Mm Whs Freshman Game The Freshmen fared better In Durham. See the game story on page 5. Unendorsed Candidates anov And Gebeaux B Circulate Petitions By STEVE BENNETT DTH Staff Writer Alan Banov and Howard Gebeaux have started circulating Detitions to apt their names on the ballot for The petitions must contain at least 145 names and be submitted to the Elec tions Board by March 10. Hugh Blackwell, chiarman of the Publications Board, said that the board would decide at their meeting this Thursday whether to make public or not the rea sons why Banov and Gebeaux did not receive endorsement. "I plan to go to as many tively for editor of the DTH " Banov said. "I should have no trouble in securing the re- II 1 1 Fori miwiKAM '- - i would make a good DTH. Banov is a junior from Charleston, S. C. He has been news editor of the DTH and is now acting press secretary for the student government. Banov said, "I feel the Pub Board used information in considering me for endorse ment that is not relevant to the position for which I have applied. "I think that my record in journalism and student gov ernment would enable me to handle the job as editor." Howard Gebeaux, a junior from Falls Church, Va., said that he has already begun cir culating his petition but he does not plan to try to secure a larger number than requir ed. He said, "I feel the Pub Board made the only decision they could in not endorsing me according to the criteria they think is most important for . i-i- B"iures Winston - Salem, has an on the petition nounced his candidacy for Banov said, "I feel the Pub editor of The Daily Tar Heel. TfZ'l vhaUS' frateities A journalism major, he re- and sororities as possible m ceived an endorsement by the securing names for the peti- Publications Board Thursday vZn I 2lfcr my Cam" - Cpaigning on experience 3 f ly P.f t0- SG?Ure sev- ln both journalism and student ?E n2Xw? Slgnatures on affairs, Linville has been an rJEi ,1 u u orientation counselor and has Gebeaux said that he will served in the Men's Residence be running his campaign by Council SS!8 uifl l wat He was a member of the an editor should be and what the editor of the DTH. My sophomore year and is pres- concepts of the duties of an ently a member of the Stu- editor are different from those dent Government Communica- expressed by the Pub Board, tions Committee, the UNC "The Pub Board expresses Cardboard Club, UNC Press the view that the editor of the club, and Sigma Delta Chi DTH must know every detail Professional journalistic so concerning the technical pro- c v:.. . . cedures involved in putting Untu he resigned this week, out a student newspaper. "I think I could learn the technical processes by next Work In Europe year. I will be at UNC dur ing this summer." Histadrut Foundation for Ed- The Pub Board has endorsed ucational Travel has an- Fred Thomas and Ray Lin- nounced an 8-week summer ville for editor of the DTH. program for work and lectures If the petitions of Banov and in Israel and Europe. Gebeaux are approved, they Cost will be $897. will appear on the ballot with Information and reservations Thomas and Linville. The may be obtained from Hista- election will be held March drut Student Tours, 33 East 22. 67th St., New York 21, N. Y. GI's Wives Get Anonymous Calls By CHARLES BARBOUR Durham Morning Herald FT. BRAGG (AP) The knew enough to trace the de night a Ft. Bragg housewife's pendents' daily activities, husband was reported execut- And, although 24 have been ed by the North Vietnamese, officially noted, many others someone telephoned the home possibly hundreds have and shouted: "I'm going to not. kill you just as your husband The calls take on many got killed." shapes and forms at first, ap- About the same time, four parently, but have the same other dependents of men fight- ing the Viet Cong received anonymous calls saying they should be ashamed that their husbands were fighting in a war that is not our business. Two others were called and told they would be taken to some remote spot and "horse beaten" at an undetermined time. These terrifying experiences are being relived once, twice, sometimes several times daily here by the women struggling to take care of their families while their husbands are away. Since last October, the Army has officially recorded 24 wives at this post as receiving one or more such calls 16 of them obscene in nature, four subversive and three of ter ror. Every call followed the same line. The caller knew the first editor of The Daily Tar RayLinville To Run For Tar Heel Editor RaV P T.irnillo o inninr ... ' RAY LINVILLE class tinance commmee his names of the dependents, knew the husbands were over seas and. most of the time, objective One wife related that she re ceived her first call shortly after her husband was report ed missing in action. "It was a long distance call," she said, "and they knew my husband's name. I heard them tell the operator that they had vital informa tion for me about my hus band." The wife refused to talk with the party and immedi ately notified Ft. Bragg offi cials. Shortly thereafter, a deluge of mail began arriving at her address from extremist or ganizations. They urged her to join at a $100 fee to assist in a march on Washington, join in picketing at the White House or meet with the group in Chi cago. (Continued on Page 6) The CHAPEL HILL, Heel, since neither received he was managing editor of the UNC Journalist, a publica tion of the School of Journal ism. He has been a member of the DTH staff. A former employe of the Twin City (Winston - Salem) Sentinel, Linville has made the Dean's List and is pur suing the honors program in journalism. He is a member of the AFROTC program and the Arnold Air Society. "The Daily Tar Heel is a student newspaper and is the students' sole means of com munication. It hould exist for all students, fraternities, resi dence halls and their activi ties. The DTH editor should be aware of the role an effective student newspaper can play. He should be interested in stu dent activities and the Uni versity as a whole," Linville said in announcing his can didacy. "The DTH is obligated to the student body for accuracy, objectivity arid maintenance of ethical standards, and I feel the paper can and should meet these obligations." Zoologist To Speak Dr. Phillip Hildroth, a re search zoologist at the Law rence Radiation Laboratory at the University of California at Berkeley, will be the speaker at Wednesday's UNC Zoology Seminar. Interfaith Council Still Looking For Participants Placs are still open for par ticipants in four of the discus sion -study groups sponsored by the UNC Interfaith Coun cil. Composed of representatives from all the campus fellow ships, the Inter-faith Council, for the purpose of "prompting thinking and action in the areas of university concern, social problems and interna tional relations, and aiding the student in attaining an under standing of religious thought and in developing his own per sonal faith, has organized the following three groups to meet for five weeks on Wednesday evenings beginning Wednes day and running through March 30: "The Philosophy of Teilhard de Cliardin," led by Father PHARMACIST BEN COURTS advises students not to doctor themselves. But if you can't resist the urge, this year's big sellers in cold remedies are Coryban D, Coricidin. Contact, wma Smith's Largest College Newspapei NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 27. 1966 'S THE TAR HEELS v t.-:- X .j o C I - X' . - X-XjX -h.- : '-- O v (N i . X Lmwi ir Horn ii mm" rjs.jnr I mf Sl t lomfjtj iA "Z . I'.tmli irr- O V ' ' L.. I 'New Wine' On Sale Now; Topic: 'Man And Myth' New Wine, the Christian He has held the Chair of journal of opinion published Statistics at Imperial College of by the Westminister Fellow- Science, London, since 1948. ship, goes on sale this week. He will soon take the same This issue, "Man and Myth," position at the University of examines the various ways Essex. myth functions in modern life. Writers include John Honig mann, Suzane MacRae, Ber nard Boyd, Virgil Aldrich, Robert Sherer and Lawrence Gruman. Book reviews are by Sue Ross, Waldo Haisley, Jim ' McCorkle, David McFadden an Clay Stalnaker. It will be on sale at Kemp's, Carolina Coffee Shop, Y-Court, Graham Memorial and Bull's Head Bookstore. It can also be obtained by mail at Box 509, Chapel Hill. Price is 50 cents. Colloquium Monday Prof. G. A. Barnard will speak on "Data Analysis in High Energy Physics" at Mon day's statistics colloquium in 265 Phillips. William Shurr S J (1942-2114) will examine the controversial work of the Jesuit biologist in incorporating t h e scientific viouXf PvnintiAn Hth thp ruict;,n foifv, ATtrr q r m at the Episcopal Student Con- tor sru p-sct FranMin sttv SrnHv hooks will hp The Di- vine Mileau and The Phenom enon of Man. "Conversations on Myth," with Rev. DeWitt Myers of the United Church (942-1740). This group will be a seminar study in preparation for the Carolina Symposium (April 17-21) on "Man, Mind and Myth" and will investigate the use of myth and symbol in religious literature and thought. The text will be Rollo May's col lected essays Symbolism in Re ligion and Literature. -..o 1 lff5:.l liB fwi Xlj fcg : It- 3? J lost but Bob Lewis faught his Yang At Duke A Nobel Award winner in physics will speak at the Tenth Fritz London Memorial Lecture at Duke Wednesday at 8 p.m. Dr. Chen Ning Yang will speak on the subject of his prize-winning effort "The Symmetry Laws of Physics." He is known for his work in statistical mechanics and on the process of sublimation of a solid into gas. He will speak in the auditor ium of the Biological Sciences Building on the West Campus. The lecture is open to the pub lic. Visits Citadel Prof. Lawrence M. Slifkin of the Physics Department will be visiting lecturer at The Cit adel, Charleston, S. C, on March 10 and 11. His visit is part of a nation- wide program to stimulate in- terest in physics, sponsored by he American Institute of Phys- ?s ana ine American AiMx.id- uon ot t-nysics leacners Slifkin will give lectures, hold informal meetings with students and assist faculty members with curriculum and research problems He has been a member of the faculty here since 1955. SP Meets There will be a Student Party meeting tomorrow night at 7:30 in Gerrard Hall to nomi- nate candidates for secretary and treasurer of the student body. Nominations for several leg- islative offices will also be made, according to SP Chair man Jim Little. The party will also adopt a platform. Anahist and Dristan. Meanwhile, over in the infirmary Dr. E. M. Hedgpeth reports things are normal for this time of year. DTH photo by Ernest Robl way into the ACC record books. A News Analysis fleets Will Last H By ED FREAKLEY DTH Staff Writer A decision that will have deep and lasting effects on fessors will carry through on this University will be made their thrats and leave Chapel by the 100-member board of Hill for freer pastures. And trustees in Raleigh tomorrow, there is no doubt that the rep There are many complexi-. utatkm and the high standing ties surrounding Monday's de- cision and many issues in volved. But from th stand point of the University com munity there is only one issue freedom of speech. Will it be returned, or will it remain qualified? On Feb. 8 the executive board of the full trustee com mittee met and in an 8-3 vote, instructed the president and chancellors to "deny the use of university facilities for speaking purposes of Herbert Aptheker and Frank Wilkin son." A second resolution was unanimously adopted by the committee which said, 'The executive committe suspends all invitations to speakers who are under terms of GS 116-199 (the SDeaker ban law) until action is taken by the board of trustees establishing rates and regulations governing speak ers as required by law." Committee Reports Trustees Victor Bryant, Wade Barber and Reid May nard were appointed as a three-man committe to dis- cuss further rules "in order to clarify the registration of erouDs" on the university cam- pus. The committee will make its report tomorrow whn all proposed regulations wui oe considered. Its decision will take into consideration the speaker poli- cy set forth by the Committee ior t ree inquiry Thic nmrvncai" is rnmnlptplv non-restrictive and is the only if the male had admitted to being in love with her, regardless one students here seem willing of the length of the relationship. Marriage was not mentioned to accept. But there are poli- as a reason. cies to be considered and they Factors which affected the success or failure of dating are all restrictive in one as- were te inability to dance, Liability to consume a fifth of pect or another liquor at one sitting, lack of a new model car to drive and There is also the question of nf .--i. y. tiu-1 i the presence of morals. grTSationtfK . . d. - to car- and the invitation to Frank ned a brle case knew wav around Philadelphia (which Wilkinson. includes every night club and expensive restaurant), is more Possibilities irritating than she's ever known, who is going to be a doctor The possibilities that lie or an attorney, maybe an accountant, and who can smile ahead are many and their like Steve McQueen. ramifications are ven more Males described an ideal date or mate as a femle who important thinks he, and not Sean Connery, is the "greatest thing going," 1. The full board may pass . . . . .t. . , , . a restrictive speaker policy wno wu welcome him with open arms after he has not called and at the same time prohib- for three months, who will support and defend him when he it Aptheker and Wilkinson's is totally wrong, and who won't laugh when he tells her his alternative it is more than accumulative average. 2. It may pass a restrictive Males said they enjoyed dating because they like "play policy and permit Apthker and mg the roie an(j "ioved to see the fools (females) believe Wilkinson to appear providing ay they are . all the measure under the pol- Women are so gullible," was the general consensus. 1C3. The board may accept a Female said they enjoyed dating because they liked let-non-restrictive policy and al- tm tnelr dates tnlnlc tne' believed all they were told. They low the two controversial also said they enjoyed "seeing the fools (males) spend their speakers to appear. money." If the board takes the first "They're so dumb," was the general consensus, altrnative it is more than a surprising result of the survey was that love was not likely that the Committee for Usted as a factor for datLng or marriae. Free Inquiry, which has been . . restrained for the past month They said one must cold independent, cynical, due to by" positive and thoughtful losing the one love of his life, calculating, and always bitter leadership, may take to the as a result of losing that one and only true love, streets. DTH Photo by Ernest Rob!. Professors It is also possible that pro- fsvnrsvv nkin1 j-t H c' new season ahead of us of this University will come crashing down. The same action is likely even if the board does permit Aptheker and Wilkinson to speak. These two men have been removed from the issue, at last for the most part. The students here are interested in free speech in its entirity. They don't want it qualified. If the committee rules that Aptheker cannot appear he with Ed Freakley The New Love We printed the first half of a revelling sex survey that was i ii ..AntAUHi Ta)oi t rafnrn f r tViic en on anoiner campus ywy. .w. vital subject to find even more startling results. Of the males interviewed regarding marriage almost all of them expressed a desire to the ages of 55 and 96. Over 93 per cent of the "double standard." However, 97 per cent of them said they told their dates they believed in the "single standard." All females said they believed in the double standard. But it was not valid, they said, if a girl was going steady. engaged, had gone out with someone more than three times or DTH Election Check page 3 for Andy My ers opinion on the election of DTH editors. Founded February 23. 1893 u probably be re-invited. And then there wiU tne .... much talked about test case. If the speaker ban is' thrown out, and surely it would be, the legislature and the Gover nor would have mud in their eyes. " ' " It is highly unlikely that the board will pass the non-restrictive policy for they would be going against the expressed wishes of Gov. Moore. And it is a well known fact that the majority of North Carolina stands behind Gov. Moore on this issue. In the final analysis no one can win, except, of course, free speech. get married somewhere between males said they believed in the

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