Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 1, 1964, edition 1 / Page 2
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T T TTHS DAILY TAR HEED Sunday, November 1, 1964 Page 2 r W K 4 xrr zAt W 4 CO o By MIKE YOPP &TII Managing Editor It was a dull Saturday after noon You. could tell from the casual stride students used to amble across campus. It was a slow walk, not at all like the scurry from class to class to Lenoir to class five days a week. There "was no hurrying except for a late afternoon rush to be first in line for Kemp's record sale. There was plenty of time to window shop, linger over a cup of coffee, catch up on a week's newspaper reading, daydream about the Duke weekend, and sleep. There was time to study too. Crisp, freshly fallen leaves pro vided a crinkling mat to recline under a towering oak, and loaf. But the freshness of an Indian Summer Saturday made the day too exciting to loaf in comfort. Thoughts iled away from the humdrum college routine, away from books and stuffy libraries and all-night cramming and dull professors and bad food. It was more important yester day to dream of the girl back home or in Cullowhee or Charl ottesville or anywhere a little too far for an afternoon drive or hitch-hike. It was more important to re member the party last weekend, the dance next weekend. . It was reassuring to think that someday you'd be out of college. Make a bundle. Life would be rough though, better think about that girl . . . Lie back and dream and watch the lazy turns and banks of what seems like a squadron of tiny airplanes twisting their way through a background of blue. It'd he fun to be an airplane, or maybe a bird. Two o'clock. A thousand ra dios are switched on by a thous and eager hands. There are whoops when the Heels make a first down, a grunt or the crack of fist striking flat hand when Georgia moves close to paydirt. But the color is missing. It's not the same when the Heels play away. No excitement. No an ticipation. The game comes, goes, is all but forgotten in the languid .4 o'clock air. Some watched State and South Carolina square off on television. Nobody seemed to care much. Even the prolific Chapel Hill canine population seemed dazed by "the monumental dullness. Per Ik SERVE YOURSELF BUFFET.-: featuring ROAST BEEF BARBEQUED SPARE RIBS FRIED CHICKEN SPANISH MEAT LOAF 3 Meats 7 Vegetables $2.95 All You Can Eat It's a Cowboy's Treat Recommended by Duncan Hines and Gourmet MM 'WiVIMM THERE'S N0THIN6V I fl ( WOOeV! ") M I I I J MORE MISERABLE 1 ; !L 1 1 ' frfl 'I ' c . itwfattwwt i r. . i . NO ft AY FQft jBElSR : A DuM SuZtePday haps they were awed by the ar ray Of rainbow splotches bursting from a multitude of trees. The tlM pftig pong tables were silent for a while, then pattered with bouncing balls. The games were slow like the afternoon. There was even time to go magazine peeping. To look and browse as long as a clerk would allow it. -1 - v't Vit ! v-- -. A I ti - ' i ! Lazy Reading On A Bed Of Leaves Students Vote Monday In 1964 Mock Election Students will have the op portunity to cast presidential ballots a day early next week. The votes won't count in the national tally, however. On Monday five polling places will be set up for the 1964 mock election. Students may vote at Ehringhaus, Gra ham Memorial, Scuttlebutt, Le noir Hall or Y-Court. Election results will be an nounced Tuesday. An election returns party for national and state elections will be held Tuesday night in Graham Memorial. Television sets will be set up and refresh ments will be served. EVERY SUNDAY 5:30-7:30 PJ1 0 BSE Some drank beer. It wasn't an afternoon for beer. Flags drooped half mast on their poles mourning the passing of a great American, they waited for the breath of wind that would lift them into a popping sheet of cloth. The wind came in soft spurts, it seemed resting too. It was a dull Saturday after noon. ' ' f,vr.'.-t'win Photo by Jock Lauterer Efforts are being made to extend coed curfew beyond 11 p.m. The Administration had neither confirmed nor denied permission late Saturday. The mock election and re turns party are parts of the National Issues Week program. Issues Week lectures ended Friday with an address by Herbert Philbrick in Memorial Hall. ims yoga ximmm mm Brighten up the occasion with one of our many cards. II will be different and she'll like it. STUDIO CARDS ITS COLD AND DAM(AND THERE'S N0THIN6 TO DO EXCEPT. JUST HANG AROUND THE H015E Philbrick Says Aim Line At American Youth. Herbert Philbrick warned Fri day night that a primary goal of subversion by the Communist Party today is youth. In the final program of UNC's National Issues Week he said Communist leaders - consider speaking engagements by party members on college campuses as a victory. Communists appeared at 45 colleges last year, he said. In reference to North Carolina's Speaker Ban Law, the man who "led three lives" said it would be an "act of treason" to invite a Communist to speak openly on campus. However, he said he would not object to an invitation from an anti-Communist group to. a party member to speak in a closed meeting. Philbrick, a businessman, Com munist and FBI counterspy for nine years, said he hoped the law did not prohibit former Commun ists like himself from speaking here. The law states that a per son who is a party member or has invoked the Fifth Amend ment when questioned about Com munist activities may not speak at a state-supported college. He would not state a preference for' either presidential candidate but said the State Department of the present. administration "does not have a policy for victory." Those responsible for the "Cuban disaster" should be removed from the government, he said. - The real issue of "the election is to win the war against interna t i o n a 1 Communism, Philbrick said, but he complained too many voters think only about "getting more security in their old age cr more pay in their envelopes." He warned about the danger of Outdoor Drama The second annual Managers and Promoters Conference of the Institute of Outdoor Drama will be held here Friday and Satur day. Representatives from North Ca rolina's three large-scale outdoor dramas will be joined by manag ers from six other states. The institute, sponsored by the Department of Dramatic Art and the Carolina Playmakers, has the largest research information cen ter for outdoor dramas in the country. tin PBl'W ' II Communists Communist "fellow travelers," sympathizers who are not trusted enough by party leaders to have membership status. He called President Kennedy's accused as sassin Lee Harvey Oswald a fel low traveler who should have been watched more closely. "How many more assassinations will take place before our leaders will learn that the Communists mean what they say?" Philbrick is the author cf a best-selling book, "I Led Threa Lives," based on his experiences as a counterspy, mostly in tha Boston, Mass., area. yours with Aristocrat, Billiard Shape, $5.95 and $5.95 No matter what you smoke you'll like Yello-Bole. The new formula, honey lining insures Instant Mild ness; protects the imported briar bowl so completely, it's guaran teed against burn out for life. Why not change your smoking habits the easy way the Yello-Bole way. $2.50 to $6.95. Spartan Official Pipes New York World's Fa'' Free Booklet tells how to smoke an pe; shows shapes, write: YELLO-BOLE PIPES. INC., N Y. 22. N.Y., Dept Z0. By the makers of KAYVCODSE If , laJji fpfl (1 (n) Ij3 11 Is i a I (! II lu LwHMI WMMIS SMS 10 niu M M' 1 . 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1964, edition 1
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