Tucsda v. December 9, 1969 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Fez Five is May Make Q 7! Sl c Tf iff, Tv? J- 5 J! r DT 11 .. i . .- Jill jr 1 rO - - j WASHINGTON (UPI)-A narrow majority of the National Violence Commission d-f;r(i today the United Mat's faces anarchy if civil disobedience continues on the scale practiced by the civil rights movement in the 1960s. The all-white, seven member majority urjred that laws be U:-tfd only small symbolic groups or individuals and that il others abide by them until they are declared unconstitutional. They were represented by a Houston lawvcr. Leon Jaworski. as at a news s p o kesman onlerence. The six-member minority, iSf lading the only two Negroes on the presidential panel, disagreed that nonviolent, noncoercive disobedience to law should not be used to test the laws or to dramatize individual conscientious objection. U.S. District Court Judge A. Hkinbotham, a Philadelphia Negro speaking for the minority, said, "I do not believe the Voting Rights Act of 1965 would ever have been pa-sod if we had gone on a test case basis." Higginbotham, vice chairman of the commission, was joined in the minority by Chairman Dr. Milton S. Eisenhower, Negro lawyer Patricia Harris, Cardinal Terence Cooke of New York, Dr. W. Walter Menniger of the Topeka, Kan., clinic, and Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., whose wife recently was arrested for a Pentagon demonstration. The majority suggested: "That when in good faith the constitutionality of a statute, ordinance or a court decree is to be challenged, it can be done effectively by one individual or a small group. While the judicial test is in progress, all other dissenters should abide by the law involved until it is declared u nconstitutional." The majority asserted: "If personal or group selectivity of laws to be obeyed is to be the yardstick, we shall face nationwide disobedience of many laws and thus anarchy." Joining Jaworski in the majority report were Sen. Roman Hruska, R-Neb., Rep. Hale Boggs, D-La., Rep. William M. McCuiloch, R-Ohio, longshoreman-philosopher Eric Hoffer of San Francisco, Chicago lawyer Albert E. Janner Jr., and Judge Ernest W. McFarland of Arizona. Higginbotham contended in a minority statement that recent advances in civil rights "have not come about and could never have come about solely through judicial tests made by 'one individual while all others in the silent black majority waited for the ultimate constitutional determination." i " ; - 13 : i I Student Lesisbtor Bill Blue, chairman of the legislature's special ccrr.mittee looking into the financing of she Daily Tar Heel, has announced that his committee his begun investigation. -" W w t W , The invtstatic: student complaints, that Tar Heel should f:njr.oe instt3i of i.3.virir it ili tken from student f,v.v blue also Student Cve anv t - it I "We're looking at the appropriations over the past years," said Blue, "and how they've teen used, and we're checking the overall financial records of the Tar Heel. "We're not out to get the "The students wer.t to ihe legislature, the source cf the funds," Blue said, "rather than going to civil authorit ks." The committee will he its opinion to the legislature as to whether the paper should receive its funds from the students or from subscriptions too, whether Legislature sbouTc Dor.ev at all to a newsnarcr that takes an editorial position. "Some students feel that they shouki r.ot be forced to support the Tar llel sf they do not agree with its views," The committee will present its report before Feb. 5. the date of the first legislative session of the second semester. "Truckin' on Down the Line" Photo by Cliff Kolovson c aumiaus UNC STUDENT CHAPTER of the Association for Computing Machinery, Inc., will present Dr. Frederick P. Brooks, Jr., professor and chairman of the Dept. of Computer and Information Science lecturing on "Are we bringing in 1984?" today at 4:30 p.m. in 265 Phillips. BAHA'I faith meets tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. Everyone is invited. SECOND ORGANIZA TIONAL MEETING of SDS will be held tonight at 8 o'clock in 209 Student Union. HISTORY WIVES CLUB meets tonight at 8 o'clock in the home of Mrs. Ted Jabbs, 738 Clark Road. EDWARD FIELD, author of Variety Photoplays and STAND UP, FRIEND, WITH ME, will read and comment on his poetry as part of the American Studies Symposium tonight at 8 o'clock in Gerrard Hall. REGISTRATION for the - 0 Available i ! nirare brac Prospective graduate students have been urged to come by the Guidance and Testing Center in Peabody Hall for information on different schools, tests, and applications. Mrs. John Alcott, a guidance director at the center, said last week that guide books are available in 015 Peabody to help students investigate graduate programs in specified areas. Among the books available are the "1970 Peterson Guides to Annual Study," which offer program descriptions to graduate schools across the nation. There are eleven separate Peterson volumes: Architecture, the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, Biological Sciences, Business, Communication, Education, Engineering, Library and Information Sciences, Nursing and Public Health, Physical Sciences, Public Administration and International Affairs, and the Multidisciplinary Volume. Applications for various graduate and professional exams are in 019 Peabody. The applications for the Jan. 17 Graduate Record Examination are due in Princeton, N.J. by Dec. 23, and applications for the Feb. 28 exam are due by Feb. 3. The aptitude test is $8 and each advanced test is $9 ($7 if taken on the same day). The next Law School Admissions Test is Feb. 14. Applications are due by Jan. 23 (fee $13.50). The Admission test for Graduate Study in Business will be given next on Feb. 7. Applications are due Jan. 16 (fee $10). Graduate Schooi Foreign Language Tests will be Jan. 31. Deadline for applications to reach Princeton is Jan. 7 (fee $10). The Medical College Admission Test will be given in May. Applicat'ons will be available by March, 1970 (fee about $20). iled Sirl mil Says ml v s ILf linger -Striking SAN QUENTIN, Calif. (UPI)-Sirhan B. Sirhan, condemned assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, is on a hunger strike in his death tow cell at San Quentin State Prison. Prison officials announced the development today as Sirhan completed more than 6 months awaiting the outcome of appeals on his conviction and sentencing last May 21. Sirhan has spent the time in lonely isolation in cell 33, a sta-k concrete and steel enclosure on the prison's sixth floor, between two empty cells. Two mesh steel screens barricade the cell block corridor 15 feet away. Sirhan was found guilty of first -degree murder in the shooting of Kennedy June 5, 1968, at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles. No execution date has been set, pending automatic review and appeal procedures which are expected to takev at least another six months. Warden Louis Nelson said Sirhan began refusing his food Friday after sending him a note saying, 'This place is worse than a concentration camp. I'm going on a hunger strike." "5 t i t 10 until!! mi.fr (fVi?.i ( t Proudly Present The !" ffnnfn MA MM vJiNTKT Kaleigh TV S1 I .U S lJuv. vau., - ' ' - 3 SHo-. N.uiy 8:3010:00 4 1 1 :3;. " ' h" " . , Sat., Dec 13, &Sua, Ic 14 or'. Calendar fiapp Zsa Zsu Pitts Memorial Pinball Contest is continuing in 115 Avery or at the Avery Snack Bar. Contest runs from Dec. 8-12 POETRY FORUM WTednesday features a "litany" of poems concerning children in wartime, read by a group of local persons plus a showing of the film "War's Children". UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION of Sociology Students will hold a meeting Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. upstairs in the Union. Included Black Gets Ga. Post From Maddox ATLANTA (UPI)-Gov. Lester Maddox made the first appointment of a Negro to a major statJboard in Georgia history Monday by naming entertainer Graham Jackson of Atlanta to the Board of Corrections. Jackson, 66, wrho played ''command" musical performances for several presidents and was a favorite of the late President F. Delano Roosevelt, replaces Stetson Bennett of Jessup on the board for the coming vive years. Maddox described his appointee who will be sworn in to office Wednesday as "a man of compassion and a man who because of his prominence in the entertainment world has contributed greatly to the uplifting of the morals of all people." Maddox noted that "even though 60 per cent of all the people concerned in the state penal institutions are Negroes, there has never been a Negro appointed to this important board. "I believe that Mr. Jackson will help the board and the department of corrections to continue the prison reform that has been so prominent in the Maddox Administration." Maddox said he had known Jackson for many years as a "person concerned about his fellow man." on the program is a talk by Robert Staaffer on "Sex, Suicide, and Socialism in Sweden." THE ROAR of the Greasepaint the Smell of the Crowd begins Wednesday night and runs through Saturday. Performances will be held at 8 p.m. each evening in the Great Hall with a Saturday matinee at 2 p.m. Tickets are $1 for adults and $.50 for students. COLLEGE LIFE will present speaker "Swede" Anderson, the international campus co-ordinator for Campus Crusade for Christ, Wednesday at 9 p.m. in the Dey Hall Faculty Lounge. UNDERGRADUATE HISTORY Association will meet Thursday at 7:30 in the Student Union. All undergraduate history majors are urged to present their ideas for improving the undergraduate curriculum. Check the daily calendar at the XFRQ aERO XEKU vrnn yr IT i XERD i5c to 2c ( COPY- i)( QUICK 'A 133 y2 E. Franklin Above N. C. iV Cafeteria 'A 929-4028 nv I The Film that shocked the readers of PlaybOy (June issue) X 4: vJS 5 ' S V . J 4 1 s "tY'W-j- iniiiiiiliiiiii'ifty jfiMESM NfCMOLSON-a SAMUEL Z RKOf F KEIR DULLEA SENTA Ulil BERGER PALMER JOHN HUSTON COLOR by MOVIELAB 5 'op -THEB8E- Jjy Persons under 16 not drrwttcd Shows: 1. 3, 5, 7, & 9 W 942-36BI tJ VCD' rnni VnrAn mm Wire & r I !i 1 CIVIL WAR GUN KITS 1 .... - mid cf cast mttal, tnd gtnCj .barrels ef solid trass tan-; ingi. Pictarei is tat Ent:ir"5 , i critcMftad t trsr a El.tr i a.. nissmcf, rapt iaa-J csany Csnftiantt feiK tsries. Salt Vt,' 1 AE0VE MODEL -l 0 JD. OTHER CUll KITS$9aT0 HIll V-ARTf5l Z 2 EAS7SATE SHCPPIN5 CENTER CKAFE1 HILL I f.'.an.-Fri. 9 U,. ta 9 PJA.; Sat 9 AJ.L to 6 PJ.t ening, information desk for room number. SECOND INDEPENDENT ART SHOW will be held Dec. 13 and 14 from 1-6 p.m. Prospective exhibitors should contact Jennie Kurz at 968-5772. PROFESSOR JOHN P. HERNANDEZ will speak on "Electron and Positron Bubbles in Helium" Dec. 17 at 4 p.m. in 215 Phillips Hall as part of the Physics Colloquium. CAMPUS CHEST 1970: All organizations desiring funds from the 1970 Campus Chest Drive must submit an application to Alpha Phi Omega by Dec. 10. Any questions may be directed to APO, 933-1044 or 933-3886. WALK AGAINST HUNGER CARDS and money are due at the YM-YWCA by Dec. 17. THIS PLACE DOESN'T SOUND LIKE YOUR KIND OF THING? COME DOWN AND SEE OUR BEER, WINE, DELICATESSEN AND PARTY SNACK DEPARTMENT BEFORE YOU PUT US DOWN. Among hundreds cf ether geed things CHEFS INTERNATIONAL GOURMET SHOP (A flaw Kind cf Store in Chspsl Hill) will hsva THE LARGEST FREE COOECBOOIC REFERENCE LIBRARY IN THE SOUTH! Whether you're an accomplished gourmet cock already - cr merely wish to add some dash to your family meals cr parties - you"! I find our unique Cookbook Reference Library an outstanding feature of the Chefs International store. There are more than 150 carefully selected volumes, covering foods and wines of all nations. Literally thousands of recipes for you to choose from and copy at your leisure. We promise you won't be hurried. We have comfortable chairs and a table for your use. And free coffee while you copy or browse. All sound too good to be true? Not at all. You might get inspired to serve a pressed duck dinner tonight. And we happen to have the duck! WATCH FOR OUR OPENING SOGfl! CHEFS INTERNATIONAL GOURMET SHOP In the now Krcgsr Shopping Center. East Franklin Street f.'snr Crovell Little Ford Photo: Information Service of India. N.Y. 1 A Dun crnTnis ?"fj?Wf fiinn Strn Vn? THE ' EQUITABLE The Eurtstk: L.-fe iirance Soc.-ety cf tie Ur ted Stajei. New Ysjrt, N.Y. An Egu-ai Ofiperljri.ty Empioyer. W. F