Ui:c Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chr?l Hill. TT. Frosh Baseball tor t Student jnittH All studt-nts who h tained buns from tt- Vtul r.l Loan Office- nd ho will , terminating stul. nt staiu. ft,r any rra'xtn, art- riuirtl u come by the offirr- Infrt ving the University. Freshman baseball coach Bill Lovingood calls this year's frosh team the best he's had at Carolina. See page five for his comments. Volume 74. Number 160 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA FRIDAY. MAY 13. 1966 Founded February 2.t. WW. ;-.'ir.;-.;. ... :,lfr ; OPEN1NG NIGHT The magic of outdoor theatre comes to Forest Theatre tonight when the Playmakers present 'Lilliom." The play was adapted and used as the basis for the musical, Nine -Story Book Exchange Set For Completion By Spring Of 468 By STEVE BENNETT DTII Staff Writer The new Book Exchange building scheduled to be start ed this summer at a cost $3, 225.000 will be nine stories, high and is supposed to be completed by the spring of '68. 'Gods' Make Stars Perform In Skies By KEN SAUNDERS Special To The DTII There are two students on this campus who virtually "play God" to hundreds of children every week. They are holders of perhaps the rarest "self - help" jobs and get perhaps the highest hourly wage of any working student. Henry Aldridge and J o hn Stupak are student narrators for the Morehead Planetar ium. Their job consists of running the planetarium instrument and delivering a 50 minute lec ture at the same time. "But it is not quite that simple, said Stupak, the jun ior member of the team. "You work in complete darkness running an instrument from a SPLASHED ACROSS the drab grew today and tomorrow is a Spring Art show opens today f If .V Vv.frtw I I - 11 V - XTS t -71 '.:.; V' " I A,- A Is- w-'-r;s; JyJ ir -. iU x :" h t ff La jt . t rx u, Lx-y f &i&7T:f- I m - - ' ' ' , - - I' 'Jrtf .-. v .- i ", l """Hfc, , Mf jrf Xk. if ri: Vt.rf?-1-; I Si " ' , ' , . ' ' r t - -: j ' t ; W 5 . ?4 . - - t , 'J i The high - rise totally air conditioned structure will be located between the new Un dergraduate Library and the new Student Union. It w i 1 1 have a lower level opening on the Raleigh Street side only, two floors for the Book Ex change facing Lenoir Hall and console containing over 150 dif ferent switches and dials, 30 of which you must use in the average show." "Then you have to lecture ! for almost an hour about what is going on overhead and you can't use a scrip in the dark either." The "instrument" Stupak mentions is a $185,000 Zeiss Planetarium Projector which weighs 2 1-2 tons. It is one of only six such instruments on the North American Con tinent. "Zeiss is the Cadillac of planetarium projectors and costs ten times as much as any other." The Zeiss instrument proj ects over 9,600 separate stars, all visible planets, the sun, the moon, and even portrays sun See GODS On Page 6 Spring Art Show: sidewalk by Battle-Vanee-Petti- cacophony of color. The annual with a host of new works "Carousel." Mai e and Female leads Ann Peacock as Julie and Hill Smith as l.iliont hen- prepare for poignant walse scene. Dill Photo bv Jock Lauterer six glass enclosed floors for office space. Arthur N. Tuttle Jr., Direc tor of planning, said that the. plans for the building were changed from the original plans which only called for a three - story building. Each floor will contain about 12,500 square feet of f 1 o o r space. The bottom floor will be di vided about evenly between Phi Raps' Coed Open House Will Officially Orientate Coeds Phi Kappa Sigma fraterni ty's annual coed open house has been made an official part of fall orientation. The Orientation Committee Monday night approved t h e inclusion of the fraternity's tra ditional event which began in 1946 in the Orientation Program for transfer and freshmen coeds. Invitations will be sent to each girl and her orientation counselor to visit the Phi Kap house from 8 to 10:30 on Wed nesday of Oreintation Week. "It's just to show the girls what a fraternity at Carolina is like and to let them meet the type of guys who are in fraternities here," said Hop exhibit. Signaling the openin Dickenson n-P on Guir miu in ., f. r". i , -1 V the office supply store located new in the basement of Y Court and the duplicating offices. The main entrance of the building will be on the Lenoir Hall side and will be on the second floor. As the building is entered from this location, a two - story open section in the middle of the building will show the ceiling of the third iloor and will aid in unifying the Book Exchange part of the building. Hudson, president of Phi Kap. Hudson said .the brothers will return to Chapel Hill a few days early to straigthen the house up before the open house. Attendance at the buffet -and - punch affair, he said., usually averages about 300. Plus the girls and their coun selors, there are the chapter sweetheart and hostesses rep resenting each sorority and girls' dorm. The open house was held ev ery year from 1946 until 1961, when it was discontinued for three years. In 1964, though, it was resumed as an annual event. A Splash - new spring sun glasses. Melody 7nt;nr Meanuhil. Jeannine Mc- n,thpr' naintinffs wiU New Spending System 0.K.M By Legislature Bv LYTT STAMPS DTII Staff Writer Student Legislature approv ed a requisition system for spending Student Government funds in a special session Wed nesday. Legislature also begun the slow item by item considera tion of the budget. I1 was not balanced when introduced by Frank Longest (SP). chair man of the Finance i-mmit-tee. The requisition system re quires the Student Bod Trea surer to authorize one to three persons of each organization vhich receives Student Gov fernment funds to sign requisi tion forms. : Before the organization may spend any funds, the authoriz ed person must obtain a form from the Student Activities Fund Office which will state the amount to be spent and that the expense is provided for in the budget. Under the requisition sys tem. Student Government would not be liable for funds spent without a requisition form. The person spending the funds without the form would be liable for them. Violation of the system will be an Honor Code offense. The system may be suspen ded for an organization if written request is submitted to the chairman of the Finance Committee and a vote of the commitee approves. The Finance Commitee may suspend the system only un der "a strictly specified sit uation." The bill does not de fine what these situations are. University Floor Leader Ed Wilson told Legislature that they could not afford to wait another year to begin the sys tem of the unbalanced budget. Dick Levy (SP) called the svstem "unnecessary red tape." Longest said the system as necessary now to "make peo ple think" before they spend Student Government funds. Eric Van Loon (SP) said there was a bill presently in the Ways and Means Commit tee to study the financial set up of Student Government. He did not want the system in stalled until further study could be made. The vote on the section of the budget defining the requi sition system passed in a voice vote. After approving the n e w system. Legislature consider ed the budget until 10:4o p.m when the rules state that they must adjourn. Included in the budget was $1,903. 30 for NSA. Rumors had been abundant that the Finance Committe had cut NSA out of the budget totally. When this part of the budget was con sidered on the floor, $45 was added to the funds appropriat- See LEGISLATURE Page Of Colors hang. And here comes "Mabel." (the painting is "Mabel." the boy is Brvan McDaniel.) Mabel is by Tom Livengood. If none Ban Suit Answer: Defendants To Ask Dismissal Of Case By ALAN BANOV DTH Staff Writer The defendants in the Speaker Ban suit will ask for dismissal of the case when they file their answer to the suit later this morning in the U. S. District Court for the Middle District of N. C. Col. W. T. Joyner, senior member of the Raleigh law firm which aided the UNC Officals To Request $ Increase University officios have an nounced plans to request an increase in the per - occupant expenditure permitted on the construction of new dormitor ies, according to Acting Chan cellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. At present the Advisory Budget Commission enforces a State requirement that a max imum of $3,000 per occupant be spent on dorm construct ion. Consolidated University Pre sident William C. Friday said last week that no decision on the amount of the increase to be requested has been reach ed. A meeting hds been held with the State Department of Administration to discuss the matter, he said. Sitterson said the University "will seek relief from the re striction shortly." He added, such a requirement "puts an Janus Inducts 14 Fourteen men were initiated last night in secret cere monies by the Society of Janus. New members were picked up at midnight at various loca tions on campus and taken to the temple of the society where they were inducted. After the initiation a reception was held for old and new members. New members are: Duane Gary Boggs, Llewellyn G. Brown, Jerry Wayne Cannady, Chan Chandler, William T. El liott, John Edward Ellis, Terry Clayton Fox, Worth Timothy Haithcock, James Gaston Hough, Charles R. Miller, Ernest Allen Shepard, Dwight E. Thomas, Jr., William Samuel Woodard and Rev. Harry E. Smith. The Society of Janus is a secret honorary society com posed of students, faculty administration officials, and others who have demonstrated outstanding leadership and service to residence halls of the university. The society makes selections on the basis of leadership, scholarship, and honorable character. Serving as officers this past year were A. D. Frazier, Praeceps; Bill Robinson, Vice-Praeceps ; Jim Pender, Notarius; and Pete Williams, Quaestor. Other active members on campus are Gordon Appell, Ron nie Aycock, Gerald Droze, Phil Baddour, John Ingram, Chuck Longino, Byron McCoy, Bob Payton, Paul Russell, Bob Hunter, Clark Brewer, Ed Burt, Arthur Hays, Jim Fullwood, Don Car son, Paul Dickson, Alan Craig, Sonny Pepper, and Lanny Shuff. On Franklin Street unrealistic ceiling on dormito ry construction and will cause a sharp reduction in the size of the two - man dormitory rooms." He said such a reduction would become necessary if the per - occupant expenditure is not increased in line with ris ing labor and building cost. Friday said, "We will re quest an upward revision in the figure and the Department of Administration will proba bly make a similar recom mendation. "It is a statutory matter and must be taken up by the 1967 General Assembly." Consolidated University Bu siness Manager A. H. Shep erd Jr, said the per - occu pant expenditure has risen from $2,687.50 (set by the 1961 General Assembly) to $2,750 (set by the 1963 Assembly) of this makes sense. . tt' because you've got to see for yourself. DTH Photos by Jock Lauterer Attorney General's staff in preparing the Defense, said yesterday that the an swer "will contain motions of dismiss al." The motion would admit the validity of the facts in the plaintiffs' evidence, but assert the merits of the Speaker Ban Law. The suit was file March 31 by 12 stu dents, Marxist Herbert Aptheker and Frank Wil kinson against Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson, Con solidated University Pres ident William C. Friday and the UNC Board of Trust ees. Attorney General Wade Bru ton said yesterday that a rep resentative of his staff will leave Raleigh about 9 a.m. to day to file the answer in Greensboro. The deadline for the answer to the suit is May 15. The de fense would be required to file their answer by 5 p.m. today, since the court in Greensboro is closed tomor row and Sunday. Wayne Evcrhart, deputy clerk of the federal court, as See BAN On Page 6 E'haus Surfers Set Luau Blast This Afternoon An Hawaiian Luau Party will be sponsored by Ehring haus Residence College on Friday, May 13. Bathed in the lights and sights of the tropics, the Shadows Combo will play from 7:30 until 12:30. This party is a group project by the six houses of the college and big plans are now being made for the event. Admission will be free for persons appropriately dressed for a luau (wild swim suits, sarongs, etc.). This combo party will be the major event of the spring social activities for Ehring haus Residence College. Plans now call for the lawn to be fully bedecked with appropri ate decorations. All persons will be greeted with a free lei. The event will be held on the front lawn. The entire campus is cordially invited and refreshments will be serv ed. This will be the last big out door dance and festival on campus. Wear your "boggies" or your "hang-ten". the exhibit v ' gm33 nuru "v ...v-..- - j- o 1

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