Pox S70 ' 3 - 1 t I Jerkley Spies The girls at Jerkeley re sented being spied on just as much as the coeds at UNC. But for different reasons. See David Rothman's page 2 col umn. Mo rie Review Tonight is your last chance to see "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg" playing at the Ri alto in Durham. See Sharon Finch's review on page 2. The South's Largest College Newspaper P?I off mm Vol. 74,'Number 68 l)k-Top Philosophy Popular Sport If you're bored and looking for something to do you might try entertaining yourself by looking over the scribblings found on desk-tops in the classrooms of our university as Art Latham did the other day. He found the traditional obscenities and the ubi quitous "Carolina, UNC," various and sundry Greek letters and "dedicated to the unfortunate souls who died waiting for the bell in Monkey wrench apprecia tion 101 scratched on the ageless desktops. But as he went on he observed that the recent unrest at Berkeley and other places have focused the attention of desk-top scratching on political and so cial change. The desk-tops produced the following graphite gems: Beware the Rising Tide of Conformity. The Great Society: Ever had the feeling that somebody was putting you on? Johnson is a fat, ugly bear. LB J is a socialist. LB J is a warmonger. (Some days you just can't please anybody.) From the left side of the desks came: White man listen. No political compromise. Down with the Speaker Ban. Down with the Britt Commission. And from the right side: War, war and more war (scrawled in boldface caps across the entire face of one desk). The hopeful suggestion Nixon in '68. Then there were two real classics: Down with Chapel Hill nuns, to hell with liberals, pinkos, civil rights workers, Catholics, Reds, per verts and South Building, to which someone had added: and bigots. But neatly printed on one desk is the refutation of all the arguments that contemporary students are too serious. "Budweiser Breakfast of Champions. Santa Trades Beard For Bandages The Pi Kappa Phi house had a red-hot Santa Claus at their Christmas party Saturday night in the form of Junior Class vice president Bill Nucciarone. Nucciarone broke tradition and put aside Santa's pipe for a cigar. A few ashes dropped into Nucciarone's flowing white beard turning it flaming red. Santa's quick thinking brothers tossed the fiery beard to the floor (minus Nucciarone of course). Santa came out with a few minor burns and now his beard has been replaced with white bandages. Painful? Probably, but Nucciarone says he was feeling no pain. Carol Gallent Lights Burn, Bum, Burn and Bum Thev did it again. "Thev" is the Christmas is caught on fire. Yes sir, that's the fourth time so far that Chapel Hill's wonderful new decorations have threatened Franklin St. This time it was a group of lights in front of Sut tons' Drug Store. The fire began about 10:45 Sunday night but the trusty fire engine showed up and squirt ed a beautiful stream of water on the hot wires. The Chapel Hill Fire Department says it was the overheating of the lights that cause the material to catch fire. The fire was the worst of the four. Panty Raid Fizzles BY ANDY MYERS DTH News Editor Ahnnt 400 veiling men stu dents stood outside Win- - ston dorm Sunday night from 8:30 to iu p.m. iney just stood there. Three campus pouce broke up the gathering, but not before Winston residents had pulled their shades and turned off their lights. An occasional flicker of light- from the windows prompted some healthy ohoprine from the men out side: (W-I-N-S-T-O-N: SEX!) When a policeman snow ed up he was followed by two more. "Damn good cop! Damn good cop!" they chanted. A shade suddenly rose be fore the mob's eyes. "More! More!" they chanted, but that was all. They just chanted. Winston residents display ed mixed feelings yesterday. Here are some of their com ments: "How would the boys feel if we did it to them?" i f J-1 I !4 decorations and "again "I didn't think they were going to come over." "Are they going to do it again?" "We figured if they tried to get in we'd all get in trouble." "It was all in fun." "It was a nice warm night for it." "I tried to study, but it kept getting louder and loud er." "From the looks of Sun day night, it looks like they need some encouragement." "One (girl) almost jump ed out the window." "No one got any studying done." "A few girls were mad." "It caused a lot of excite ment." "I was disappointed in them." "I thought they were go ing to start up again." "We're not very pleased with the boys." "I don't even know what was going on!" Alas, there was no panty raid. CHAPEL Reject Klan' Advises X rrr. MERRY CHRISTMAS, DRIVE SAFELY This was the message of a sign near this car in Y Court. The car, in which a student recently Crash Kills One; Injures 5 By FRED THOMAS Special to the DTH A UNC student died and five other persons were hos pitalized after a two-car col lision Saturday night about 11:45 on N. jC. Highway 86, one mile north of Chapel Hill. A UNC freshman, Kathleen Browning Lafferty, 17, of Concord, has been charged with reckless driving and in voluntary manslaughter. James Richard Hammett, 20 - year - old junior Business Administration major of Con cord, N. C.r died at North Carolina Memorial Hospital of head injuries at 11:15 Sunday morning. He never regained consciousness. Brenda Woodard, 21, a stu dent at UNC at Greensboro, was reported in special care in "fair" condition late yes terday. She had been on the critical list since Saturday night, with a neck injury and a fractured arm. Treated at the hospital and taken to the student infirmary were Miss Lafferty; Richard Lynn Starnes, 20, Charlotte; Salem Robert Suber, 19, Char lotte; and his wife, Barbara Elaine Suber, 19, Charlotte. Suber, UNC sophomore, sus tained slight lacerations on the back of his head and was described by his doctor as "diffusely sore." Mrs. Suber who is not a student, received facial in juries and a fractured jaw. Starnes, UNC junior, suf fered burns on both hands and his left leg when he smothered a fire on Miss Woodard's clothing. Flames from the burning Ford had followed a trail of gasoline to the spot where he was lying. Miss Lafferty had superfi cial lacerations of the hands and a slight injury to her left ankle. All six persons were riding in the death vehicle. Occupants of the other car Jimmv Roberts and Charles Lawrence, of Route 2, Chapel Cyclist Hit By Car In Critical Condition A 19 - year - old Carolina sophomore who collided with a car while riding his motor cycle late Saturday night is listed in critical condition at North Carolina Memorial Hos pital. Stephen Ellis Hyde, of Skill man, N. J., suffered severe head injuries, a fractured left leg and chest injuries. Hyde, who has been unconscious since the wreck, is in the in tensive care unit of the hospit al. According to the Dean of Men's office Hyde was sitting still with his lights off in the right lane of 15-501 near Mann's Chapel Road when he was struck from the rear by a car driven by General Madison Pearson, 75, of Roosevelt Drive, Chapel Hill. Pearson was headed toward Chapel Hill when the accident occur ed at 11:30 p.m. The Highway Patrol, which investigated the accident, has made no charges. Hyde is a resident of Gra ham Dormitory and a pre -med major. HILL NORTH CAROLINA Hill, and Doreta Council, Ju lia Ann Rigsby and Dela Mc Millan, of Durham were treated at Memorial Hospital and released. Investigating highway pa trolman T. J. Hines said a 1957 Ford, driven by Roberts and traveling toward Chapel Hill, slowed to make a left turn onto rural paved road 1750 (intersection of Airport Rd. and Estes Dr.) A Volkswagen, which be longed to Hammet but was be ing driven by his date, Miss Laf ferty, slammed into the rear of the Ford, knocking it into a ditch on the right-hand side of the highway where it burst into flames. Hines said occupants of the Volkswagen told him they were traveling about 45 m.p.h. Chapel Hill policeman Tom my Snipes who witnessed the accident through his rear-view mirror, said he saw the Ford signalling to turn and realized the Volkswagen would not be able to stop. He called for help, and he and other Chapel Hill police (! PRELIMINARY MEETING Gorge Nicholson, chairman of the Carolina Forum, (left) introduces Rep. Charles L. Weltner, D-Ga., (right) to members of a welcoming com mittee at the Raleigh-Durham Airport yesterday after noon. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. Phi Sigma Kappa Kidnaps Housemothers For Charity By BOB HARRIS DTH Staff Writer Housemothers from all se ven sororities were "kidnap ped Monday afternoon as Tau Epsilon Phi's annual "Christ mas House" drive got under way. TEP's "Christmas House" is a drive to collect food and toys for needy families. Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity "kidnapped" the housemothers at 3:45 p.m., leaving the fol lowing note: "We have kid napped your housemother and are holding her for ransom. Show your housemother how much you appreciate her by being the first to ransom her with either a box of canned food or a box of toys. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 14. rode to his death, attracted large crowds until late into the evening. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. men assisted with traffic un til the fire was extinguished by the Chapel Hill Fire De partment and the injured per sons and their cars were re moved from the highway. Miss Lafferty will go before Chapel Hill Recorders Court for her preliminary hearing Jan. 8 and 9 a.m. She is charged with reckless driving and in voluntary manslaughter in a warrant signed by Hones. The men in the Volkswagen were all members of Chi Phi social fraternity. They were returning from a Chi Phi-Chi Psi party at Maltsby's Cabin, off Highway 86, about seven miles north of Chapel Hill. Hammett is the second UNC student to be killed in an au tomobile accident in the Chap el Hill area this year. Junior Roger Davis, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., died after a one-car crash on Highway 15 501 near Glen Lennox Shop ping Center in October. Funeral services for Ham mett will be held today at 3:30 p.m. at Epworth Methodist Church in Concord. The housemothers had pre viously agreed to the "kidnap ping." In car and on foot about 110 girls descended on the frater nity house, bringing food and toys and singing rival rush ing songs. Six boxes of canned food and one large box of toys were col lected. The housemothers were well treated. Each was given a cor sage and a tour of the house. By 5:15 p.m. the last of the housemothers had been ran somed. "Each sorority did a very good job," Charles Worley, Phi Sigma Kappa secretary said. "We sure would like to be in vited to their house." 1965 By JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer Georgia Congressman Char les L. Weltner last night called on the people of North Carolina and the South to cease their support of the Ku Klux Klan and "organizations that drive our people apart," in a speech before 1,700 students in Me morial Hall. Weltner, a liberal Democrat from Atlanta, Ga., is the mem- Congress M Cite Klan ay For Contempt Officials of the Ku Klux Klan who withhold Klan rec ords from congressional in vestigators may be cited for contempt of Congress, accord ing to Georgia Congressman Charles L. Weltner. Weltner, a member of the House Un - American Activi ties Committee, said the possi bility of citing uncooperative Klan officials for contempt was "under active considera tion" by Congress in a press conference here yesterday. Weltner spoke on Klan ac tivities in an address to the student body last night in Me morial Hall. The liberal U. S. Represen tative from Atlanta, Ga., said congressmen were also consid ering strengthening federal statutes against conspiracy to include Klan activities. Information concerning the possession of firearms by Klansmen has been turned ov- er to congressional commit- tees investigating firearms con trol, according to Weltner. Denouncing the Klan as "a terror organization" which was "structured along the lines of the Communist Party" Welt ner said HUAC would continue its investigation of Klan acti vities in the next session of Congress. "We will continue our in vestigation to include the ac tivities of the Klan in Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, Flori da and Louisiana," Weltner said. He said there were 117 Klan claverns in North Carolina. Weltner defended HUAC from critics who claim the committee is overstepping its authority in current investiga tions. Citing HUAC's 30 year his tory, he said, "The commit tee is not overstepping its bounds in its investigation of the Klan." Weltner said HUAC is "cer tainly not contemplating" an investigation of the civil rights movement in the near future. He also said "an agency of the federal government" had warned him on two occasions that Klan members might ha rass him during his speech last night, but he said he was "happy to be here." Weltner said he had receiv ed no harassment in the past for his role in the HUAC in vestigation of the Klan, but "that he had received a few threatening letters. JOHN GREENBACKER Elliot To Address YDC "The role of the reporter in the political arena" will be the topic of an address by Jerry Elliot, Gov. Dan Moore's Press Secretary, before the UNC Young Democratic Club to night at 5:30 in the private dining room of Chase Cafe teria. The former news director for WPTF radio in Raleigh, Elliott served as a reporter for WTVD television in Dur ham before assuming his pre sent position. Elliott's address is part of the "Politics Backstage" lec ture program sponsored by the YDC. Club members and interest ed students are invited to bring their trays to the pri vate dining room and hear the speech. Sick Of Sightseeing? Tired of sightseeing? Want to know what's really happen ing abroad? Try the Experi ment in International Living. The Experiment program Weltner ber of the House Un-American Activities Committee who call ed for the recent House investi gation of the Klan and its ac tivities. He participated in a panel discussion of the Klan which u's also composed of Major L. P. McClendon, an attorney fro.n Greensboro; Floyd Mc Klssick. Chairman of the Con gress of Racial Equality; and WRAL television newsman Pe ter B. Young. Only one Klansman attended the meeting and identified himself to the panel. A spokesman for the Klan contacted the Carolina Forum Chairm?;1. George Nicholson last week and reserved 60 seats for Klansmen expected to at tend. The Forum co-sponsored the discussion with the YMCA Hu man Relations Committee. The audience viewed a CBS documentary film on Klan history and terrorism entitled "The Ku Klux Klan: The In visible Empire" before the panel discussion. "The Klan is an un-American organization," Weltner told the audience at the film's conclusion. "It deprives citi zens of their rights by use of force and violence." He called for the passage of "remedial legislation" which would "teach the Klan to make its decisions openly with out accompanying acts of vio lencs." Citing the Klans 100-year-old history of violence, Welt Best Bargain Still Old Victory Village JEAN ROBERTS Special to the DTH Not only will UNC married student housing rents remain steady, but by this summer. 50 to 70 units in Odum Village will be furnished James Wads worth, UNC Housing Director, says. Wadsworth blames higher taxes and increased dormitory rents as the cause of the cur rent rent increases by many of the commercial develop ments in Chapel Hill. Com parable housing to that now available in the new Odum Village (which rents for $72 to $82), costs $85 to $150 per month elsewhere. The old pre fabs in Victory Village are still the best bargain with rents from $20 to $40. Even with its low rents, Vic tory Village grosses about $98, 500.00 per year reports James A. Branch, UNC business man ager. The cost of mainten ance are reverted a separate reserve fund. Odum Village rents are set according to the federal government's debt re payment schedule. The University Trustees have allotted all of the land in Victory Village for long range expansion of the hospital com plex. Bids will be let on January 10, 1966 for the first nine million dollar stage of the expansion. As soon as this building begins Victory Village will come down unit by unit. Branch believes that since there in no suitable place to calls for participants to work and live with other people abroad in order to see how they think and live. This year the Experiment has programs in Argentina, Mexico, Norway, Ghana, Tan zania, Nigeria, India, Finland, Poland, Japan, and the Vir gin Islands. Cost ranges from $475 to $1050. Scholarships are avail able. Application deadline is March 10 with a cut - off date of February 15 for those seeking scholarships. Anne Queen at 105 Y Build ing is faculty representative at UNC. Jeanie Driler at 219 Kenan is campus representa tive. Orne Receives Grant Dr. Jerrold Oren, UNC li barian and chairman of the American Standards Associa tions libraries and documen tation technical committee has been given a $34,150 three year grant by the National Science Foundation Founded February 2$, 1803. ner said, "The time has come to sever the long chain of ter rorism which was bequn in 1865." Young defended Klansmen as members of a "mocked, expointed. deprived white ghet to." He claimed the First Amend ment rights of the Klansmen had been deprived by the re cent HUAC investigation. He praised Klansmen as the "leaders" of the "white ghetto," who were investigat ed a "federal secret police apparatus of paid informers. "This investigating unit can turn against any group," Young said. "Who will it be the next time, Mr. Weltner," he asked. "Will it be the Black Muslims, whose mosque in Los Angeles was riddled by police bullets, or mayDe even the Congress of the United States. "There are now 204 regular Klan units and 70 women's auxiliaries active in 'variety vacationland,' " Young said. "Klansmen ask, 'How come there's so much action for nig gers and none for us," he said. He called on Weltner and the audience to answer a "mes sage of help coming out of the white ghetto." "Problems are not solved by figuring out tricky things to say," Weltner said. "I would be shocked to find that the best people of our country have come before our committee during the recent investigations. move the old wooden barracks and UK house they will prob ably be torn down and with money from their reserve . fund. . .. . . , Presently, ' the University provides about 250 units in Victory Village and 300 units in Odum Village for a mar ried student population of ap proximately 2200. Both Wads worth and Branch expressed hope that at least this many units would continued to be provided. Branch stated that the Uni versity hopes to include plans for additional permanent mar ried student housing in t h e capital improvements budget for the 1967 General Assem bly. While the state supplies no money for housing, it muit authorize plans for building housing. The federal govern ment will loan money for such self - liquidating projects. Branch added "That with with the present cost of build ing, housing comparable to Odum Village could not be built and rented at the same figure." The present community cen ter, which also houses the Day Care Center for children, is considered part of Odum Vil lage and therefore will not be replaced by hospital expan sion. The new community cen ter for married students is now in the planning stages and is expected to be placed near the present playground area. The purpose of the grant is to help in developing stand ards acceptable to all librar ies. The money will be used to tackle such problems as the classification of books, in dexing, layout of periodicals, abstracts, and bibliographic references. Law Librarianship The School of Library Scien ces of UNC will offer a course in librarianship in the first term of the 1966 summer ses sion, June 9 - July 16. The course is intended for those who are preparing for careers as law librarians and for others who may be now working in law libraries. The course will carry three semester hours' credit. Enrollment for the course will be limited, and applica tions to register for it must be submitted by May 1, 1966. Applications and further in formation may be obrained from Miss Jean Freeman, as sistant to the Dean, School of Library Science.