Library Serials Dept Box 870 - . ChaTffi Hill'. W.C, 1st! Hi m wtt The G, O. P. Will the Republican revival in the South continue? Read Barry Jacobs' opinion of the G.O.P. situation on page 2. McXair Lecture Dr. Laurence M. Gould de livers the McNair Lecntre to morrow niht at 8 in Hill Hall. His lecture will be on "Science and the Culture of Our Times." The Souih's Lur'si Colle .Y-nsjxer- Anwr(.(lll jll((n Winner Volume 74, Number 117 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY. MARCH 13. 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 Drill Team Wins Third State Title GREENVILLE UNC'p AFROTC drill team won the Area B-2 (state of North Car olina) drill competition yes terday, making it the state champs for the third time. Drill Team Commander Clyde Thompson was elated. "It's great. We're number one," he said. The drill competition was based on regular drill, per sonal inspection and special drill. The Carolina team scored 763 out of a possible 1,000 points. The closest contender was East Carolina College with 696 points. North Carolina State, the only other contest ant, scored 562 points. UNC lost only in the per sonal inspection division to ECC, by five points. In the other two divisions, regular and special drill, UNC won wasily, giving it four out of the possible five trophys that were awarded. The trophies UNC won are: with Ed Freakley A. C.'s Snow A. C. Snow of the Raleigh Times had this item in his col umn "sno oolin' " Friday. . . ....... - ONE OF THE LADY staff members received a speeding ticket, and when police reporter Mike Yopp (former DTH managing editor) came into the newsroom the conversation was directed his way. "Hey Mike," someone yelled. 'Tell Tom's boys to lay off that stretch on U. S. 70 West. My wife got a speeding ticket there last month; my neighbor's wife got one there last week and now Shirley got one out there today. What's wrong, anyway?" "Sounds like Raleigh's full of fast women," replied Mike. Better watch it A. C. Gould In The Cold Laurence Gould, who delivers the McNair Lecture here tomorrow night at 8 in Hill Hall, was the butt of good humored jibes from his associates in 1928 when he was encamped in the Antartic wastes of "Little America," the head quarters of the Byrd Expedition to the South Pole. They were joking with Gould because he kept talking about trite possibility of taking a trip by submarine to the North Pole. Thirty years later the United States sent its Polaris sub marines under the ice to the Arctic regions around the North Pole. Gould tells about being kidded about his proposed Arctic under-ice venture in his book "Cold: The Record of an Antarctic Sledge Journey by Dogs." Gould may have some advice for wearers of beards. Espe cially in the event that they ever go to the Arctic or Antarctic regions. There, a beard is practically a must. "SOME DAYS ago I shaved my beard, believing it wise to do so before starting on the trail, Gould writes in his book, "Cold." "It was quite a change for I had not shaved since leaving New Zealand. My face had not gotten fully used to the change for I froze it time after time today. Now tonight my face feels as though it had been sunburned." So beardos, there is someting you can do in ths world of ours. Not So Bad Jim Smith, a conservative's conservative, says that all this Aptheker stuff may not be so bad after all. "It has the political science and sociology departments threatening to re sign." Statements From Candidates Candidates for president and vice president of the stu dent body and editor of The Daily Tar Heel will be al lowed to run statements and letters of endorsement in the DTH. Statements from each candidate must not exceed 350 words and copy must be in the hands of the managing editor by 4 p.m. Friday. Pictures of each candidate, if desired, are due at that time. Letters of endorsement, with no more than 25 signa tures, may be submitted by each of these candidates no later than 4 p.m. Wednesday. They cannot exceed 250 words. Candidates for all senior class offices may choose be tween submitting a policy statement or letter of endorse ment, either of 250 words. They must be turned in to the DTH by 4 p.m. Wednes day. Photographs of each candidate may be submitted at that time. The regular drill trophy, the special drill trophy and the trophy for winning this year's competition. UNC retired the revolving trophy by winning it the third year in a row. After the competition, Rod dy Morrow, a former UNC drill team member who train ed this year's winning team, was ceremoniously tossed in to a swimming pool. A Victory Banquet was held 5:30 p.m. yesterday at ECC. Dr. James J. T. McShane, fa ther of a member of the ECC drill team and chief of U. S. Marshalls in Washington, D. C, was the key-note speak er. The judges all came from Shaw AFB, S. C. They were: Lt. John S. Durkin Jr., M Sgt. Robert J. Degrechie, S Sgt. George M. Ardis and S Sgt. Marion G. Vann. The competition was held 3 p.m. yesterday in the ECC's Memorial Gymnasium. I V -" if o Tuesday Set For New Vote On Referendum By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer The latest chairman of the Elections Board, Arthur Hays, yesterday promised an all-out effort to conduct Tuesday's Constitutional Referendum without a hitch. Hays, appointed to the post Friday by Student Body Pres ident Paul Dickson, is the fifth Elections Board chair man this year. He held the post for a se mester two years ago. The Tuesday plebiscite will decide whether the offices of president and vice president of the student body should be placed on the same tick et. An identical referendum was held Feb. 22 on the so - called "slate amendment," but a protest was lodged by a resi dent of Alexander Residence Hall, Bayard Harris. Harris charged that John Winborne, then temporary chairman of the Elections Board, had not provided poll tenders at Alexander; that the Y Court polls were not properly manned and that not enough students had been in formed about the referendum. They will include: times polls will be opened, voting locations, poster defacement violations, campaign expense rules, polling places regula tions (no campaigning within 50 feet), rules for stamping of ID's, lists of unqualified vot ers, a rule that each voter must deposit his own ballot, a rule that polls must be man ned at all times, a rule that no candidate may man a poll and a rule that all violations must be reported as soon as possible. Interviews Start For Orientation The Campus Orientation Commission announced yester day that interviews for staff positions will be held March 14-18 from 4-6 p.m. in Graham Memorial. The positions open for men and women on the staff are as follows: foreign student coor dinator, married student coor dinator, secretary and treas urer. Also the directors of aca demics, receptions, medical af fairs, UNC-G mixer, counse lor's manual, Student Govern ment, publicity, religious em phasis, honor systems, activi ty session and weiner roast, counselor benefits and library coordination. Bob Wilson, commission chairman said, "This year the commission is looking for stu dents who are not overburden ed with outside activities and who will be able to dedicate the necessary time to the proj ect." Interested upperclassmen are urged to apply for these com mittee positions. Students should sign up for an interview at the informa tion desk in Graham Memorial. Carolina Will Get By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer Construction of a new $1, 880,000 Law School building to be erected on Ridge Road be hind the Institute of Govern ment will begin next October. It will be completed by the fall of 1968. The building cost of $1,755, 000 and equipment cost of $125,000 will be paid for by the state. The building will contain 94,000 square feet. Dean of the Law School J. Dickson Phillips said, "The new building is to be con structed to provide adequate facilities for the Law School and space to house a growing Law Library." At present, Manning Hall houses the Law School, but does not provide an adequate amount of space for the cur rent number of faculty and students. There are 465 students in Law School this year with an expected enrollment of 500 next fall. Manning Hall has been over -crowded since the jump in enrollment in 1964 from 377 to 451. When the enrollment reach es 500 no additional students Lr-vV .. ir 1 o jtu Willi 1 AAAUGH! A WHATZIT! There was. a day when owidng a Volkswagen set you apart from others, but now the "bugs" are practically everywhere. A pink blob with eyes makes this VW standout, but daffodils on a Plymouth outscores it nine to one. Spring is sprung, the grass is riz, and this is where the flowers is. Plastic? well what do you expect in March? DTH Photos by Jock Lauterer. Beat, Hippy, But No Soap By PEYTTE FEARRINGTON DTH Staff .Writer . , A beat. A hippy. The sorority girl and the residence college boy envision a beard, sandals J : j i. i , r and an evident lack of soap, But several afternoons at Wendy Farer provides her Harrys, The Tempo, Y-Court view, "The outward appear and GM bring a new dimen- ance of the hippies is not con sion to a definition of this one ventional, but this is the point, per cent of the student body. A great many of these sin As Russell Banks states, cere, productive students are "The average student here is in the arts or the interpretive a child in his interests and humanities. Convention and ambitions. Saturday night be- society's rules confine and re comes the end of all his ac- strict their creativity. It's tivities. UNC is like a big high when hippiness becomes ah school, but I don't feel frus- end in itself that the individual trated. There are outlets for becomes a non-producer." the serious student here." Another interpretation is of This same idea was echoed fered by Kitty Hawthorne, "I'm by David Mallison, Richard not sure why this certain ve Doble, Paul Tyler and various hicle is used for the beat pro other students who, by their test against middle class con appearance, must be placed in formity, but clothes and an the beat category. outward appearance are the One coed who attended a most logical way to illustrate beat masquerade party said, their feelings." "It was out in the country. "The point is a hippy can People were just sitting around wear anything that appeals to talking and drinking. This boy her, Farer said. She can go dressed up as death walked up into a store and buy a pair of and stared. He scared the hell Pappagallos, but she has a out of me, but then he walked off to argue with some other boy." When asked what the argu ment was about, she said, "I really don't know the words were beyond me. These people are concerned with serious instructed several beat stu matters. They are looking for dents. He says, "One of these the truth in themselves and in boys in my class always wore will be admitted until the new building is completed. Dean Phillips said the new facility will easily handle that enroll ment. Another major deficiency in the present quality of the Law School is the space avail able for the Law Library and THE NEW I.AW SCHOOL BUILDING, to be constructed on Ridge Road beginning next October, will cost Sl.880.000. .Most students will enter from the east side, which is next OOP 3QDD IOC309 t01ggl the world without taking any. thing for granted." This then becomes the basic idea behind the movement and the beards. But why the beards . .... at all? choice." When the beats on campus are considered as interested, conscientious students, they cannot be overlooked.' Dr. Dan W. Patterson, asso- ciate professor of English, has i 1 05"" 1 JUm....i-.1 SSSSjh, New Law for student reading and study. At present, the Law Library contains about 110,000 volumes. It must enter a period of sub stantial growth if it is to be adequate in terms of com parison with the libraries of law schools of comparable size. "The new library, designed John. Birch Society Founder Will Speak The Robert Welch who a controversial speaker. His In fact, P. Cleveland Gardner, a 1916 graduate and a classmate cf Welch's, says, "He was a quiet, normal-type boy. He was the last type of boy I would have expected to have these radical views." S. H. Hobbs Sr. of Chapel Hill told the Durham Herald he doesn't remember Welch's having any "notions about politics when he was here because he was too young for it." Chancellor 'Upset9 By Tape Recorder By ANDY MYERS DTH Staff Writer A tape recorder came be tween Acting Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson and three Student Government represen tatives yesterday. Student Body President Paul Dickson was answering a re quest by Sitterson to come by his office and discuss the ad ministration's speaker policy and other "related matters" when Sitterson noticed h i s a coat, but never a tie. Some other professors said, he. would be rebellious, but I found him exceedingly intelligent and in- tere.s,ted- "T ' n7 i Many people feel that there is no need for them and na job to be done," Patters&fl said. Their mistake comes when they become narrow minded idealists not willing to see the whole field and to loose a few points to win the game." If the entire hippy movement is genuine, from where did the bad connotations arise? A trip to downtown Chapel Hill and a few well-placed questions can quickly answer this. The famous, or infamous, beats in town, the young peo ple from 25 to 30 who appear most extreme in attitude and dress are, for the most part, not students at the Univer sity. One student, preferring to remain anonymous, stated, "These people are psychologi cally messed up. In another time they may have only been town drunkards." Still another group is called beat by the student body, but hippies term them "pseudo." Farer's remark of "hippiness for its own sake" is recalled. With three distinct groups within the beat category, the question arises why the con scientious group does not change its appearance to be (Continued on Page 6) School Building for a total collection of from 250,000 to 300,000 volumes, will adequately accommodate our needs," Phillips said. University Business Mana ger J. A. Branch said, "The new Law School building will be comtempory in style. It is deisgned so that it can be en to a parking lot. A student lounge will be located Just In side the door. The main entrance will be on Ridge Road. Campus Tonight By BOB HARRIS DTH Staff Writer will speak here tonight at point of view has not always been so radical. conversation corded. The three was being re students who spoke with Sitterson in his office for 30 minutes were Dickson, NSA Coordinator Eric Van Loon and Carolina Forum Chairman George Nicholson. Sitterson said yesterday that the talk concerned the "gen eral situation," although there was some discussion about possible renewed invitations to Herbert Aptheker and Frank Wilkinson. "This was mentioned," Sit terson said, "but then we got off on a general discussion." Dickson, his arm in a sling from a fall last week, en tered the office with Nichol- son" and Van Loon. Van "Loon" carried the tape recorder. When the tape recorder was discovered Sitterson made them play back the tape and erase the two - minute conversation. "That upset me a little bit," Sitterson said. "They didn't mention it to me." He added, "I've been deal ing with people all my life and this is the first time any one has tried this." According to Dickson there was no consensus reached at the meeting. "We didn't ex actly hide (the recorder) it from him," Dickson said. "Eric was sitting with it right in his hand." The recorder was a minia ture model which Dickson has been carrying around with him since he became involv ed in the speaker controver sy. Van Loon stressed that "the real question" Dickson pre sented to Sitterson "was whether or not we should have a court case, and whether the decision (to ban) Aptheker and Wilkinson was binding. "It was fairly important that we did not get it wrong, and that's why we had the tape recorder," Van Loon said. larged to take care of further increases in the student body." The architect, Charles H. Wheatley of Charlotte, is con cluding design development drawings incorporating the Property Control review com ments of his preliminary sketches. 8 in Memorial Hall is billed Since that time, however, Welch has become deeply in terested in politics. In 1950 he placed second in a field of four for the Repub lican nomination for lieuten ant governor of Massachu setts. He actively supported Robert Taft against Dwight D. Eisenhower for the 1952 Re publican presidential nomina tion. He has found Barry Gold w.'ter an acceptable spokes man for his views in 1964. He and several other men organized the John Birch So ciety in 1958. The society sees ROBERT WELCH its purpose as working "by all honorable means to bring about less government, more responsibility and a better world." It sees its goals as completely opposed to those of Communism. The society is named for John Birch, an American Christian missionary who di rected Nationalist Chinese in telligence forces during World War II and was murdered 10 days after V-J Day by t h e Chinese Communists. The organization calls Birch the "first American casualty in that third World War be tween the Communists and the ever-shrinking free world." Welch terms John Birch's death as the event which clearly set up battle lines be tween Communism and "Christian-style civilization." In addition to tis attacks on former President Eisenhower, the society has launched viol ent attacks on Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren. In fact, in Welch's opinion, the "whole Supreme Court is a nest of socialists and worse . . ." and, "The im peachment of Earl Warren would dramatize and crystal lize the whole basic question of whether the United States remains the United States, or becomes gradually transform ed into a province of the world-wide Soviet system." It is Welch's belief that "at least 95 per cent of all peo ple on both sides of the Iron Curtain do not want Commu nism. The job is not to unsell a majority from something they want or think is good for them, but to enable a pre ponderant majority to resist and refuse something they do not want." s This enabling act is ob structed by a major premise of Welch's logic: "This belief is that ... the American support of the inter national Communist conspir acy is now the backbone of its strength, and has been for many years." If and when we can reach the point of turning just the American government from actively helping the Com munist conspiracy everywhere in the world, we shall have on a most important battle in the world ahead." Welch's appearance is spon sored by the Carolina Forum. He is the author of several books including "May God Forgive us," and "The Life of John Birch."