UIIC Library ScriaLa Dept. n n 1 1 45 11 11 r JJL VL In 7 1 A Ml JLYOi-O Weather And Snow Report Fair and partly mild today and tomorrow, with flurries of weather extending into the northwestern states. Glacier warnings are posted from Block Island to Ambrose light ship. The sun will rise as scheduled, and low tide in the Bay of Fundy is at 4:33 this afternoon. Valkyrie Sing The date for registration for the Valkyrie Sing has been ex tended to tomorrow. Please send applications and Sid to Mary Susan Kirk at the Kap pa Delta house. mm The South' Largest College iSeivspcfer Volume 74, Number 130 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 any y ir - m 2 r rrn li F Tar Heels Get end-Off Today By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer ; Players, coaches, cheerleaders, administrators, and thousands of students are expected to show up this morning at 11:45 in Polk Place to give the Louisville-headed Tar Heels a rousing send-off. The pep rally "should be just like last week," said Dick Starnes, head cheerleader, "except it'll be even bigger and better and louder than when we sent the team off to College Park." Starnes expects "thousands of loyal Tar Heels to show up with banners, horns, bells, Rebel flags, the works," to send the roundballers off to the NCAA finals with the firm knowledge that the home front is behind them at least 100 per cent. The pep band will show up on the steps of South Building to lead the cheerleaders in revelry. The players will speak, the coaches will speak, the Chan cellor "will most likely have a few words of encourage ment, too," and the "students will hopefully show up en masse to lead them all on," the head cheerleader said. This weekend, Lewis, Miller and crew are playing for all the marbles the NCAA basketball finals in Louisville, Ky. . The last time Carolina got out of th'e' ""Eastern Regionals was way back in 1957, when the Heels re turned with the national championship. As last week, "which was such a tremendous suc cess," said Starnes, "the Chancellor lias asked pro fessors to show clemency on those students who come in late to their noon classes." Last week at this time, there were four games to get through, including the Tigers of Clemson, who defeated UNC in regular season play, and Bob Cousy's Boston College Eagles. Now there's only Dayton and the Big One, Univer sity of California with Lou Alcindor. The Heels need some support, and Starnes and his cheerleaders are looking for it from the student body. The team is leaving for Louisville Thursday at 11:15 a.m. from Woollen Gym. Their bus will take them to Raleigh-Durham Airport for a noon departure. Starnes hopes "there will be a whole caravan of' students and faculty to follow the team from the gym to the airport, have another great send-off there, and really show the team that we're behind them all the way." He also asked students to send telegrams of en couragement to: The Carolina Tar Heels, Sheraton Hotel, Louisville, Ky., before game time Friday night. Spring Sing DO .v.'.v.v.v.'.v.'Av.v.-X'XvWS- "4 -r- i l - ' f ' i K - : - . . r' "C--- . . .. 1 - - - - - - - - i The famed UNC Varsity Men's Glee Club will present its annual Spring Concert in Hill Hall this April 4. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer A Barbara Bell tallies the votes a3 they pour into the G.M. Rendez vous Room during last night9 s frantic-paced counting session. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Rioting Not Black Power Says Stokely Carmichael By WAYNE HURDER DTH Staff Writer "The only way the Negro youth can express his frustra tion is by what the society has taught him violence," Stokely Carmichael, advocate of 'black power' told a mixed audience at Duke University recently. And, he added, "This is not black power." 'The black community has been excluded from decisions . on how to shape our society," he further explained. . "This has. not been acciden tal .. . this has not been on the level of individual acts," but actions of one group against another, he said. 'To correct this pattern will require basic changes in the society," and the purpose of the fblack power' movement is to force these changes, Car michael added. Carmichael is the head df the Student Non-Violent Co ordinating Committee. He first expounded his idea of "black power" during the Mis sissippi voter registration march last summer. In the past "the answers to these questions . . . has been mlloffli in terms of integration," he Negro gets power through stated. their independent political par Whites assumed that "there ties they will be able to bar was nothing good in the black gain with white society on a community" that onlv the stronger - basis and be inte- good black men should be si phoned off for integration, Carmichael told the full house. "America has asked for in dividuals to advance 'but what the Negro has often needed in the past was group ad vancement," he added. The fault with this concept as Carmichael explained it, was that whites as a group discriminated against the Ne groes as a group. Therefore, Negroes as a whole should be integrated in to American society, instead of the present system of inte grating individuals who are considered good, he continued. "Integration means to me a two-way street," he added, drawing heavy applause. To make integration a two way street, he said, "we must organize black community, power ... we must develop leadership that is not respon sible to the White press and leaders but to the black com munity." SNCC has already organized all-Negro third political par ties m several counties in Ala- bama and helped set up the Mississippi Freedom Demo- crat Party, the Negroes' an- swer to the segregationist Mis sissippi Democratic Party. In response to criticism that third parties have the effect of segregating Negroes more, lie commented that "it will not have an effect of isolating the black community but the reverse." He explained that when the Late Hours The Dean of Women's office announced yesterday it is granting 2:00 late permission to all coeds attending the Eeta-sponsored James Brown show Thursday night. This also applies to fresh men women. This is the first time this year the D. of W.'s office has granted this permission. Should the James Brown "concert" break up by 12:30 or so, the coeds should plan to be in their dorms by 1:00, but Brown usually runs well past this time. LeadiM - grated into American society on a group, not individual Da sis. He termed "the 'right to de fine ourselves as we please" as the first necessity for Ne groes to achieve freedom. Presently, in America, he said, whites set the terms of 1 CARMICHAEL the debate and define the is sues and participants. He quoted a passage from Camus to the effect that for a slave to free himself he must reject his master's defi- mtion of him. As aa example he gave the cowboy and Indian movies, When the cowboys kill all the Indians they call it a victory but when the Indians kill all the cowboys it is a massacre, Lashing out at the press, be told the crowd that the "white press has been busy articulat- ing their own interpretation, their own analysis ... of lit tle words fblack power.' " "It has failed to give an im-' portant report of what posi tive things have been done in the black community, among churchmen, and some intellec tuals," he continued. He summed up the whole problem as a "conflict be tween property rights and hu man rights." Right now property rights prevail, he thinks. To change this takes power, he says. "I don't think the world lives on love or morality ... it runs on power P-O-W-E-R and when you have that pow er you don't have to worry about love." 7 . i (Continued on Page 6) Im Only One-Third Of The Districts Report By DON CAMPBELL DTH News Editor Bob Travis held a substantial lead last night over Bill Purdy in the Student Body president race with more than one-third of the districts reported. With 14 of the 38 districts reporting, Travis had 844 votes to Purdy's 685. In the vice-presidential race, Jed Dietz was swamping his opponent, Noel Dunivant. With the same number of districts reporting, Dietz led by 1,047 to 490 votes. In the Daily Tar Hill editor ship race, with 11 districts re porting, Bill Amlong had as many votes as both his oppon ents. Amlong had 764 votes, Scott Goodfellow had 410, Dick Levy had 232. Because of an 11:00 p.m. deadline, this story was writ ten at 10:30. The latest re tarns are given in the ad joining box. The presidential race ap peared very close when first returns were announced. By 10:30, Travis had pulled ahead by some 160 votes. In the vice-presidential race, Dietz jumped to a command ing lead and appeared to be holdingit. Amlong also held a large lead at 10:00 but the margin had narrowed somewhat by 10:30. Separation and sorting of the ballots started at 6:30 and dragged on for two hours be fore the counting of ballots "be gan in Roland Parker Lounge. , After one hour of counting, the first returns were posted on the election board in the Rendezvous Room'. They were from the Infirmary all nine of them. Only the presidential, vice presidential, secretarial, edit orship and NSA delegate bal lots were being counted. The votes on the constitu tion amendments will be count ed later. Student body treas urer candidate Hugh Saxon was unopposed, as was Bob Orr, the candidate for Caro lina Athletic Association presi dent. A small group had congre gated in the Rendezvous Room by 9 o'clock. Upstairs in Roland Parker, several students wandered in and offered to count votes as late as 10 o'clock. One group of fraternity pled ges walked in they said they had been ordered to come over and offer their services. Protest Rules . Any student wishing to file a protest of any part of Tuesday's Student Gov ernment Elections should submit his protest to the Office of the Attorney Gen eral within 96 hours after the Elections Board has validated the particular election being protested. This protest must be in compliance with Chapter 32, f itle IH, of the Student Government Codification (5 S.G.C. 1966) and as in terpreted by the Supreme Court. If a student is in doubt as to how his protest should be constructed, he can make inquiry of the Attorney General or his representative who will give the student detailed instructions. LATEST RETURNS President: Travis 1367 Purdy 1063 Vice-President : Dietz 1696 Dunivant 761 DTH Editorship: Amlong 1693 Goodfellow 1103 Levy 718 Outline Cautioned By ERNEST H. ROBL DTH Staff Writer Attorney General David La Barre yesterday issued a warning to students saying that the. use of study, guides oh English themes, without the. use -of- footnotes ..consti tutes plagiarism. . LaBarre issued a statement on this topic after being told of numerous alleged honor code violations by the direc tor of the freshman and soph omore English program, Dr. William A. McQueen. In a note to aBarre, Mc Queen said, "Based on con versations with several in structors, I anticipate a large number of instances of plag iarism to be reported to the Honor Council in the near fu ture." McQueen explained the sit uation as follows: "Apparently plagiarism is widespread this spring in the ireshman English composi tion courses where students are required to read two novels. Apparently students have been using study guides as background reading for the novels and many of them have included passages from the study guides without ' T 7 ' - -r ; BEAUTY OUT OF THE mammoth destruction down by the Wilson library, new drainage pipes for the proposed nnder grad library lie stacked on top of one another. The modern wings on the library will be completed by the Fall of 13S8. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer ace use acknowledging their source in papers that they have written outside of class." He continued, "We are con . cerned about preventive mea sures, and we hope in the fu ture to use questions and composition assign-ments-whicb. will not be cov ered by the study guides." McQueen also commented that the English department was interested in "encourag ing an equitable honor sys tem whose main aim would be educational rather than punitive." He expressed the hope that the honor system would find more options in the sentenc ing of honor code violators. LaBarre commented on the same issue in his statement yesterday, saying that the question of what sentence to give a person convicted of plagiarism was a major problem of the student judi ciary. "As the chairman of the Men's Honor Council has pointed out, they feel that to a certain degree they must follow precedent and the tra ditions handed down by their predecessors," he said. (Continued on Page 6) i r fc;- T 7 - .'-