Mm
Corsages
Tickets for chrysanthemum
corsages for Saturday's home
coming game are on sale in
Y-Court today, $1.50. The sale
is sponsored by the senior
class.
Witt
Services
The Wesley Foundation ill
hold a memorial service for
the late theclDg'n -1 I
lich today at noon. The serv
ice. at the new tnpvl at n4
Pittsboro St., will last about
30 minutes.
The South's Largest College Newspaper
Vol. 74, No. 36
CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA TUESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1965
Founded February 23, 1893
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PEACH PIERCE
Joyner Hall
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EMILY CATHEY
Chi Psi
Dickson
Petition
Student Body President Paul
Dickson approved 21 more
names for the recall petition
yesterday, but added that no
more names will be accepted.
Rep. Sharon Rose, the origi
nator of the petition, said the
names had been secured before
LUC LJCLlliUU IlClll KJ-ll hohuvu
in.
The elections board said yes
terday that 18 invalid names
have been found on the peti
tion. The total number of "ques
tionable" names, the commit
tee chairman said, is at least
80.
' Alvln Tyndal, the committee
chairman, said most of the
questionable names are illegi
ble or were alphabetized incor
rectly by his staff, five of the
nreviouslv "questiona
ble" names were located yes
terday and found to be correct.
All the 21 names accepted
yesterday were correct, Tyn
dall said. No n?mes beginning
,with R, S and L have been
checked yet.
- Among the invalid names on
the petition, Tyndall said were
such signatures as "Dick
Tracy."
Dickson said an election will
be held Nov. 9, if the petition
Senate Committee Issues
Booklet On Viet Protests
By ANDY MYERS
DTH Staff Writer
The Senate Committee on
the Judiciary has released a
booklet titled "The Anti-Viet
Nam Agitation And The
Teach-in Movement."
Printed less than a week
after the national anti - Viet
Nam demonstrations Oct. 15
16), the booklet seeks to show
the extent of Communist in
iltration into the anti-Viet
Nam movement in this coun
try. The 256 - page staff study
was approved by the Senate
cn Oct. 13 in a resolution.
Some of the conclusions of
the study include the follow
ing: "The great majority" of
demonstrators acted for rea
sons ranging from "strategic
considerations to pacifism."
The Communist Party of
America has given "all - out
support to anti - Viet Nam
demonstrations and teach-ins,
have directed its members to
participate in them, and have
sought to influence them in
the interests of Communist ex
pansion." Many non - Communist
organizations have neglected
to demarcate "their position
on Viet Nam or to repudiate
MARY KING
Maverick House
SHARON DERRICK
Spencer Hall
Accepts
Will Not
if valid.
The General Elections Law
requires that nominations of
candidates for the recall elec
tion must be submitted no lat
er than midnight tomorrow.
"Nominations may be made
either by the established polit
ical parties or by petition,"
Dickson said.
Dickson made the following
statement to the DTH yester
day concerning the recall pe
tition: I have permitted 21 more
signatures to be added to the
original recall petition. These
additional names were submit
ted to, me by Rep. Sharon Rose
who assured me that these
names had been secured at the
time of the submission of the
original names. She also as
sured me that, to her knowl
edge, no further names were
in the possession of anyone
other than the Elections Board.
The Chairman of the Elec
tions Board has ruled that fur
ther names would not be ac
cepted. Rep. Rose has agreed
to this ruling.
The Elections Board is still
in the process of validating the
petition So far, the petition has
been neither validated or in
Communist support or to es
tablish . . . controls designed
to prevent Communist infiltra
tion and exploitation of their
movement."
Many "known Commu
nists or (people) with long
records of association with
Communist fronts have been
able to play a prominent role
in" these movements.
"The control of the anti
Viet Nam movement has
clearly passed from the hands
of the moderate elements . . .
into the hands of Communists
and extremists elements who
are openly sympathetic to the
Viet Cong and openly hostile
to the United States."
Teach-ins "have had ab
solutely nothing in common
with procedures of fair de
bate or the process of educa
tion . . . they were a combi
nation of an indoctrination ses
sion, a political protest dem
onstration, an endurance con
test, and a variety show."
The national teach-in of
last May 15 "received com
plete support from the Com
munist and pro - Communist
publications in the United
States like the Worker, the
People's World, the National
Guardian, and the Militant."
tf' i tx. ... ? . i i
JUDY DUDLEY
Parker Hall
Finalists Selected.
PATTI FIELDS
Maverick House
21 More Names;
Be Enlarged
validated, i
If the petition Is validated, it
is my intention to hold the re
call election on November 9,
1965, the date of the regular
fall elections.
The Chairman of the Elec
tions Board has informed me
that The General Elections
Sale Of Tear Gas
Weapons
WASHINGTON (AP) A
former North Carolina Ku
Klux Klan official acknowl-
edged today he once had been
arrested for selling tear gas
weapons.
But Richard Joseph Constan-
tineau, a gundealer in Wil-
mington, N. C, told the House
Committee on Un - American
Activities at the time he didn't
think he was acting illegally.
The committee is probing
Klan affairs and its investiga
tors earlier today pictured
North Carolina Grand Dragon
James R. Jones as a Kalns
man once disciplined for his
radical conduct.
Constantineau said he was
elected a state Klan kokann in
1964 but he actually appeared
to have had little experience in
the Klan, having joined in
April or May of 1964 and re
signing in August of the same
year.
Constantineau explained his
klavern, designated as the
New Hanover County Improve
ment Association, had met for
a while in a union hall, but
then switched to a meeting
room in Wilmington Motel.
The reason for the change,
said Donald Appell, chief inves
tigator for the committee, was.
the trade union learned the im
provement association was ac
tually a Klan klavern and re
fused further use of the hall.
Appell brought out that after
the Klan dealer was arrested,
another Klansman informed on
tear gas sales at an obvious
non-Klan business.
But Constantineau denied
that he asked for the Klan to
act against the other dealer.
Rep. Charles L. Weltner. D-
Ga., said it appeared to him
that Constantineau's gun sales
went uy sharply after he join
ed the Klan and Constantineau
i acknowledged his association
with the Klan might have been
the reason for the increase in
gun sales
But Constantineau said there
was also "a seasonal factor"
involved.
Jones was also depicted as
once being expelled from the
Klan for not paying his dues
This was brought out as the
SHARON FINCH
Morrison College
PEG McQUEEN
Sigma Chi
Law requires that nominations
of candidates for the recall
elections must be submitted no !
later than midnight, between
Wednesday and Thursday of
this week. Nominations may be
made either by the established
political parties
tion.
or by peti-
Admitted
committee put a series of ques-
tions to Arthur C. Leonard of
Spencer, N. C, who the com-
mittee said preceded Jones as
North Carolina grand dragon,
Leonard, as other Klan offi-
cials have done when question-
ed by the committee, refused
to answer questions. He cited
constitutional protections and
possible self-incrimination,
The only statement Leonard
made was to give his name.
Donald T. Appell. the com
mittee's chief investigator, said
another staff investigator had
questioned Leonard before to
day, and that Leonard had
said Jones had worked for him
and that he had preceded Jones
in the grand dragon post.
Appell said Jones and Im
perial Wizard Robert Shelton
met two weeks ago, when at
that time both welcomed the
committee's investigation of
the Klan. He said they hoped
it would "bring to light a lot of
false thinking about the Klan."
Symposium
Drive Starts
The Carolina Symposium is
launching this week its solici
tations drive. Floor representa
tives in each dorm wiU visit
each room and speak for ap
proximately five minutes on
the Symposium. It is hoped
that $1 will be collected from
each student.
The budget last year was
$10,000, but it is being raised
to $14,000 in order to increase
the pay for the men who will
be the featured speakers for
the Symposium. Men are being
brought to the campus from as
far away as England.
Dean Allen Richardson, the
minister of York Cathedral,
will speak on "Myth in the
! Supernatural" as part of the
i total theme, "Man, Mind and
Myth."
House meetings were held in
I eacn dorm on Monday evening
to explain the financial setup
of the Symposium. The solicit
ing began on Monday.
TONI GREENWOOD
Ehringhaus
LOIS SHEPHERD
Alpha Delta Pi
Daily Tar Heel Photos By
Ernest Robl.
Many Hear Policy Pleas
Nearly 200 students and fac
ulty members heard pleas for
a re-evaluation of U. S. for-
P01": in. th ' F"
(Sunday night ur Carroll Hall.
. P.anel 01 S.1X aisunguisnea
Americans spoKe on me issue
f, tft grouuP,Dy mea"su 01 a
wiepuwie wkuP, mm mc u-
" ci
Uy lcv. vvuuaui uiuanc vui-
Scott Speaks
Here Sunday
Lt. Gov. Robert Scott will
be the main speaker Sunday
at dedication ceremonies for
Scott Residence College, Av
ery, Parker and Teague Res
idence Halls.
Scott College was named in
honor of the late Kerr Scott,
past governor and U. S. Sena
tor, Lt. Gov. Scott's father.
Speaking at 3 p.m., Scott
will discuss "North Carolina
and Higher Education. Trus
tees, legislators, university ad
ministrators, faculty and stu
dents have been invited.
Festivities will be conduct
ed outside the mam Avery,
Parker, Teague area. A mo
torcade from the Morehead
Planetarium lot at 2:30 p.m.
precedes the ceremony.
A large picture of Ken-
Scott will be unveiled and
placed in the social room of
league. Scott, the third resi
dence college officially open
ed here, is the first one to be
dedicated.
Robert C. Hunter, governor
of the college which includes
650 students, said the system
"is working well and has re
sulted in an improved spirit
among students.
Hunter is a political science
major from Marion. Other ot
t'icers of Scott College are
Tom Mimms. secretary; Ed
Blair, sneaker of the Senate;
Ed Little, treasurer; Mike
League. Lt. Gov.; and Tom
Jones, senator.
3ob Farns is president ot
Parkpr Chuck Richards IS
president of league ana
Charles Morgan is president
of Avery.
Cadets Honored
Seven Air Force ROTC ca
dets have been named Distin
guished Military Cadets by the
Professor of Aerospace Stud
ies, Lt. Col. Kenneth W. Slaker,
Jr.
Distinguished Cadets are eli
gible to apply for a regular
commission upon graduation.
The cadets are: Robert R.
Bandy; Charles W. Finch; El
lis J. Harrington; Thomas C.
Harville, Jr.; Charles R. Pay
et; Gyde G. Thompson; and
Joe R. Warfel.
Attorney General Studying
Klansman In Light Of Ban
By BARRY JACOBS
DTH Managing Editor
North Carolina Attorney Gen
eral Wade Bruton has been
asked for a ruling on the ap
plicability of the speaker ban
law to a Ku Klux Klansman
who pleaded the Fifth Amend
ment. He is now studying the ques
tion. Consolidated University Pres
ident William C. Friday made
the request yesterday in Ra
leigh. The question concerns a
scheduled speech by North
Carolina Grand Dragon James
Robert Jones on the North
Carolina State University cam
pus Nov. 22.
Jones repeatedly pleaded the
Fifth Amendment when he ap
peared before the House Com
mitte on Un - American Ac
tivities last week.
The leader of the North Car
olina Klan refused to give the
committee any information ot
than his name. In addition
to the Fifth, Jones also cited
the First, Fourth, and 14th
Amendments as grounds for
his refusal to answer.
President Friday said that
the section of the speaker ban
law which is relevant to Jones'
case is Section 1-C.
This section forbids the use
of a state school campus to
anyone who pleads the Fifth
Amendment concerning Com
munist or subversive connec-
fin, Yale University Chaplin.
The program was sponsored
by Americans for the Reap
praisal of Far Eastern policy
in celebration of the 20th 'an
niversary of the United Na
tions. Coffin told the group man
kind would only progress in
the future through the concen
tration and unilication of hu
man knowledge and energies.
"United Nations Day is a
grand time to reappraise the
uN," Coffin said. "We need
to launch an assault on ab
solute national sovereignty."
He called for the establish
ment of a standing UN army
which would make the "forces
of unity prevail" over the na
tions of the world.
Coffin called on Americans
to show more flexabiLty in its
dealings with Red China and
other nations.
He praised student activists
on college campuses who
bring crucial foreign policy
and other issues into the pub
lic eye.
Dr. John Fairbank, noted
foreign policy expert and a
member of the six-man panel,
supported Red Chinese admis-
Philosophy
Society Holds
First Meeting
The Carolina Philosophical
Society, a round-table discus
sion group, is now being form
ed. According to Bill Woodall,
organizer of the society, 'The
Carolina Philosophical Society
hopes to fill the void that cas
ual conversation in the various
meeting places on campus
leaves to the thinking student."
Woodall pointed out that
many other universities have
similar organizations. "Event
ually we could debate other un
iversities on philosophical top
ics," he said.
The society will hold inter
views for interested students
tomorrow and Thursday from
3-5 p.m. in Roland Parker I in
GM. The society is open, to all
undergraduate students, but
the membership will be limit
ed. Woodall emphasized that the
meetings will be all discussion,
with no lectures. The club will
meet every two weeks in Cald
well Hall.
The group, said Woodall,
"will seek to offer interested
students of any major field in
telligent discussion in the phi
losophical sphere, in much the
same manner as the Carolina
Political Union does in the po
litical sphere."
The society has the support
of the Department of Philoso
phy and will have a faculty ad
viser from that department.
tions or activities before a duly
constituted legislative commit
tee. Bruton said yesterday he
would have to do some re
search on the question. He said
he didn't know when he would
make the ruling.
Friday said that a trans
script of Jones' testimonj has
been sent for. n nrdpr to de
termine what types of questions
the Klansman refused to an
swer. Should Bruton rule that Jones
is barred by the controversial
law, his decision could have
Trustees
To Make
RALEIGH (AP) Trustees
of the University, seeking re
lief from the speaker ban hw
enacted by the General Assem
bly declined to impose one of
their own Monday.
The trustees, meeting in the
old House chamber of the cap
itol, tabled without debate a
policy resolution to prohibit Ku
Klux Klansmen fro.n speaking
on cny of the university's cam-
sion into the United Nations.
"Fighting alone is not go
ing to settle the contlict in
Viet Nam and the rest of
Asia," he said: "We must "at
tempt to draw Peking into the
rest of the world."
Fairbank emphasized the
difference between Chinese
and Western culture, and the
long and separate histories
which produced them.
Using the conflict in Viet
Nam as an example of the
problems confronting U. S.
policy in Asia, Fairbank said,
"We're in a foreign nation far
from home. The Chinese
aren't.
"We can't withdraw mili
tarily from Southeast Asia,"
he said, "but we can attempt
to focus the problem on a lar
ger plane."
He called for negotiations
on Asian problems on an in
ternational level.
Editor Norman Cousins, So
cialist Norman Thomas and
author Michael Harrington
condemned U. S. actions in
Vit Nam.
Allard Lowenstein, former
N. C. State prfoessor, said the
.United States was "ignoring
the existence of the real Chi
na, Red China" by keeping
that nation from joining the
U. N.
Former Democratic New
York City mayorial candidate
William Ryan called for a re
evaluation of U. S. foreign
policy on all fronts.
Negro Schoollwuse Torn
By Explosion; None Hurt
KENLY (AP) A Negro
school in rural Johnston Coun
ty was shaken by an explosion
today. The blast, before school
opened, ripped open a wall in
the rear of the building and
demolished one classroom.
No injuries were reported.
Principal B. L. Williams of
the Bagley School of Rt. 2,
Kenly said the damage was
discovered by the janitor.
Williams had no damage es
timate and did not know the
type of explosive used. He said
State Bureau of Investigation
agents had been called to as
sist the Johnston County sher
iffs department in the inves
tigation. About 250 Negro pupils at
tend the school.
"We haven't had any trouble
down here that would lead us
to expect this sort of thing,"
Williams said.
The blast apparently occur
red sometime between mid
night and 4 a.m., but on one
in the area reported hearing
the explosion.
The Ku Klux Klan has been
active in the county in recent
months and was pointed out by
wide significance. Other mem
bers of the hooded order who
plead the Fifth, including Im
perial Wizard Robert Shelton,
might also be banned.
However, Friday pointed out
that his question was concern
ed only with the specific case
of Jones' scheduled speech in
Raleigh.
Among the questions which
Jones refused to answer were
ones concerning Klan finances,
the use of cover names for
Klan charters, and one about
the Klan's refusal to expel
members known to have com
mitted violence.
Refuse
Ban
puses.
Proposed by trustee Ernest
E. Parker Jr , of Southport,
the prohibition would have ap
plied to members of tne kljn,
members of organizations af
filiated with the klan or per
sons taking the Fifth Amend
ment in answering questions
regarding klin activities.
Irustae Luther Hamilton of
Morehetd City stepped in
quickly with a tabling motion,
harking back to the long con
troversy over the 1963 speaker
ban law.
The trustees are on record
as opposing the 133 statute
which denies a forum to Com
munists or persons pleading
the Fifth Amendment in an
swering questions regarding
subversive activities.
"Inasmuch cs a Kindred mat
ter has been discussed at great
length and with great volume,
I do not see tn;t any useful
purpose can be served by this
resolution," said Hamilton,
former member of the State
Senate. "I move that it do lie
upon tb' "
Hamilton's motion carried
overshelmingly. Few "noes"
were heard among the 10C
members of the board.
Parker's resolution would
have made the chancellors of
the four university branches
responsible for enforcing the
klan ban.
Atty. Gen. Wade Bruton is
preparing an opinion on wheth
er the 1S63 ban applies to the
head of the Nortn Carolina
KKK, Grand Dragon Robert
Jones of Granite Quarry.
Third Periodj Quiet
But Look Out Later
The third period is "quiet
time" for North Carolina's
football team and its oppon
ents. The Tar Heels have
scored only seven points during
that period, their opponents
only three.
By contrast a total of 75
points have gone on the score
board during the fourth quart
er. the U. S. attorney general's of
fice as a center of Klan activi
ty in the state.
The school is located on
Highway 301 about three miles
from Micro, 35 miles southeast
of Raleigh.
Seminar Set
On Computers
The last of two seminars on
the Triangle Universities Com
putation Center will be held
by the Department of Informa
tion Science and the Computa
tion Center today at 2 p.m. in
Room 1, Swain Hall.
The discussion topic for the
seminar is "The Status and
Plans of the UNC-Chapel Hill
Computation Center." Detailed
plans for the new computing
facilities, service and change
over problems for the Univer
sity will be presented.
All faculty members and
persons interested in using the
computer are invited.