Library Serial D3pt Box 870 Chap9V Hill, ?J. c. Today's Weather Scattered morning and after noon earthquakes, accompa nied by a southeasterly wall of flame. Winds 100 m. p. h. Seas 500-600 feet and inland waters boiling. Temperatures The Bo fly In Bama There are no fig trees around the University of Ala bama's Paul J. Bryant Hall, but there are some fig leaves there. See editorial on page 2. m tne upper thousands. CHAPEL HILL, N. C. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 epoHers, ROTC MiUUa Girls . Greet Mope 4 :viUUie .Number 39 , if 'Anger By SCOTT GOODFELLOW DTH Managing Editor "How do you maintain that youthful look?" she asked. "I lie about my age," said Hope. "Then is it true that you're really 39?" "No, I'm 20." Bob Hope had arrived in North Carolina. There to greet him were a horde of reporters, a company of AFROTC cadets, a bevy of Angel Flight girls, and a spirited group of onlookers. And nobody picketed. There was a large "Welcome Bob Hope" sign which blanketed the restraining wall and had set the stage for a continuous cries of "That's his plane" Architect School Asked For UNC-C CHARLOTTE (AP) A se cond school of architecture is needed in North Carolina, a top educator said Thursday, and it should be located at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Dr. John T. Caldwell, chan cellor of North Carolina State University at Raleigh, said in an interview a second school would in no way jeopardize the one at his own branch. Dr. Caldwell was the keynote speaker at a two - day con vention of the South Atlantic Region of the American In stitute of Artchitects. In his re gular talk, he said America, has not yet learned how to accomodate beauty with the emphasis on private proper ty. Architects for several years have been pressing for a sec ond school of architecture, or enlargement of the one at N.C. State. Dr. Caldwell said. "We at N. C. State feel that another school. . . is desperately need ed in this state, and we are convinced that it should be lo cated in Charlotte." He added the new school at the University's Charlotte branch would "pose no threat whatever" to the one at N.C. State. As a matter of fact, one would compliment the other. While Dr. Caldwell did not indicate any dates for estab lisment of a second school, the president of an influential group of architects backing a school in Charlotte d i d mention dates. W. Scott Ferebee, Jr., who heads the group, said it had recommended to Dr. Dean Col vard, president of UNC-C, that a school of city planning be established at the branch in January. This would be the initial Dhase of establishing a full architec tural school. Ferebee's group was set up several years Appointments Are Presented At Navy Day Ceremonies Carolina's Naval ROTC Bat talion was told Thursday at the annual Navy Day parade that "to be a part of the U.S. Navy today is truly the mark of a man." Captain Rex W. Warner, Commanding Officer of the NROTC Unit here, presented the midshipman officers with their appointments during j I ii ago by UNC trustees to study the feasibility of a second school. The committee has argued agsinst putting the second school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "Architects are completely against this idea," Ferebee said. 'Why set up another another school with N. C. State just 20 miles away?" Senior Plans To Aid Store In Klan Fight A UNC senior will be tak ing orders for food today to help a groceryman in a small eastern North Carolina town who is being boycotted by the Ku Klux Klan. The Klan claims that Har ry Taylor's 'wife, who is an attendance counsellor, is "go ing out looking for colored children to put them in the white school." Taylor operates the only grocery store in Hookerton, population about 400. The Klan is trying to put him out of business. ' To help Taylor, John Schoo will be taking orders today from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at the Wesley Foundation. He will go to Hookerton Sat urday to make the purchases. Schoo will be taking two kinds of orders: $5 orders for packages of staples food stuffs like sugar and canned goods which will not spoil and $2 orders for snack packs of candy and other foods which could be kept in resi dence hall rooms. The orders may be picked up Saturday night from 5 to 7 o'clock at the Wesley Foundation. ceremonies. Following is a list of the midshipmen, their position, and their rank. James Sturges, Battalion Commander, Midshipman Captain; Alan Cameron, Bat talion Executive Officer, Mid shipman Commander; Robert Newlin, Battalion Operations Officer, Midshipman Iieuten- it' I as 2-engine piper cubs rolled by. When the plane finally pulled up, reporters con verged from everywhere. Everyone expected some of his stage crew to exit first perhaps January Jones. But the first to appear was Hope himself, tieless and wearing a dapper golf hat. And the presentations began. A UNC Angle Flight girl rushed up and pinned a notice the size of a street sign on Hope. It read "Bob Hope," and had an Angel Flight seal on it. "I hope that the audience is this big," quipped Hope. The sign soon fell victim to the pressing crowd. A Chapel Hill AFROTC cadet presented Hope with a plaque making him an honorary colonel in the Tar Heel Air Force. Bob Hope Arrives At Airport DTH Photo By Mike McGowan 205-Lb. Ex-Com Weds '.-I ' 95-Year-Old Millionaire BRECKENRIDGE, Tex., (AP) A 205 - pound blond ex convict beat the Texas Ran gers to the draw Wednesday, slipped her 95-year-old million aire patient into Oklahoma and married him. Then she came back and was served with papers alleg ing kidnaping, but went free on $5,000 bond. Her patient, a millionaire Californian noted for his phi lanthropies, declared upon their return that they were not married. But when informed and Commander; Bayard Clark, Battalion Supply Officer, Midshipman Lieutenant; Cle ment Timothy Corcoran, Bat talion Adjutant, Midshipman Lieutenant; Donald Fitzgerald, Battalion Assistant Operations Officer, Midshipman Lieuten ant (jg); Sam Major, Batta lion Assistant Supply Officer, Midshipman Ensign; Phillip Kirstein, Battalion Public In formation Officer, Midship man Ensign. Robert Combs, "A" Compa ny Commander, Midshipman Leiutenant; Dan Nelson, "A" Company Executive Officer, Midshipman Lieutenant (jg); Lane Anderson, "B" Compa ny Commander, Midshipman Lieutenant; Bob Young, "B" Company Executive Officer, Midshipman Lieutenant (jg); Hampton Huger, "C" Com pany Commander, Midship man Lieutenant; John Olshin ki, "C" Company Executive Officer, Midshipman Lieuten ant (jg); Connie Lovett, Drum and Bugle Corps, Midshipman Lieutenant (jg); Leslie Blan kinship, Drill Team Command ing Officer, Midshipman Lieu tenant (jg). The following platoon lead ers are all Midshipman En signs, Howard McLaughlin, Carl Sandberg, Douglas Plum mer, Louis Anders, Ralph Martin, Ross Dwyer, Richard VanLeuvan, Thomas Daymont, and Jay Schwartz. f 'r - i f- ,jt;" they were, He took the news without concern. Pearl Choate, 59, who serv ed time on a murder convic tion until 1963, met A. Otis Birch when she became resi dent nurse for him and his ail ing wife 16 months ago in Pas adena, Calif. She has been married six times and lists her occupation as "companion to the elderly," prison records show. Baptists said Birch made his millions in oil and citrus dur ing the early 1900's and had given millions to Baptist col leges and churches. He now is living mainly off $50,000 an nuities a year. Baptist friends who flew here said Miss Choate shut the Birches off from the church and friends and five months ago disappeared with them. They , were interviewed by the FBI in Ensenada, Mexioc, after California friends put out a missing persons alert, and next were traced to Harling en, in the lower Rio Grande valley of Texas, where Birch was treated for a broken hip. Before California friends could fly to Harlingen, Miss Choate rented an ambulance and drove off the with the cou ple. They turned up here two months ago and Mrs. Birch, who had been operated on last spring for cancer, died Oct. 7 at the home of Miss Choate's brother here. Four days later, Birch took steps toward adopting Miss Choate and a hearing on the adoption was set for tomor row. Attorneys said last night's marriage in Altus, o k 1 a., could nullify the hearing. Texas Rangers had been or dered to guard the house where Miss Choate and Birch stav ed but before the guard went up, the couple left for Altus, just across the Texas border, where a justice of the peace married them in the car. After returning to Brecken ridge, a city of 6,400, Miss Choate was served with the kidnaping charge and posted bond. Earlier in the week, she was charged with trying to Governor Moore sent his greetings. During the question period which followed, Hope rambled easily over a variety of subjects. How does Hope like the Chapel Hill - Durham area? "I as out here, many years ago advertising for Ches terfield with Bing. I'm still loyal to Bing and there are still many cigarette cartons in my garage." "James Brown was here for a three-hour show," said one reporter, "and he only appeared twice in that time. How about you?" "I'll be on over an hour I have a lot to say." By this time the "friendly onlookers" had over come the restraining wall and pressed around the al ready compact reporters. Hope talked on. Will he return to Viet Nam next Christmas? "I don't know yet, but I've said that I'll go if I'm invited." 0 ' I' stab a relative of the late Mrs. Birch, Harlan J. Moehn of Danville, Iowa., and was free on $200 bond. It was he who filed the kidnaping charge and a hearing on it is due tomor row. When Virgil Moore of the Breckenridge American inter viewed the couple after their return, he asked the elderly man through written questions if he were married. "No!" Birch replied loudly. Miss Choate took the paper then and wrote, "Tell him." inston w R eport Prowler oaming In Dorm R By JULIE PARKER DTH Staff Writer A prowler invaded Winston Dormitory early Thurs day morning, coeds said. But the two campus policemen who rushed to the scene at 5 a.m. couldn't find anything except an open side door. "He was standing over me with his hand resting here," said Sandy Tennent of Room 109, touching her chest. "I was too scared to scream," she said. "I just froze." "He ran out the door. I didn't see where he went." Miss Tennent described the man as "dressed in dark, grubby clothes and not very tall." Miss Tennent said she and her roommate ran to a room across the hall and then to the housemother, Mrs. Louise Mixon, who called the police. The coeds throughout the dorm were then rousted out of bed by fire alarm bells as lights flashed on and the policemen combed the halls. Some of the coeds speculated the man hid in the basement earlier in the day, came upstairs and then excaped through the side door. "But why would he wait untif 5 a.m.?" asked one coed. "And why didn't girls in the basement study room see anyone?" ii eacum May Noll Part - time English Instruc tors yesterday called the ap pointment of a English Depart ment committee ot investigate the Paull case a "moral vic tory" and said there probably would be no teaching boycott. One instructor, Bill Moss, said, "As far as I am con cerned, no one would have any further demands of the Eng lish Department because they made it clear they would re instate Paull if they could." Moss said that the inclusion of two instructors on the in vestigating committee was "in good spirit." Another instructor said Thursday that a further protest may be made to Chancellor Sitterson because "he has not made it clear to the depart ment that it has the full pow er in the case; otherwise, the department would have rein stated Paull during the inves tigation." The committee to investigate the Paull case, composed of five full and part - time Eng lish professor and instructors, was named Wednesday night by Dr. Raymond Adams, act ing chairman of the English Department. The recommendations of that committee will be dis cussed with the full faculty and if no changes are made will be forwarded to Chancellor Sit terson. The investigating committee was scheduled to meet again last night. They held their first meeting on Wednesday night after the faculty meeting ad journed. The only other major action yesterday concerning the Paull case took place outside Paull's former classroom on the third floor of Murphey Hall. At 8 a.m., two photograph Coeds One exasperated woman wriggled through the crowds and shouted, "Can you do something to help our football team?" "I've been with the Los Angeles Rams so long that I doubt If I could help anybody win." Somehow the discussion switched to politics. Hope beams. "I voted for Nixon so everybody was in trouble." A senior AFROTC officer fought his way through the crowd and told Hope he had a car waiting. The meeting abruptly broke up as the center of interest was hustled off. The UNC bus rumbled up to take away spectators and reporters dashed for telephones and dark rooms. And the Electra - Jet just wasn't as important as it wheeled off down the runway. ers from Life magazine were there, along with three from the Daily Tar Heel. When barred from the class room by Paull's substitute tea chers, they stacked chairs up in the hallway and shot pic tures through the window over tne ooor. - - - i, tit n?. i ' i i - r v .... THERE ARE some spheres of male activities in which women just can't participate except as spectators. Such is the case of this pinmate who sits alone on the grass watching her while her man concentrates on signals and touchdowns and stuff. DTH Photo by Mike McGowan Career Program Is This Afternoon Students participating in the Careers for Carolina program today can gain insight into the present job situation in gov ernment jobs. The program is designed to acquaint students from North Carolina colleges and univer sities government career op portunities. A significant addition to the program this year will be an explanation of summer intern programs for students interest ed in gaining first hand ex perience in public service jobs. Assistant Director Donald Hayman of the Institute of Government will discuss the program following dinner in Chase hall. After Hayman's speech, there will be personal confer ences with panelists who have served as summer interns. Ken Day, chairman of Stu dent Government's Campus Affairs Committee which is co-sponsor of the program, said Thursday he is pleased with the interest already shown in the program. He said students who failed to sign up for the program in advance may still attend by coming to the Institute of Government's Knapp Building for registration beginning 'at 1:30. The program begins at 1:50 with a welcome by confer .Boycott Occur One of the photographers snapped pictures through the air vents between the hall and the room. All five were eventaully rou ted from the building by Chief Beaumont, who had been call ed by an unimpressed profes- sor. ;jJxV- ft. . .: ence coordinator Chip Bre th en and Student Body President Bob Powell. At 2, George Esser, execu tive director of the North Car olina Fund, will speak on the "Challenge of Public Service." Panels on job opportunities begin at 2:30 and continue un til 6. Each student will attend three panels. The dinner at Chase is set for 6 followed by the intern ship panels and personal con ferences. Day said he is expecting several delegations from North Carolina colleges and universities to attend today's program. Coed Housing Deadline Set Any undergraduate women not presently residing in Uni versity residence halls and who wish to apply for space for the spring semester may fill in the application forms in the Office of the Dean of Wom en, 202 South Building, before November 1. Graduate women not pres ently residing in Kenan Resi dence Hall may obtain an ap plication for dorm space be fore November 1.

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