L.-..W Llcrary Dor. 870 Christmas Since Thursday morning's paper will be the last DTH be fore the holidays, there will be no coverage of Thursday night's game with Florida Stat. Helping Hand The Carolina Quarterly gets a helping hand from Mike Jennings. See his page 2 col uno for details. ) The South's Largest College Newspaper i - 74, Number 69 r ...................... STOLE Lenoir Hall Food 'Bugged' Everything comes in cans nowadays: shaving lo tion, hair spray, laughter on TV shows and now beetles! The fears of a generation of Lenoir Hall custo mers came to life this week when a cockroach-sized bug popped up in John Guard's spinach. The Popular Branch senior, who has worked in bean processing plants is sure the insect was in the can to begin with. "It was the type bug you normally see in the fields," Guard said. "I don't think it was added at Lenoir." The Lenoir Hall manager apologized and told him to get another plate. "He was very nice about it and I was too. What Color Is God? "What color is God?" the Negro student asked. "White," the Klansman replied. He was B. H. Ingle, a lay Baptist preacher from Raleigh. "Are you sure?" "Yes," the Klansman said as the two confronted each other after Congressman Charles Weltner's ap pearance here Monday. "Why?" "Because your race has sinned." "Can we be cleansed of sin?" Phil Clay, the Ne gro, asked? "Yes . . . and when you are, you will be white." "He isn't a typical Klansman," Clay said after wards. "He spoke to me." Students Discuss Campus Sex A group of psychatrists said yesterday, "Colleges should not worry about student 'sexual activity- prac ticed with appropriate attention to the sensitivities of other people." Here are a few student reactions: Ann Livingston, senior, Raiford "I agree with the psychiatrists. I don't approve, however, of public displays of affection." Richard Creel, grad student, Salisbury "It's a private affair and no concern of other people." Wolfgang Witz, senior, Montgomery, Ala. "It's an individual's responsibility to take into considera tion all his acts be they sexual or otherwise." KODert Adams, sophomore, Arlington, Va. "I agree with the psychiatrists." Carol Gallant, senior, Charlotte "It's impossi ble for a university to set the moral standards for 12,000 students." Bob Harris Student To Be The trial for UNC student William R. Billiard III, 21, is scheduled before the Orange County Superior Court some time this week. The Wagram youth was charged with possession of 3,000 peyote "buttons" and a few ounces of marijuana when Chapel Hill police raided his apartment at 127 W. Rose mary St. earlier this month. Police Chief William D. Blake said initial bond was set at $5,000. Blake said the boy's father signed the bond. Bullard faces a maximum penalty of $1,000 fine and a five-year prison sentence if convicted. Ugly Man Contest The Ugly Man Contest ends Saturday at 1 p.m., so any fraternities and dorms wish ing to submit "sealed bids" to support their candidates have to get them in by Fri day, midnight. Contest sponsors said en trance fees must be paid by Friday, also. Sealed bids may be brought to Merv Sessoms, 1206 Morrison. Yesterday's totals: Honey Bun Hodges, first with 1,480 votes; Lambda Chi Lamb Chop, second with 1,239 votes: Joyner Coed, third with 885 votes; Delta upsilon, fourth with 711 votes; Morrison, fifth with 655 votes; Stacy, sixth with 628 votes; Manly, seventh with 559 votes; Phi Sigma Kap pa, eighth with 212 votes; Parker - Teague - Avery, ninth with 186 votes. I I? Professors Speak Five UNC Romance Lan guages professors will spend their holiday vacation taking part in professional organiza tion conventions in Chicago. Four will present papers at the Modern Language Asso ciation Convention Dec. 27-29. Dr. Jacques Hardre, chairman of the Department of Romance Languages, will give a pa per on "Albert Camus on Christian Metaphysics and Neoplatonism" in the Ro mance Section of the conven tion. Dr. Joseph R. Jones will present a paper on "Gueva ra's Lost Chronicle" and Dr. John E. Keller will discuss "Folkloristic and Popular El ements in the 'Cantigas' of Al fonso the Wise." The Spanish Literature of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Section will feature a paper by Dr. Nicholson B. Adams. His topic is "Greet ings From the Real Academia de Cordoba." In addition, Dr. Sterling A. Stoudemire will attend a meet ing of the American Name Society in Chicago Dec. 30. He will discuss "Guadalupe: The Transfer of a Hispano Arabic Name." Flying Club Carl S. Travis, a senior in accounting, succeeded Rev. P. D. Midgett a president of the Chapel Hill Flying Club Monday night. Most of the club members are student pilots working to ward their private pilot's li Clim 5 BY JOHN GLEN Special To The DTH :: The climber whipped out his :: hammer and drove a piton as : a safety measure. He swiftly 6 attached his rope to the piton :: and began to climb the sheer $: face. : Suddenly the ledge beneath .::.: him disintegrated. The climb er pushed away from the cliff and dangled from his rope. : He reached for a new : hanghold and took a deep :: breath as his feet found solid :: rock beneath him. : This may not be an every day happening for climbers, :: but according to members of :: the Carabiner Club of Caro S lina, it's something to expect :: every day when you go climb :: ing. $j The 35 - member group al : so has a faction at UNC-G :: of 20 girls. The club was formed in 1961 :: by Forrest Green and David :: Dantzler. Their first outing : consisted of rappelling down : the side of Mangum Dorm. $: The club now meets on Tues 8 days at 7:30 p.m., room 205 :: Mitchell Hall to plan the fol :: lowing weekend's outing. 8 Hugh Owens, president of :: the club, explained why peo $: pie climb. "Its not just be :: cause its there that we climb. S Most of the climbers are afraid of heights. We climb to : overcome our own fears and :: to develop the courage to face :: lifes hardships." Safety and teamwork are the :: main points stressed by clim i bers. "Each climber is expect- ed to do his part to protect :: the lives of others. If this fails then someone will get hurt," Owens said. :: A trip starts at 6 a.m. on : Sunday from South building. The cumbers stop by Greens- Need A Ride Home? Better Take 'AT Bus The transportation situation out of Chapel Hill for the Hol idays is jammed as usual this year with the only relief in sight coming from the bus station. "We understand the situa tion completely," said termi nal manager Hubert Pearce yesterday afternoon. "Every thing is completely full on most scheduled busses and were are adding several more to handle the demand." Seaboard Railway out of Durham and Raleigh has had most of their trains booked solid for several weeks. Re quests have dated back to the first week in September and Tried cense. Other officers elected were Grover Wrenn, vice presi dent; Joanne Johnson, secre tary and Chuck Rogers, Treas urer. Students interested in mem bership should contact one of the club members. Meetings are held every second Mon day in Graham Memorial. Christmas Lights Chapel Hill's Christmas lights will remain up until after the holidays when they will be returned to the fac tory for check-up Merchant's Association's Executive Direc tor Joe Augustine said today. He said the lights were sep arately fused so there would be no danger of a black-out in Chapel Hill. The lights have caught fire four times. Augustine said he thought the fires resulted from elec tricity making contact with the decorative material. Radio Speech WUNC-FM will broadcast a taped recording tonight of a speech made here Monday by Dr. Robert J. Anderson, assistant surgeon general and chief of the Bureau of State Services. The half-hour pro gram will begin at 7:28 p.m. Anderson discussed the types of problems to be tac kled at the National Center for Environmental Health Sci ences now under construction in the Research Triangle Park. CHAPEL HILL NORTH CAROLINA hers Seek Danger i - -. - ' - - I. r A MEMBER of the Carabiner boro to pick up the girls and usually drive to Pilot moun- tain or to Hanging Rock State Park. The climb does not begin when they reach their destin- ation. Instead lecutres in rope handling and the proper tech niques of securing hand and footholds are given. 'No climber goes on the cliffs until he can secure his own rope and has taken se- veral practice falls to get used to havmg his life dnagling from a rope," Owens said. Climbers don't hurry to get to the top. They take great of daylight we have are fac pains at making sure the next tors in determining the suc foothold will support their cess and amount of enjoyment weight. - the club will have in a climb." "We can't make mistakes in this business," Owens said. His job is to find the safest route to the top. If he makes a mistake it will be bis last one. Never more than one man climbs at a time, so that no more reservations are be ing accepted on several trains. ' Particularly crowded are those going to Florida. The return situation is the same. Holiday flights out of Ra leigh - Durham Airport to such places at Atlanta, Charlotte, and Washington have been fill ed up for months but cancel lations may come at any time. An agent at Continental Tra vel Agency said that students should not be discouraged if they cannot get a seat on a flight leaving Friday or Sat urday because there are often last minute cancellations. Flights still open are: for Friday Flight 323, leaving at 11 p.m., and Flight 553, leaving at 8:10 a.m.; and Flight 645 to Atlanta, leaving at 9 p.m. On Saturday there are still seats on Flight 559 to Char lotte, and Eastern flight 501 to Charlotte leaving at 9:02 a.m. All Eastern Airline flights to Chicago and surrounding areas are closed. Students needing rides to and from the airport can con tact the Tar Heel Cab com pany for limousine service that leaves from the Carolina Inn. The price is $3. The Carolina Cab company has a special group rate of $5.50 for five persons. Extra busses to accomodate the holiday rush have been scheduled to insure that ev erybody has a seat. The following will go to New York, by way of Richmond and Washington. Friday at 7:45 a.m., 3:35 p.m., 5:35 p.m., and at 9:30 p.m. More will also leave on Saturday and will be scheduled as the need arises. These special busses are by reservation only to insure that everyone will also have a seat on the return trek. Prices are the same as regular fares. Nancy Raley onlv 9 ( shopping V DAYS J 7 LEFT WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, i Club of Carolina shows how. if a member falls the lead man will arrest him with the rope. One climb usually takes sev- eral hours. The leader has to determine how difficult t h e climb is and how long the climb will take. The worst thing that can happen to a team is to get caught in a rain storm or to have darkness set in while climbing. Either condition makes climbing extremely dangerous. The condition of the rocks, the weather and the amount But for members, climDing is not onlv a ereat sport. It is a good physical condition- :: er. And the energy spent on j:-: a climb is shown by the way : they wolf down food after a g day on the rocks. : . p n n S ' l .es?. - CS' iim i in najr'TiwSIHii h ith n i nil Girls, Telephone Spell Poverty For Students By DAVID ROTHMAN DTH Staff Writer The telephone ads promis ed: "You can call anywhere, anytime you feel the need or wish," but Rick Dennehy is not so sure. The Alexandria, Va., fresh man may have to sell his mo torcycle to pay the $95.05 phone bill he accumulated from Sept. 20 to Nov. 14. That's nearly enough for a semester's rent in Morrison Residence Hall, where Den nehy had the expensive little black box installed in his room. And he still hasn't been billed for long distance con versations after Nov. 14. "I sorta got carried away," he said during a telephqne in terview. "I have a girl at Wake Forest, a girl in Raleigh, a girl a Madison College and one back home, and when I am alone, I like to hear a female voice." Dennehy reports he's not the only Morrison resident to suc cumb to temptation. "You can spot people like me at the dorm snack bar," he said. "The day the phone bills arrive, you see people who normally buy milkshakes sharing their woes with each other over five - cent cokes. "My roommate had a bill of $70 one month, though I think I'm now ahead of him. 1965 Ca: puis tails In Com BY JOHN GREENBACKER DTH Staff Writer A bill to establish a Cam pus Radio Board of Directors, which was defeated by Stu dent Legislature fire' weeks ago and reintroduced last week by its sponsors, was de clared held indefintely in the Rules Committee of SL yes terday. Rules Committee Chairman Bill Long (SP) made the an Libertarian Economist Will Speak Tonight In Gerrard Dr. Ludwig Von Mises, world famous libertarian eco nomist, will speak on "The Problem of Private Property" tonight at 8 in Gerrard HalL Von Mises, who advocates a laissez faire capitalistic eco nomy, is professor of econo mics at the Graduate School of Business Administration of New York University. The 84 - year - old econo mist founded the Austrian In stitute of Business Cycle Re search in 1926. He left the country in 1934. From 1934 to 1940 he occup ied the chair of International Economic Relations at the Graduate Institute of Inter national Studies at Geneva, Switzerland. In 1940 he came to the United States. Von Mises' most famous works include "Human Ac tion," "Planning for Free dom," "Omnipotent Govern- Many other students here have bills of $20 or more." Dennehy claimed he had spent $51 on one girl alone, "And that's not counting the $35 person - to - person call. Dennehy and the girls talk about "what's not mentioned in our letters." The longest of his 36 long distance conversations was a 75 - minute chat with the Mad ison College coed. His farth est was to New York. Dennehy's interest in the exact cost of phone bills is perhaps due to his being a mathematics major with an with an estimated 3.4 aver age. He's considering forming 'Telephone Users Anonymous' for students with similar pro blems. "It would work like this," he said. "Whenever you felt like calling somebody out of town, you'd telephone a mem ber of the group at UNC. Then you wouldn't have to pay the long distance charge. "I think it's important," Dennehy said, "to learn to use the telephone properly. In fact, sometimes I believe I've had too much practice." He ended the nighttime in terview by saying: "I'm glad you called when you did. The phones at Madison College close at 11 p.m." .Radio nouncement after 15 minutes of closed deliberation by the three committee members pre sent for the meeting. The committee reached its decision after hearing testi mony by Campus Radio Com mittee Chairman John Stup ak and Rep. Hugh Blackwell (SP). Blackwell, former chairman of the SL Finance Commtitee, has led the fight against Stu- LUDT41G TON ment," "Bureaucracy," and 'The Anti - Capitalistic Men tality." Students from Duke, the Un iversity of Virginia and N. C. State are expected to attend the address, which is sponsor ed by the Carolina Conserva tive Club. Von Mises will come to Cha pel Hill after addressing the student body of Davidson Col lege. "Dr. Von Mises' lecture should prove interesting to students in all academic per suits" Conservative Club President Wilson Clark said yesterday. "Professor Mises has over 60 years of experience in the humanities and social scienc es," he said. John Greenbacker Baptist Says Klan's Hate Is Religious By DAVID ROTHMAN DTH Staff Writer North Carolina students got a dose of Klan teachings com bined with old - time religion when B. H. Ingle, a lay Bap tist preacher from Raleigh, showed up at Congressman Charles Weltner's Monday night talk. Ingle, an elderly man about 5 feet 6 inches tall, explained to about 40 UNC students clus tered around him why mem bers of the Klan commit vio lence despite their interest in religion. "Your pastor tells you what to do," he said, "but he can't control you. Only the blood of Christ can do this which is why the Klan sometimes has troubles with members." Ingle explained that his group burns crosses because they are "evil. The Romans and the Jews crucified Christ upon a cross; that's the rea son the Klan has its present attitude toward them." Phil Clay, a Negro UNC so phomore from Wilmington, asked Ingle if he could come to a Klan rally. "No you can't." the preach er replied. "But you're wel come to form a Klan chapter of your own." The crowd laughed. Ingle suggested that God has punished the Negroes "by making their skins black. "But when they enter the Kingdom, they'll be white." Clay said the Klan "twists the Bible to suit its own twist ed ideology." Explaining why the Klan is secret, Ingle said: "Well, when you have a sweetheart or get married you'll find cut soon enoush what I mean." More laughs from the crowd. "The believer in quality ed ucation," he said, "will get farther and farther from the glories of God. I'm convinc ed all these people really know is a little bit of psychology." Ingle insisted the Devil "causes every pain. I know this for sure. The image of God is glory." -,'"" Founded February 23, tS93. Bill ittee pak and campus radio since last spring. Under original plans a cam pus carrier current radio sta tion would broadcast low -power, non - commercial AM FM radio programming of stu dent interest to campus living units. It would cost an initial out lay of over $24,000 and nearly $11,000 annually to operate. Stupak told the committee he was withdrawing the cam pus radio financial bill pending further investigation of finances, which he said could only effectively be con ducted by the Campus Radio Board. Blackwell opposed forming the Radio Board, because he claimed passage of the Radio Board Bill might "oblige" le gislature to vote money to campus radio in the future. "We can't pass this bill and disregard the financial issues which may come up in the fu ture," Blackwell said. He quoted figures which he said indicated Student Gov ment suplus funds of nearly $65,000 which took nearly 20 years to accumulate. Blackwell urged that the Campus Radio Committee of Student Government conduct the investigations which Stu pak claims a campus radio board could only do. "Let's dispose of the cam pus radio issue once and for all," Blackwell said. Stupak said only a radio board could act officially as a financial investigator for cam pus radio, In the eyes of the UNC Department of Radio, Television and Motion P i c tures. Stupak said no investiga tions could be conducted with out the assistance of the ra dio department. He urged passage of the bill in light of the results of last October's student referen dum, which supported cam pus radio by a vote of nearly three to one. Long said the committee postponed action on the bill because further investigation was necessary. Long also said reintroduction of the same bill five weeks after its defeat by the legis lature made consideration "di latory." Low Q.P. Average Doesn't Mean KP UNC students whose QP av erage is below 2.00 and who are worried about being draft ed can relax. The State Headquarters for the North Carolina Selective Service in Raleigh says that low quality point averages and class standings are no longer used as classification require ments. The new requirement states that North Carolina students have to carry a full academic load of 15 hours or in some cases 12 hours, depending on the college rules. There are exceptions to this rule however. Local boards can draft students who have been in college for five years or more and have not receiv ed their undergraduate de gree. The State Board also said that many students failed to fill out 109 Forms (applica tion for II-S status). The Selective Service con siders II-S students as those "whose activities and studies found to be necessary to the maintenance of the national health, safety or interests." Jim Schlosser Dates Corrected Dates that were incorrectly listed in the General Cata logue and the Student - Fac ulty Directory have been cor rected. Charles Bernard, Chairman of the Calendar Committee, announced that the following dates will be followed. Classes will end for Spring recess at 12 noon, April 2, 1966. Instruction will resume at 8 a.m. April 12. The first summer session will begin with registration on June 9, 1966 with classes the folltiwing day. The sec ond session registration is scheduled for July 18 and ends with exams on August 24-25.

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