1963, June 26 - Speaker Ban Law Passes; Protests Ensue
Students protested the law as a violation of free speech and academic freedom. Under the threat of losing University accreditation, the law was amended in 1965 to give trustees authority to approve campus speakers. To challenge the amended law, Study Body President Paul Dickson III (d. 1972) and other student leaders invited Frank Wilkinson and Herbert Aptheker to speak on campus on March 2 and March 9, 1966, respectively. When Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson (1911-1995) denied them permission, hundreds of students gathered on McCorkle Place to hear the speakers, who stood on the Franklin Street side of the campus wall. The event formed the basis of a lawsuit, Dickson v. Sitterson, which declared the Speaker Ban Law invalid in 1968.
SOURCES
Graham, Nicholas, and Cecelia Moore. “Speaker Ban Law.” UNC A to Z: What Every Tar Heel Needs to Know about the First State University. Chapel Hill, N.C.: U of North Carolina P, 2020. 202-203.
“Part 2: Speaker Ban Controversy.” I Raised My Hand to Volunteer. Manuscript Department, The Wilson Library, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 2007, https://exhibits.lib.unc.edu/exhibits/show/protest/speaker-essay.
Snider, William D. “The Speaker Ban Law, 1963-1968.” Light on the Hill: A History of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill, N.C.: U of North Carolina P, 1992. 271-279.