Uric Library Serials Dapt. Box 870 Charl Hilt. fj. C. Tillman Dr. Rollie Tillman, Director of the Master of Business Ad ministration program will dis cuss graduate education in business administration at 7 . p.m. tonight in Room 10S. Gardner Hall. Orientation Counselors Interviews for the selection of orientation counselors are being held this week in the Roland Parker Lounges of Graham Memorial from 2 to 5 p.m. The South's Largest College Xeuspcr-er Volume 74, Number 134 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1967 Founded February 23. 1893 n O e icneniriiae Planned Here "7 O Tj T TFh By DON CAMPBELL DTH News Editor Human Beings, be advised: There's gonna' be a Be-in. A Human Be-in. It's gonna' be a "period of childlike innocence." If you have a poem or a song, a speech or a picture bring it and share it with a friend. Most important bring your self to the feet of Silent Sam at 1:00 p.m. on Thursday, April 20. Be-ins have been in big at London's Hyde Park, at New York's Central Park, at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. The Be-in here may be the first on a college campus. The Be-in was thought-up by John and Barbara Gunn. He is a psychology major here. They got the idea after read ing about a San Francisco Be in in the Berkeley Barb. "The ones in San Francisco were fantastic," Mrs. Gunn said yesterday. "We hope to create a Hyde Jfaric atmo sphere here." "The real theme of the Be in is child-like-ness," she con tinued. "I hope it will be some thing my 3-year-old will en joy. Children are invited; in a very real sense, they are the guests of honor, for though a Be-in defies rigid definition, it can be described as a pe riod of childlike innocence." Mrs. Gunn said, "We're try ing to keep it apolitical, but people can express any ideas they want to. Some people are bringing musical instruments, yrK:::::::-: This Is The Last DTH Edited By Goodfellow; lAmlong Takes Over Now N. Y. Times Reporter Says EJ By ERNEST II. ROBL DTH Staff Writer Covering the White House and the man occupying it can be a frustrating experience and Lyndon Baines Johnson isn't helping the situation. That was how New york Timesman Robert B. Semple Jr. pictured the job of White House correspondent to the UNC Press Club Tuesday eve ning. Semple told the group "re lations between the White House and th2 press have nev er been very good. . . . Under President Johnson they are perhaps marginally worse than ever before." The reporter laid much of the blame . at the feet of the President, dwelling extensive- ly on the "credibility gap." Semple said that while he him self is tiring of the term, "there is very clearly a credibility gap. V ! ! 1 - -J LB J AND A "CREDIBILITY GAP?" New York. Timesman Robert B. Semple, Jr., in a meeting with the UNC Press Club last Tues others are planning to read poetry. "Tpe main idea is we want people to dress unusual so unusual as to attract atten tion. Most people will dress weirdly anyhow." She said foreign students on campus are being invited to dress in their native cos tumes. Scott Simmons, another or ganizer of the Be-in, said this about it: "We want a day of inno cence. It will be a time to ex press our mutual basis in love. "We would like to have a true Be-in, in the tradition of San Francisco and New York." Other things to be brought to the Be-in are food and flow ers. "My husband and I are go ing to be baking a lot of home made bread," Mrs. Gunn said. "It's more human it's better than things that are store bought. "We welcome others to make bread or cookies," she said. About the flowers: Anyone who would like to pick flow ers to bring, Mrs. Gunn would appreciate their help. "We dorft know exactly how it's going to turn out," Mrs. Gunn said, "but a large crowd would be encouraging." It will last all afternoon, and if it's successful, she said, it might become a "seasonal thing." It's gonna' be a big day, folks. Be there. 7 I i-.-.-i-.-.l-J'fl .v.v.v.v' Is A Lily- QiUe "To my way of thinking, the credibility gap is caused not by deficiencies in the Presi dent's personality or profes sional quirks of our business, but, rather by the frequency with which the President tries to gild th3 lily on matters of substance. "And with President John son, this appears to have hap- rnZ Qf Q other ti in nnr historv ha said. ". . .'it leads ultimately to suspicion whether he is tell ing us the truth about bis larg er concerns, including the war in Vietnam. "All I know is that the "iU5ia!sra- ven uiougn aissim steady growth of our commit- uiatl0n may ffe,r snort TTIPnt thorvi Vi o c hum nnnnm- advantages, tne lone run be- panied by an appalling amount 0f public confusion at home ana aDroaa," ne said. Semple's talk to the Press Club was part of Journalism Week now being observed by .-: We found these interesting pictures Wednes day. Apparently boys were just as vain as girls when it came to getting a really top notch tan. Bat then we can't really blame y p pi ' "t " " ; - - - ' ' Tyfah,""' :-- . -" "-"71 , H v J Ift-i--- . v "Tr': V; '.V.v;; 4 I a.. j. a.. . - - .IM 1 -Tr1llt . -n - , , itij-MT 1 m -irMn Mmr-fijiii niwiiii 1 -f " - fiitmanmirwf mm i iMirrTHiuwf m MHiiwmr nnmr nM mrrnim H HH Assassination Plot Unveiled In West BERLIN (AP) West Berlin police yesterday ar rested 11 persons who a spok esman said were involved in a plot to endanger the life of Vice President Hubert H. the School of Journalism. Dur ing the week, several journalism-oriented professional or ganizations are also meeting here, bringing a number of speakers to the campus. "Public suspicion about the fundamental honesty of an ad ministration," Semple said Tuesday, ". . . can only hurt the man m power. For if the Amencan people are going to vest as much power as they have invested in a single man then they must be able to trust and believe him. "Otherwise, they are going to be confused, and they will not follow him with much en- i-l... " TT71 11 .1 ? long? j0. the Semple concluded. v Semple joined the Washing- ton bureau of the New York Times in September of 1963. During the period from April day, discussed the problems in covering the White House, and in particular, the Presi dent. DTH Photos By Ernest H. Robl Humphrey, who is due here tomorrow from Bonn for a one day visit. Guenter Dolgener, an offi cer of the West Berlin police political section, told a news- 1965 through November 1966 he was one of two Timesmen per manently assigned to the White House. Recently the major empha sis in Semple's writing has been on civil rights and urban renewal, although he still keeps an active interest in the day to day events of the presi dency. In his Tuesday evening talk, the Times reporter empha- sized that if anyone suffered from poor relations between the White House and the press, it was the President. "The steady accumulation of presidential power would seem to give the upper hand to the President in most things, particularly the mak ing of foreign policy, but in the constant war between the President and the press . . the press may have a better chance of surviving against the Johnson technique than Johnson himself. - "The stuff we have to re port straight . . . can be cor rected and balanced in the edi torial columns. And we do have recourse to what is known everywhere as interpre tive reporting," he said. Semple also points out that the President has a passionate interest in everything written about him and is quick to re spond to any real or imagined travesties "perpptrated by un skilled or merely vindictive newsmen." , He said that this attitude sometimes caused news re ports to "exaggerate (the President's) nasty idiosyncra sies. . . .' Semple said that the physi- cal framework in which re- 1 porters are forced to work while reporting on the Presi- dency two dailv briefings by the press secretary was in itself a basic source of the frustration that comes with the job of White House correspondent. 01 a r I ;4 J those folks for wanting to bask in the beautiful son. So, all yon sun-worshipers take heart. It's only two months tin youH have all day to bask. Berlin man: "Eleven persons, most of tnem students, were uracil m police custody because they met in conspiratorial circum- stances and. . planned as- saults against the life or health of the American Vice President, Hubert H. HPfJ" rey, by means of bombs with luuMiuwu urcuuvaia n tic bags and with other dam gerous intruments such as stones." "Material evidence was se cured," Dolgener said. Humphrey left Washington March 26 on a two - week, fence - mending tour of Eu rope. He stopped in Geneva and Bonn early in the tour, WMit nn tn Rnmp. nnH Tondon and returned to West Germany holding tnese tour suites open yesterday. fr two weeks, said the pro gram "is concerned with the In Rome, antiwar demon- academic welfare of foreign strators threw yellow paint at language students." him as he entered the opera "I think we'd all agree it's house. A few drops hit his tough enough around here as suit. He also encountered An- ti-American demonstrators in Florence. . - The vice president debated the war with members of the British parliament Tuesday at a private meeting of the Bri- tish - American mterparlia- dents involved. "There are mentary group. laboratories and classrooms," WMO Radio Adds Coeds To Disk Jockey Program WMO Radio, "the voice of Morrison University" has gone coed. Today seven coeds from Nurses' Dorm will report to the second floor storage room-turned-studio as WMO disc jockey trainees. This is as far as their clear ance from the Dean of Women and Dean of Men's office will take them,, but 'plans to ex pand their clearance to all lounges in Morrison are al ready in motion," announced Parker Hudson, governor-elect of Morrison. So far only girls from Nurses' have expressed an in terest, but any coed may join WMO by contactmg Phil Hon- eycutt, head d.j. and audio en- gineer, or iven roweu, prv- gram director Joyce Schilke, Patsy Reyn olds, Robin Castle, Linda Moore, Margie Williams, Gwen Hightower, and Mary Lyn Field will begin broad Deck PEORIA, ILL., (AP) Petite Corazon Amurao stifl ed her sobs yesterday, step ped out of the witness box and identified Richard Speck as the killer of eight nurses. Miss Amurao, the only sur vivor of the night of horror, walked across the courtroom floor, took a stance within a yard of Speck, pointed her right index finger and said, "This is the man." Speck, slumped in a chair at his counsel's table, show ed no reaction. A crowd which filled all 70 seats in the hot circuit court chamber, including members of the families of some of the victims, watched in fascina tion as the doll-like witness confronted the lanky drifter. Speck, 25, is on trial on charges of methodically mur- dering the eight young worn- en. July 14, 1966 m their townhouse dormitory on Chi cago's south side. But the spectators had eyes only for Miss Amurao as she Language Suites Set In Morrison By STEVE KNOWLTON DTH Staff Writer Interested language students will have the chance next year to live in a suite of eight com prised solely of students of the same language. This experiment is a further extension of the living learn ing experience idea -of - the residence colleges and will be conducted in Morrison Resi dence College. "Students interested in mas tering, or at least improving their conversation abilities in one of the foreign languages may sign up for one of these e ' .fp -fh th hmio;nff office Barry Hagger Aca- demi, u of Morrison sai(J yesterday Thefe an entire suite comprised of students in French Spanish, German, and Russian. Hagger said he expects "those students who sign up for this program will be above the freshman level courses, so they will have enough knowl edge of the language to be able to use it in daily conver sation and increase their pro ficiency." Director of Student Housing James Wadsworth, who is it is, and anything we can do to make it easier and better, we want to do it," he said. Dr. Herbert Reichert, chair man of the German Depart ment, feels that this informal atmosphere will help the stu- casting their own shows next week. They will probably take ov er the "music to study by" program broadcast every night except Saturday from 7 to 9. Hudson, excitedly called the DTH yesterday to announce that, "as of 3:32 Wednesday afternoon, WMO became the first coed residential college radio station in Chapel Hill." The radio station has been broadcasting for about a month. The Chapel Hill Tele phone Co. yesterday afternoon completed the lines running from Morrison to its sister house, the Nurses' Dorm, mak ing it possible for the Nurses, as well as the infirmary and South wing of the hospital, to receive WMO. Ausio engineer Honeycutt said that the six coeds "will be shown the finer points of broadcasting according to WMO standards" in the one week training program. told her story for the first tima in public. Miss Amurao began her tes timony by telling about her training as a nurse in the Philippine Islands. She went on to her arrival in Chicago May, 1966 to take a position at the South Chicago Com munity Hospital, and led up to the night of July 13 which began as a quiet evening for the nurses who shared the townhouse unit at 2319 E. 100th St. Shemtold how she went upstairs about 10:30 p.m. af ter locking the front door. Miss Merlita Gargullo, who shared the east bedchamber, was in bed "dressed in v a short nightgown light yel low." "I locked the bedroom door," Miss Amurao related, "The light on the ceiling was on. I got up andswered who was knocking. I unlocked it. I saw a man. . ." She picked up her story when she recovered from her he said, "but there is no sub stitute for speaking a language for the fun of it." Students who are consider ing this program should con tact Hagger in 818 Morrison or Wadsworth as soon as pos sible, for the Housing Office can hold these rooms open "for only a ' limited time," Wadsworth said. Hagger asked that all interested make ar rangements "by next Friday at the latest." Assistant Dean of Men Fred Schroeder said there has been no official sanction of the proj- ect. but intimated none was needed. "I really think it's a very fine idea," he said. "This office won't discrimi- nate in housing against those who want to live in the same suite for this reason any more ian we wouia discriminate against people who want to live together for any other reason." a x x x y v S X X . S ' ' I Ifs fence-hanging time again for young boys. Mainly because it's also baseball time. For Steve Adams9 view of the game9 see page five. -DTH Photo by Mike McGoiean seizure of weeping. "The man was holding a gun in his right hand, point ing toward me," she said. She also said she noticed marks on his face and that his hair was Vblondish, comb ed toward the back." "I stared at him about one or two minutes," Mis Amu rao related. "He asked me, 'Where are your compan ions?' He grabbed my fore arm." Prosecutor William J. Mart in asked if she saw the man in the courtoom. Miss Amurao then went over to Speck and identified him. "He is the same." she said. Miss Amurao told the jury that the prowler herded her and five other nurses in the house at the time Miss Gar gulio, Valentina P a s i o n (friends from the Philip pines) Patricia Matusek, Nina Schmale and Pamela Wilkening into the larger south bedroom. Miss Amurao quoted Speck as saying, "I want money. I'm foing to New Orleans." "Then Spek sat down in front of us," she said, "and Miss Widening volunteered, 'I'm going to five him mon ey.' " When the girls had resum ed their sitting in the big bedroom, Miss Amurao said, "we heard a female voice downstairs." It was Miss Gloria Davy. She had just returned from a date. She went ud to the south bedroom. Speck hid behind a door to catch her. "Then he stood up and got the bedsheet from Miss Ma tusek's bunk," she testfied. "Speck sliced the bedsheet with a knife." Miss Amurao said Speck vfraped the sheet strips around his neck and tied each of the wrisHs nurses' ankles and Miss Amurao related that at one time he told his captives, "don't be afraid." when they went back up- stairs, she went on, he tied up Miss Amurao and Miss Lrarguilo, She related that Speck cut Miss Wilkening's ankle bind ings with a knife. i if y' - lC,,7- i N'V y