slaX Dept. Box 070 BULLETIN N. C. State remained unde feated In ACC action by defeat ing UNC's swim team 48-47 in Raleigh last night. For sum mary, see tomorrow's DTH. SL ii!St?dLent suture ing tonight. meet- F ounded FerT25l893" CHAPElTin 11965 "Volume 72, Number SG 1 II- : . Edit i - 1 i 0 $ i 1 or s ooh With ERNIE McCRARY This week is perhaps the most significant in the history of the fraternity system at UNC. They call it Rush Week, and the name is apt. Hundreds of students, mostly freshmen, have been thoroughly plied with handshakes, punch, slaps on the back and fraternity gospel since last Sunday. And hundreds of brothers have been carefully, appraising these rushees. But rush is different this year. Deferred rush, in operation for the first . time, is having some, obvious and consequential effects. ' " . . A healthy sign is the vigor with which rush is being carried ' on this year. Some observers feel that fraternities have never before showed so much serious ness and maturity in rushing ac tivities. ' ' It is all to the credit of the brothers that they are farsight ed enough to take this attitude and that they realize the impor tance of their action this week. Deferred rush is presenting a challenge,; but it certainly should not -be a crisis. The fraternity system at UNC is most emphatically not weak, and: only a weak system could receive a serious setback during a time of change and transition like the one which may be in store for our fraternities. There is little doubt that de ferred rush will result in smal ler pledge classes, but this is certainly not fatal. Since stu dents who cannot attain a 2.0 average are eliminated from rush, part of the "weeding out" process' has ; already been ac complished for the fraternities. . Mediocrity, a bitter pill for any fraternity -to swallow, can be kept to an absolute mini mum, but , arguments either for or against a changing system are futile at the moment. It is up to the two groups involved, the brothers and the rushees, to accept the challenge and accept it enthusiastically. Fears that only a small group of freshmen would be eligible to rush were needless. The class is beyond doubt one of the best, if not the best, to ever enter UNC over 1,000 freshmen had 2.0's and are free to participate in formal rushing activities. Today's rushee can make an exceptional contribution to the fraternity system. He is well aware of the advantages a fra ternity can offer him and he must have a real desire to join a fraternity or he would not have spent his time rushing. If he receives a bid, he is (Continued on Page 3) Noteb The Campuis It's a hair-raising business and Chapel Hill is raising pounds of it every day. Like modern day Sampsons, hundreds of long-haired youths are bracing their arms against the pillars of the barbering industry and threatening to flatten it as flat as any Philistine marketplace. r ""It's getting so bad you can't find their ears when they come in to get a trim," said barber Alton Miles of the Village Barber Shop. Barbers seem to think that the trend toward longer locks has come to, stay awhile. The threat to the tonsorial economy of the nation is not the beatle cut or the beatnik un-cut, but rather a modified form of the long-popular Ivy league style long in front and stylistically brushed to the side to cover as much forehead as possible. Miles wouldn't comment on the cause of the long hair fad, but other barbers had long before placed the blame. "It's those Beatles," said James Lawrence ; of the University Barber Shop. "I wish they'd get haircuts and stay out of America." Two of the five shops in the area have re ported slumps in business because of the style. Several shops have raised haircut prices 25 cents to meet the deflation. George Tomasic of the Tar Heel Barber Shop izid also the Liverpudlian mopheads have had influence over the drop in business. Tomasic thinks that: "Girl friends might have a lot to do with the long hair." Trustees Anti-I&ag By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer A Student - Government peti tion opposing the Speaker Ban Law now being circulated on campus will be presented by Student Body President Bob Spearman to a committee of the Board of Trustees this week end. . . . : The petition, which urees that all responsibility for the "internal affairs of state sup-i sorted colleges" in North Caro-v Una be vested in the respective, boards of trustees, is one of. at, least four from all UNC" branches to be introduced at' the meeting. : - . '. -Spearman met last Sunday with student leaders of the Con solidated University to "dis-; cuss our appearances before this committee and to discuss ways in which we could present , the impact of the Speaker Ban on each campus. . The Speaker Ban Law was organizations on each campus are. being asked to : prepare statements of their position on No Traffic On Cameron For 60 Days Cameron Avenue will be chained off to traffic Monday morning from Memorial Hall to South Building for a 60-day trial period. The move, announced by Dean of Men William G. Long, will be made to give greater protection to student pedestrians and to . reassign two .campus po licemen to other important cros sings. The two policemen will di-j feet traiTic oft f Sbutlv Road 'where it is estimated that at least 10,000 student trips occur each day," Long said. They will probably be stationed near the entrance to the Bell Tower parking lot and at the entrance to the Parker-Avery-Teague area. Long, also chairman of the Faculty Committee on Traffic Safety, said " access to parking lots on both sides of South Building will remain open. This includes lots at Old East, beside South building, by Memorial Hall and by Swain Hall. The closing is experimental and a study will be made after the 60 days to determine if the move should be permanent. "Initially the closing of Cam eron Avenue may cause some confusion," Long said. "We ask all persons to understand that the experiment is being con ducted toward the end of the eventual general improvement of the traffic situation on the campus." THAT To Get Petition the Speaker Ban Law," he said. "Each campus - is undertaking research on the different speak-? ers who have appeared 'on their campuses during the last 15 years in order to see what ef-. feet the law might have had onr these speakers." The Supeaker Ban Law: was passed in 1963 after a short de-i bate by the General Assembly, and "prohibits all "known Com-: munists" or persons who have , taken the Fifth Amendment in connection with subversive ac tivities from speaking at state-; supported schools. : ". : ' C' The Speaker Ban replaced a ; law passed by the Assembly in 1941 and clarified in 1948 which! prohibited speeches ' by persons : advocating the violent over-; throw of the U.S. government. Student leaders rre expected to stress the fact that the earlier and more clearly written law was never violated by speakers at Consolidated University branches during its . 22-year tenure. The "Gag Law" has been cri ticized for preventing noted scientists with previous leftist connections from speaking on campus and for placing restric tions, on visiting musicians and cultural groups from the Soviet Union. Numerous student leaders and educators have criticized the law as a basic violation of aca demic freedom, and have urged modification of the bill to place the power of supervision in the hands of University trustees. "I feel that this effort by the student bodies of the three cam puses will show the. unified op position of a vast majority of the students to the Speaker Ban Law," Spearman said. "I hope each student on the Chapel Hill campus of the Uni versity will take this oppor tunity to sign the petition that is being circulated by Student Government." Student leaders and the edi tors of the campus newspaper will attend the meeting. vo L,liar2ed In Burglary The preliminary hearing will be held Tuesday for two youths involved in the December bur glary at the Coble Construction Co. office on the building site of new Carmichael Auditorium. James A. Weaver and Phillip Hubbard, both 19 and of Kan napolis, have been charged with breaking and entering the of fice. They are inmates at the Chapel Hill Area Youth Reha bilitation Unit at Mason Farm. An automatic checkwriter and 378 blank payroll checks were taken from the trailer office be tween noon Dec. 23 and 8:30 a.m. Dec. 24. Trouble For Local Barbers Mops Keep Floppin y.M..W-.WJ..MJ........y....MU....,J Ul A ,L , Wwiiji.it .j f, n t t. ,x.mv., . . - - ' 1 I .; . . I : c ' . J i: . ' - - 1 - - , -i- v I x ..-sr. v . ? - i I K j - ? j- J, ' -' - r . . V " ' : L v - : i I T h II II H I I II II III II I h - - . l UAR DELEGATE Baxter Linney of UNC argues against United States policy last night as he addresses members of the Model United Nations Security Council. About 500 delegates are here for the four-day session. Photo by Jock Lauterer w,Wwmvwavav.vvwv'wv" - Late News Briefs From Daily, Tar Heel Associated Press Wire Reports A TERRORIST BOMB ripped through a U. S. enlisted men's billet yesterday in Qui Nhon, Viet Nam, killing an undetermined number of its "40 or more Occupants and two Viet Cong who set off the charge. Speculation arose immediately that the United States might make another retaliatory strike at North Viet Nam similar to the one launched Sunday by U. S. and South Viet Nam aircraft. Relief operations quickly uncovered one American dead and 13 wounded in the" debris of the four-stbry concrete building. Qui Nhon a coastal city 275 miles northeast of Saigonk .is the ..capital of Bihn. DihnPrQvincJ,. where Viet Cong forces have smashed several hundred South Vietnamese troops in a mountain fight this week. i - - A PUBLIC HEARING on a bill to make Charlotte College the fourth campus of the Consolidated University will be held at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. This was announced yesterday by Sen. Ralph Scott of Ala mance, chairman of the Higher Education Committee. The hearing will be something of a formality since the bill's passage seems assured. It bears the names of 49 of the 50 senators. An identical bill in the House was signed by 81 of the 120 members. The bill, which would become effective next July 1, would designate Charlotte College as "The University of North Carolina at Charlotte." PRESIDENT JOHNSON HELD a lengthy, emergency session with the National Security Council Wednesday, but there was no indication of any imminent action in the Vietnamese situation. The White House displayed no signs of anxiety as a result of the Qui Nhon bombing. Presidential Press Secretary George Reedy said only, "The situation is receiving the closest attention." He said Johnson is not planning a broadcast to the nation. , - -' - - - - ,r ' , r , 1 i . " -' -' , " ; V: - i 7Z ' s ''vAav. - i He says girls like the rugged, he-man look. "They need something to run their fingers through," he said. Red Marley of the Carolina Barber Shop feels that the style will die out as soon as warm weather ; comes. Looking at the situation from the other side of the mop, Roger Kelley, a sophomore psychol ogy major from New Jersey, whose wig .meas ures six inches at high tide, has this to say: "My life's ambition is to have my hair long enough to put it between my. teeth. It just looks personable. You can . do more with it. Why should girls have the edge on original hairstyles? "My parents make me cut it when I go home," he. said. "I. don't have to go home for over two months. , . "I think I'll let it grow until then. If it grows down over my ears maybe I won't be able to hear people complain about how bad it looks. "I see an obvious trend coming," Kelley said. "Other parts of the human body are becoming less and less covered and therefore less and less sexually arousing. "The forehead is becoming more and more hidden. I expect it to take on errogeneous sig nificance as time goes on because of this. - "Yul Brenner will have to wear a hat in all his American movies, or he'll never get past the censors." Walt Fores, a junior, also from New Jersey, wears the new front-swept Ivy League style. "It helps keep my eyebrpys warm . on . cold winter nights," he said. Model Speaker Of National Sovereignty The nations of the world must be willing to sacrifice some de- iree of sovereignty to achieve a successful world peace-keep ing organization, a former State Department official told dele gates to the Model United Na tions here last night. Georae V. Allen told the 500 student delegates that there will come a time when "nations of the world must meet together to decide to what extent hey may have to surrender sovereignty . . . to enable a world organization to func tion." The current director of the Tobacco Institute and former Assistant Secretary to Bureaus Df Near Eastern, South Asian and African Affairs compared the relinquishing of sovereingty to states in the federal system in the U.S. He called federalism one of the great achievements in po litical science and said the next step ... must be to build (a world organization) closely on federalism." Allen pointed out some groups do not want to surrender sov ereignty because of "emotional grounds." . He said one such organization "here in Chapel Hill" opposed the disposition of the U.S. and U.N. flags at the Model U.N. This was an apparent refer ence to American Legion Post No. 6 which distributed printed, sheets citing the correct "dis play in the United States of flags of international organiza tions or other nations." The sheet read in part: "Again it is our duty to remind the public and especially the 400 delegates from 60 southern universities who are scheduled to - attend ' the Middle South Model United Nations to be held at UNC that there is a law in the land passed by the U.S. " Congress and signed by the President in 1953 that should be obeyed." It then went on to cite the correct display of the American flag. , State Intern Applications Available Potential politicians may ap ply for one of 25 summer in ternships with the North Caro lina State Government in Ra leigh after obtaining applica tions from the Institute of Gov ernment here. The 11-week program, which includes day work with the state government and nightly seminars aoout cnaracteristics and problems of North Carolina government, will offer three se mester hours of credit in poli tical science and a salary of $75 per week. Six students from here par ticipated in the - program last summer. "I would encourage all quali fied students interested in gov ernment or public service to ap ply for this program," former intern Hugh Stevens said. "It was one of the most bene ficial and exciting experiences I have ever had," he said. "Par ticipants will be making a daily contribution to the functioning of North Carolina's government al system." Student Body President Bob Spearman, another former in tern, said, "This program gives the student a realistic view of how state bureaucratic depart ments function. ."Equally Important," he said, "are the seminars, in which state officials speak about their de partments and the problems which face the state. "This helps put the various departments in perspective, and gives a broad view of North Carolina government. Students who will have com pleted three years of college by; June 7, and college students who are residents of North Carolina are eligible. Applicants are . required to submit job applications, a col lege record transcript, a recent' photograph, and a letter stating honors received, college extra curricular activities, and rea sons for application to the In stitute of Government by Mon day. Application forms are avail able at the DTH offices. V. N. Opens Sessions Urges Sacrifice GEORGE ALLEN Allen asserted that "drastic and heroic efforts must be tak en by the present generation in the field of international gov ernment." However, he said, "if the pres ent U.N. fails we'll build anoth er one. But in this atomic age if this one does fail we may not have a chance to build an other one." He praised the U. S. policy in the Congo and called interven tion a "courageous, brave and thoroughly correct" position. Allen was keynote speaker on the first night of the four-day Model U.N. session. He re placed Arthur Larson, director of the World Rule of Law Cen ter at Duke, as main speaker. Larson canceled the speech ear lier this week because of illness in the family." . The session was called to or der by UNC's Jim Medford who read telegrams of greeting from President Lyndon Johnson and U.N. Ambassador Adali Steven son. Allen was introduced by Dean FC A Rally Features Yanks' Richardson Bobby Richardson, second baseman of the New York Yankees, and Don Shinnick, linebacker of the Baltimore Colts, will be featured speakers at a campus-wide rally spon sored by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes Tuesday. James Jeffreys, the national executive director of the FCA, will also be featured on the pro gram which will begin at eight p.m. in Memorial Hall. BOBBY RICHARDSON "It will probably be the most inspirational things to happen on campus all year," said local president, Harrison Merrill. "This is the first time such a rally has been held on a col lege campus." Jeffreys, a former All-American at Baylor, will be the fea tured speaker on the r rbgram which is expected to last about an hour. An accomplished jug gler, Jeffreys will perform his juggling act before he speaks. The FCA is a national or ganization made . up of athletes on the high school, college and professional levels. With head quarters in Kansas City, Mo., ,.Sss.::,l'.',:s.,j. And Champagne Flowed Champagne was flowing on campus Tuesday. However, the sparkling stuff wasn't consumed. Instead it spilled on the ground around the construction site of Carmichael Auditorium next to Woollen Gym. Workmen broke a bottle of pink champaign over a steel beam after the jack supporting the frame was taken away. It was a celebration for the partially constructed build ing standing on its own. it l-.i of the General College Carlyle Sitterson. Behind placards of their re spective nations, the delegates from 60 southern colleges crowded Hill Hall for the ses sion. General Debate A general debate among mem ber nations was held after Al len's speech. The Security Council comprising China, the U.S., USSR, United Kingdom, France, Brazil, Czcsocholovakia, Bolivia, Ivory Coast, Norway and Morocco also met. Committee meetings were held yesterday beginning at 9 a.m. Sessions will continue today and Steve Robbins, president of National Student Association, will speak at 7:30 p.m. on how international student politics af fects the U.N. Delegates will hear Dr. Ar thur Waskow of the Institute of Policy Studies, Washington, at 8 p.m. Friday after a dinner in Lenoir. Five Delegations UNC has five delegations: Cy prus and the UAR (Di Society), Brazil and Byelorussia 'Phi So ciety) and Iceland (CCUN). Mike Lawler, last year's UNC student body president, is chair man of the Economic Commit tee. He was last year's Model U.N. president. The president and vice presi dent, Craig Worthington and Timothy Anna, are from Duke. Ellen Gilkenson, executive sec retary, is from UNC. The Model U.N. is modeled after the actual world body with the same council and commit tees. UNC won the award for the best delegation at last year's Model U.N. held at Duke. the FCA's main purpose is to "witness for Christ by using the athlete's influence." Among the professional ath letes active in FCA work are Richardson, Shinnick, Minesota Viking quarterback Frank Tar kenton, St. Louis Hawk forward Bob Pettit, and two members of the Detroit Tigers, Dave Wick ersham and Don Demeter. The UNC chapter of FCA jr t rolling last year thanks to the efforts of Al Long, the last four sport letterman here. Now an insurance man in Durham, Long and faculty advisor Dean Smith stirred up interest among campus athletes. The UNC chapter now has 22 active members, coming from almost every sport. FCA meets every other Thursday night. Its main ac tivity is sending members to speak at high schools, colleges, and church groups. Dean Carmichael Will Head Skit In Talent Show Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael heads the cast in a faculty skit at the Sophomore Class Talent Show Feb. 26. Professor David Lapkin. As sistant Professor George Daniel, Dr. John Semonche and two others will be in the play. . Charlie Davis, guard on the football team, will sing, Ehr inghaus President Byron Mc Coy will present a skit and Gle Club President Alvin Tyndall will perform a vaudeville act.