what good use their money has put Morehead RESIDENCE College will hose the first of the series in Graham dormitory tonight at 10 p.m. with Governor Rick Page presiding. The second meeting will be held Wednesday at 10 p.m. in the Ehringhause social room and presided over by Ehringhaus Governor Bill Courtney. Novelist Set To Appear At Bookshop Writer Joyce Crawford, a faculty wife whose first novel Stranger In Our Darkness, has just been published, will be at the Bull's Head Bookshop on Wednesday, October 2, from 2 to 4:00 p.m., to meet with students and faculty and to autograph books. This afternoon, at 4:00 n m chp will hp at tho P!hanl Hill Public Library for the first o.f a series of "meet-the-author" teas sponsored by the Friends of the Public Library, to which students and faculty are invited. Mrs. Crawford has already made several appearances in the area and on television. Her novel was written in part while she was a member of the UNC Extension Division Novel Workshop, which is conducted annually by Manly Wade Wellman for writers with a novel in progress. First Meeting Of NUC Set For Tonight Here The New University Conference, a political organization aimed at graduate students and faculty members, will holds its initial organizational meeting of the year tonight at 7:30 in Carroll Hall. The Southern Students Organizing Committee, a parallel group for undergraduates, will hold a meeting tonight at the same time in 111 Murphey. Last Thursday SSOC held its first organizational meeting and drew a crowd of over 150. The NUC has been Carolina Political Union Now Holding Interviews- The Carolina Political Union has begun interviewing to find eight new members for the 1968-69 academic year. The interviews, which started yesterday, will continue through Thursday, 3:00 to 5:00 each afternoon in Roland Parker Lounge of Graham Memorial. Any graduate or undergraduate student is eligible. Students may sign up for interviews at the Graham Memorial Information Desk. The application forms should be filled out and returned to the desk before the interview. Admission to the CPU is on a competitive basis, and membership is limited to thirty people. About eight members left the Union as graduating seniors or graduate students According to Student Body President Ken Day, "All residence college officers and student legislators from that district are expected to attend." Day feels that the main criticism of student government is its lack of bargaining power with the administration. "One of the things we can do to enhance our power is to expand our base of constituents. The "gripe-ins" will provide greater contact with student government officials and the people who pay." Day will talk briefly on student government work this year but will "leave the majority of time to listen to reactions, comments, and concerns of people living in these residence colleges." According to Dan Killian, communications officer for student government and the man responsible for the "gripe-ins", "It's a chance to get out the politicos." Informal Language Talks ISC Discuss ions Are By TOM GOODING DTH Staff Writer "Students who have been having trouble learning a foreign language in the university classrooms have generally found that the informal language discussions sponsored by the ISC have been very helpful," said Danielle Withrow, co-chairman of the ISC. The intensive language study program was initiated by the ISC last spring. Groups of students met weekly in informal discussions under the leadership of a foreign student All discussion is in the language of the foreign student. These seminars, which generally entail two hours each week, gave the participants tentatively structured into four study action groups based on different concerns of the members. SSOC divided itself according to issues into three similar committees last week. The four NUC groups are 1) Democracy in the University; 2) the University and the Community; 3) the draft; and 4) the American system. In its present state the NUC consists largely of faculty members on campus. Temporary organizers have been established as a result of pre- organization meetings that ncic &ic:iv4 biua auiiiiiici. finishing their degrees. The Carolina Political Union was organized in 1936 by the political science students of the late Professor E.J. Woodhouse, who were concerned with the changes being injected into American society by the New Deal. The CPU was reorganized in the spring of 1964 by student leaders who felt that such a non-partisan discussion group has a place in the University community. In the past few years the Union has met with such noted public figures as Edward Kennedy, Jacob Javits, Strom Thurmond, Charles Weltner, Morris Udall, Charles Mathias, John Kenneth Galbraith, Louis Harris, James Reston, and xl Lowenstein. r NO MORE WASHING-In an effort to help alleviate the present water shortage in Chapel Hill, the University practice in the basics of each language. It also exposed the student to the colloquial side of the language. Studies were conducted in Agnew Blasts AttOmey (general . TOLEDO,Ohio-Oov. Spiro Agnew Monday attacked U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark here with comments on crime in the streets, drug traffic, wiretapping and gun controls. He called for an increased crackdown on narcotics, including work through diplomatic channels and through customs, to keep the drugs out ot tne country. The NUC is a national membership organization which was formed in March 1968. The UNC Chapter includes Scott Bradley, an SSOC organizer, George Vlasits, who was convicted of refusing draft induction last week, and Dr. Lewis Lipsitz, a noted member of the Political Science Department According to a brochure describing the organization, the NUC believes "in a university which is the common resource of all those struggling to purge American society of its impulse to war and oppression.' The brochure also mentioned that the first meeting tonight will offer "a plan of organization and a course of action... to the group for its consideration." It further stated that it welcomes the participation of any faculty member or graduate student seeking to build a democratic university and society." Bus Schedule South Campus buses will leave cafeteria for downtown daily weekends at the following times: 12:10 12:25 1:10 1:25 3' Lj'(k'J cafeterias will begin using plastic and styrofoam dishes which are disposable. Roy Teague, service manager of French, German, Spanish, Chinese, and Italian, and Portugese. Almost any language is available if an interest is shown. "When the program was started the response was so great that we were swamped. with no professor holding a- grading pencil and learn much faster- Students handle ffte 1$" themselves and it has P5ove successful said iviisi vuimuvv. During the past Spring Semester the ISC opened a Student Travel Office. The office has already assisted over 400 American students in planning trips abroad. Programs include a $200 roundtrip flight to London; inter-European flights with as much as 80 per cent reduction off regular fares; NSA International LD. Cards; overseas car rentals and information on work and studies abroad. The program also includes travel inside the United States and special emphasis will be given to Mexico, Canada and the Caribbean. For students who are interested in studying abroad the ISC offers four exchanges to overseas universities. The major requirement is a working knowledge of the language. These are full scholarships for one complete year of study. During International Week there will be a campus-wide effort bv many clubs and organizations to give the Chapel Hill community an opportunity to become more aware of international affairs. Exhibits, films, discussions and speakers will be scheduled throughout the week. The ISC will also sponsor an International Forum in which professors will be invited to speak on an area of international conflict. This year it is hoped that the forum can be spread out to the residence colleges in an attempt to reach the entire campus. Project of the Americas (PRAM), sponsored bv the ISC, is an organization of Chase except 2:10 225 3:20 4:20 DTH Staff Photo By Tom Schnabcl Lenoir Hall, displays some of the dishes which will soon be used in cafeterias. all University students in both the U.S. and Latin America. UNC-CH is one of 15 campus chapters in the U.S. PRAM has three major purposes: to educate the peoples of the hemisphere about their sister countries, to create a tradition of dialogue - among the students of the hemisphere in an atmosphere which encourages the free and. open interchange of ideas; to develop a new generation of McCarthy Group Plans New Fight Will Support Former Backers Of McCarthy By J.D. WILKINSON DTH Staff Writer - Former McCarthy President supporters for will establish a special committee Thursday night to seek ways of raising funds to aid the campaigns of candidates for the U.S. Congress who backed the candidacy and principals of Eugene McCarthy, Dr. Alden Lind, said Monday. Lind, a UNC political science professor, is state coordinator of the McCarthy for President State Co ordinatin g Co mm ittee. The group has slated a series of meetings to discuss plans for future action now that McCarthy has been defeated in his bid for Party's the Democratic presidential nomination. The meeting Thursday night will be held in Gerrard Hall and will commence at 7:30. It will focus on issues as seen by the liberal wing of the Democratic Party and will feature a number of speakers who were active in the McCarth In a letter dated September 25, Lind made an appeal for contributions to help finance the campaigns of several Congressional candidate who either took an active part in the McCarthy presidential campaign or who have actively espoused the causes which McCarthy fought for in his bid for the Democratic nomination. These include William Fulbright of Arkansas, Wayne Morse of Oregon, Joe Clark of Pennsylvania, Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, and George McGovern of South Dakota, all of whom are battling for re- eiecuon to the U.S. Senate, and John Gilligan of Ohio and Paul O'Dwyer of New York, two candidates who are seeking election to the Senate for the first time Candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives include Frank Thompson of SALT LAKE CITY (UPI)-Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey said Monday he "would be willing" to stop the bombing of North Vietnam as a move toward peace if elected president.- Humphrey told a nationwide television audience: "As president, I would be willing to stop the bombing of the North as an acceptable risk for peace because I believe it could lead to success in the negotiations and a shorter war. This would be the best protection for our troops." Humphrey repeated, however, an earlier statement that neither he nor anyone else had control over the Vietnam WTar while President Johnson remained in office. Discussing his proposal if elected president, Humphrey said "in weighing that risk and before taking action I would place key importance on evidence direct or indirect, by Mem JL hemispheric leaders imbued with "a new American conscience". At present the UNC, PRAM pursues these objectives through campus forums and summer and year-long scholarship exchanges. The UNC-ISC will also send delegates to , the ScWthern "Model United Nations. Anyone interested in becoming a delegate should see Danielle Withrow in the ISC building. New Jersey, Don Edwards of California, and UNC alumnus Allard Lowenstein of Long Island, New York, who is generally given credit as being the man who convinced Eugene McCarthy to fight President Lyndon Johnson for the Democratic presidential nomination. Dr. Lind said that the letter was part of a preliminary effort to raise funds for these candidates and that the actual drive would be formalized at the Thursday night meeting. The National Student Association has contracted with RE-CON, a newly formed corporation, to provide member campuses with the first computerized job service. NSA will provide member campuses with questionaires which will be distributed to seniors. Virginia Carson and Bob Wilbur, the project coordinators at UNC, will begin distribution of the forms next week. After the forms are filled out, they will be sent to the RE-CON Corporation. After processing the information, RE-CON will then send the student a list of the companies which can use his services. In addition, each company on the list will be sent the names of all students who are Qualified to fill the positions offered. The company will then contact the student for a possible interview. RE-CON initiated this service in order to eliminate the on-campus job interviews. Rather than have the student spend hours at interviews to find out if he is even needed at Com For NSA Mem deed or word -of Communist willingness to restore the Demilitarized Zone between North and South Vietnam." Humphrey also said he would take a second step which would involve "the risk that the South Vietnamese would meet the obligations they say they are now ready to assume in their own self defense." Furthermore, the Democratic presidential contender said hp would sit down with South Vietnamese leaders to "set a specific timetable by which American forces could be systematically reduced while South Vietnamese forces took over more and more of the burden." "I would propose once more an immediate cease fire with United Nations or other international supervision and supervised withdrawl of all foreign forces from South Vietnam." he said. In what appeared to be a sharp b r eak with administration policies, Humphrey said, "I believe all of these steps could lead to an honorable and lasting settlement serving both our own national interest and the interest of the other nations of Southeast Asia." Humphrey said he did not "condemn any past commitment" regarding the Vietnam struggle. But, he added,"I do say, if I am president, I owe it to this nation to bring our men and resources in Vietnam back to American where we need them so badly and to be sure we put first things first in the future." Humphrey said as president, "I would undertake a new Commenting on why the local McCarthy workers are launching this effort, Lind said that it is "largely because most of these candidates have been singled out by organized labor, the Democratic Central Committee, and other organizations which have in the past supported Democratic candidates as somehow unworthy of their support this year." "All of these candidates have called for ending the war, and more importantly they puter Program Planned ber Ca: a company, through computerization RE-CON will be able to provide both students and companies with the necessary information. RE-CON refuses to contract with companies who fail to Exp. College Info Roger Thompson, chairman of the Experimental College announced Saturday that the joint Experimental College and Action Government description sheets will be distributed campus-wide today. The description sheets, to be distributed to students, faculty, and graduate students will be used to determine the courses for the Experimental College and the interest groups for the new Action Government. A contest is to be held to determine the best cover design for the joint Experimental College, Action Government catalogue. A first prize of $20 f i 1 J Hubert H. Humphrey strategy for peace in this world, based not on American omnipotence, but on American leadership-not only military and economic, but moraL" As he did in San Francisco speech last week, Humphrey proposed international peace-keeping armies under supervision of the United Nations in future conflicts. The vice president listed several things he would not do. He said he would not escalate the fighting in either North or South Vietnam. " "We must seek to de-escalate," ' Humphrey said. Humphrey appeared to be setting up a posture of his own policy concerning Vietnam without repudiating President' Johnson. "We will all pray that his Johnson's efforts to find peace will succeed, but U2 aysfrorrr now, there will be a new president, a new administration and new advisors," he said. have fought the perversion of priorities which has come to pass in our federal government" "Placing the war at the top of the nation's priority list has sapped resources which otherwise could have been directed toward more important and useful projects aimed at alleviating the domestic problems which now plague our nation." Dr. Lind will be one of the featured speakers at the meeting Thursday night puses comply with the Equal Opportunities Act The service is provided to the student free of charge and he is not restricted from using any and all other means of finding a job. will be awarded to the best cover . design for the joint catalogue which is to include the Experimental College on one side and the Action Government on the other. The first course for the Experimental College is tentatively scheduled for October 17. Anyone who would like the opportunity to teach a course is urged to do so. Thompson made this statement concerning the Experimental College Courses. He said, "Anyone who feels confident is encouraged to teach an Experimental College course." S I r- A A 1