U.N.C Library Serials Dept. Box 87Q nraniUis de rlhta Famed flamenco guitarist Manitas de Plata will appear in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. on Monday. He will play free to UNC students with ID. -y Senior Degrees Seniors in Arts & Sciences who expect to graduate in January should apply for a degree in 206 South by Nov ember 15. To Write Well Is Better Than To Rule' Volume 74, Number 41 CHAPEL HILL. N. C, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1966 Founded February 23, 1893 mm in Senior Coeds To Discuss Future Plans Senior women if you are wondering what you are go ing to do after graduation you should attend a meeting Tuesday night to hear discus sions on futures for women col lege graduates. The meeting in Gerrard Hall at 8 p.m. will feature a talk by Mrs. Harry Smith, wife of the Presbyterian campus pas tor, and will be followed' by discussions on careers avail able to women after gradua tion. Assistant to the Dean of Wo men Dershie McDevitt said that a planning committee has done a considerable amount of work and she strongly urges all senior women to attend the meeting. Other meetings will be held on the two following Tuesday nights on futures of marriage and graduate school. Financial backing for the programs is being donated by the Carolina Women's Council and the Panhellenic Council. Student Party Meets Tonight The Student Party will re sume its weekly meetings to night at 7:30 in Gerrard Hall after not meeting last week. Included in the business to be transacted tonight will in clude the filling of the legisla tive vacancy in Men's District VIII Parker, Avery, Teague. All members are urged to attend. AVAV.V.V.V.WX 1 1 III I I II I ft 4 ) - p-. - I 4 f.. t & ' .tWr 1 ie--. t , " " " ' .. i ' t ' f r .v. I i"J v - I . . v .. : V r, ; 1 I i .,; " f- v L ----- V' :w!8- V - - - - . V-' i . " - -S' :a.if 'milU'lrmaat.imm i'timim i mn-Jxr w wriiiiiWnnr-:l'l . n mtfUmwiiinnM' muni mnm -i mnm-i - i im Mt urn in rrrt Georgia 28, VNC 3 .Bmlldlo Che w B Heels A WOULD-BE Georgia score is nipped in the bud by North Carolina left safetyman Gayle Bomar (11), who intercepts a Lynn Hughes pass intended for Georgia fullback Brad John son (41) in the second period. But Carolina defenders didn't stop enough of Georgia's offense and the Bulldogs rolled to a 28-3 win. (UPI TELEPHOTO) By BILL HASS DTH Sports Writer Georgia's opportunistic Bull dogs, paced by a flashy sopho m o r e halfback, hammered away at North Carolina's Tar Heels until they came away with a 28-3 victory in Athens Saturday afternoon. Kent Lawrence, a 9.5 sprint er, scored two touchdowns and gained 106 yards in 10 carries. Altogether the Bulldogs ate up 171 yards on the ground and added 115 more in the air. Carolina, for the third straight game and the. fourth time in six tries this season, failed to score a touchdown. BUI Dodson's 36-yard field goal in the second quarter were the only points the Tar Heels could hang up all afternoon. . Georgia picked off four Caro lina passes, returning one all the way for a TD and scoring on a drive after another. They also recovered a fumble which led to the first TD. Carolina came up with its share of breaks, too, recover ing three fumbles and intercep ting two passes. The differ ence was that the Tar Heels could do nothing after each op portunity. The Tar Heels took the open ing kickoff and fashioned a drive that carried them from their own 23 to the Georgia 42. Then David Riggs, who had runxwell in the drive, fumbled a pitchout from Danny Talbott and George Patton recovered for Georgia at the. UNC 48. It took only three plays to score. Fullback Ron Jenkins carried the ball twice to get it to the 37. Lawrence then took a pitchout and raced around right end all the way for the touchdown. Bob Etter convert ed to make it 7-0. After punting to Georgia late in the first quarter, the Tar Heels got a break. Lynn Hughes completed a pass to Randy Wheeler, who fumoiea yard line on runs by Riggs, Dick Wesolowski and a Tal bott to Charlie Carr pass. Ca rolina moved to the three, but on fourth down Talbott's pass was intercepted in the end zone by Happy Dicks. Rogers threw Hughes for Niel Rogers pounced on the ball long loss and forced Georgia to at the Georgia 43. As the quarter ended the Tar Heels were on the Georgia 11- 'Antigone' Tickets Available This Week Tickets for the Carolina tyrdom symbolized France, re Playmakers' second production lectins the German "new or- Kemp's Still Going Green Ten ry Low Over, head By GEORGE McCALL Special To The DTH Kemp Nye, that man who is down, but not out. If you have been by Kemp's green tent his open air rec- 7i 1 L zi i GERALD ARPINE'S lyrical mood-piece called a "poem-in-dance" is Sea Shadow, in which a' sprite from the sea visits a dreaming boy on a beach. The two performers are members of the Joffery Ballet Company, who will be here November 10. ord store then you have un doubtedly heard his explana tion for the low price on his records: "The low over-head." Sure enough, you have to duck your head to get under Jof f rey Ballet Will Perform The first tour of the Robert Joffrey Ballet since it was selected as the permanent resi dent ballet of the New York City Center will include a per formance in Memorial Hall. The ballet will be here Nov ember 10 at 8 p.m. This road tour marks the tenth anniversary of the Jof frey Ballet which has grown from a little group of six dan cers in a rented station wagon to one of the major companies of the world. The repertory chosen for this performance is made up of the hits of the last two New York seasons and will offer a wide variety o f styles for which the company has been acclaimed at home and abroad. Since its beginning, the Jef frey Ballet has presented a wide range of ballets from purely classical to the most modern jazz. Ticket sales for the Novem ber 10 performance will begin Tuesday at the GM information desk. the "low over-head," which is : a green tarpaulin; supported, by four poles held in place by some thin rope connected to stakes stuck in the ground. This is all there is over-head, which is very little indeed. A fire last spring partially destroyed the building that Kemp used to occupy, which stood, next to the Dairy, Bar,. Inside were many interesting things ranging from imported cigarettes and musical instru ments to local art displays. Umbrellas were always more expensive when it was raining. If you bought one on a sunny day, you got a real bargain. "If you buy five or more records, I get to whisper in your ear," says Kemp with a glee in his eye. He shouts this to all who stop by his tent, referring to the extra discount if you buy in quantity. Kemp says he is going to build a new building on the same lot. But he is going to follow President Friday's ad vice, who told him, "Nothing modern ... I won't come in it unless you antique it." "I told him to start saving all the spiders he finds for the new store . . He said he would," Kemp said grinning. The new building is still in the planning stages, but is ex pected to go into construction some time in March. At present, the plans call for a three story building with a full basement. The basement will be for a new Polynesian restaurant, where coat and tie will be re quired to get in. Then up stairs, according to Kemp, will be the record store with all of the usual unusual items you would expect to find. The second floor will be tak en up with office space. And on top of the offices, an ob servation restaurant, "For the old grads who want to go up and look at the campus. We'll have an elevator from the basement up. You know it (pointing across the street to the area in front of Graham Memorial) looks just about the way it did when the famous color lithographs were made of the University in 1907," he said. "Right now, I am in t h e wholesale business ... on the road three days a week, trav eling all over North Carolina, and up into Virginia as far as' Norfolk, Roanoke and Salem . . . selling records." This summer, a fire com pletely destroyed the building that was all that was left of what used to be Chez Kemp, Ltd. So, now Kemp is trying to get a colorful Geodesic Dome to use this winter. "It will have colored panels in the walls that will make wild col ors on the inside ... I am going to try to get a huge rec ord carrousel that will make getting records easy." One thing is sure, there will be a special spot in the new store for Kemp's now famous green tent. of the season, "Antigone," will become available to season ticket holders tomorrow and to the general public Thursday. Due to the already great de mand for tickets, Business Manager John W. Parker has announced that the original run, scheduled for Nov. 9-13, has been extended through Monday, Nov. 14. Based on the Sophoclean classic, Anouilh's play con cerns a young girl, Antigone, who defies an edict by her uncle-king, Creon. Her two brothers have killed each other during a civil war, and Creon has ordained that one of them be left unburied. Antigone shuns the ordin ance, heaps earth upon her brother's dishonoured corpse, and is buried alive for punish ment. Produced first in Paris in 1943 during the German occu pation, the play had to receive the sanction of the Nazi censor before it could be performed. der" with its promise of pros perity providing the French people would agree to surren der their spiritual independ ence. The play and the char acter of Antigone became a symbol for the French resist ance to Nazi domination. The title role of Antigone punt to their own 49. Talbott hit Bob Hume for a 26-yard gain to the 23. The drive stall ed at the 19, and Dodson kick' ed his field goal with 10:26 left. During the rest of the period, Bill Spain and Jack Davenport recovered fumbles and Gayle Bomar intercepted a pass, but Carolina never got on the move. BUly WTarren was forc ed to punt after the first fumble and Mark Holmes in tercepted a Talbott aerial af ter the second. Bomar made a magnificent one-handed snatch of Hughes' pass in the end zone after Ge orgia had moved to the UNC 7. The half ended with the score 7-3, Georgia. The ball game was still close in the third period. Warren punted to the Georgia three will be played by Virginia Cor- and the Bulldogs had to pun nue, a dramatic arts major from Charlotte. She has ap peared in the Playmakers' productions of "Hamlet" and "A Streetcar Named Desire." William M. Hardy of Chapel Hill, an experienced theater veteran and professor in the Radio - Television department here, will appear as Antigone's uncle Creon. Others in the cast include Bob Batson as Chorus, Jean ine van Hulstyne as the Nurse, Judy Andres as Ismene, Rick Dula as Haemon, and Amanda Meiggs as Eurydice. Also, Ralph Dennis, Dozier Hasty, Pat Huriy, Gary Wea- Antigone's protest and mar- , thersbee and Bill Marks. out of the hole. Carolina took over at midfield. On a second and 13 situation at the Georgia 41, the game turned on one play. Talbott threw for fullback Mark Maz za, but the pass was a tad long. Mazza lunged and tipped the ball, and defensive end Larry Kohn plucked it out of the air. He had a clear field ahead and he rambled 62 yards for the score that broke Caro lina's back. The break breahted new life into the Bulldogs. They start ed one long drive that was halted in the fourth period, then scored after Warren's See FOOTBALL on Page 5 r if' H , ;if i i ih . . 7-4 c,4- vr 1 I &s it . : . t irsT:-.. V J i. -i ... 1 I V '"' 1 4 I - 1 .-. i "Zi v -. i ff . I I (:-tJy' I -if l i f,i V - - ' ; I ll t . ... .,. "" sft JOHN SCHOO UNLOADS $538 worth of grocer ies in front of the Wesley Foundation Saturday afternoon. The groceries were purchased by students and Chapel Hill townspeople in an effort to help Harry Taylor, a grocer in Hook ertown, North Carolina. Mr. Taylor is present ly being boycotted by the Ku Klux Klan. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl ::::: Who Killed Jack Kennedy? A Conspiracy ? Special To The DTH Controversy over what really hap pened in Dallas, Tex., on November 22, 1963 began to boil again this week aft er a national magazine claimed that 10 violent deaths followed the assassination of John F. Kennedy. A report published by Ramparts magazine followed closely on the pub lication of a number of books in recent weeks all of which questioned the of ficial report on the assassination. Death Network The magazine said its findings were the result of a year-long investigation into unsettled aspects of the assassina tion. Ramparts said it had found an "underground" network of assassina tion sleuths throughout the country working on the case and gave primary credit to one of them a Texas week ly newspaper editor, Penn Jones Jr., who in .1963 won the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award for Courage in Journalism for uncovering the unusual string of violent deaths following the assassina tion. They could be considered the framework of a "Kennedy Curse," it In an article by News Editor David Welsh the November issue of Ramparts, published today, named the following 10 persons whose lives ended under mysterious circumstances, by murder or suicide: Jim Koethe, Dallas reporter, killed by a mysterious karate chop on Sept. 21, 1964; his suspected killer, never in dicted, was then quietly put into the state penitentiary for life on a hotel rob bery charge. Bill Hunter, Long Beach, Calif., re porter, who covered the Kennedy case, "accidentally" shot by a Long Beach policeman, April 23, 1964, just hours aft er George Senator, Jack Ruby's room mate, had testified before Warren Com mission counsel that he "could not re call" a meeting in his and Ruby's apart ment attended, according to other wit nesses, by Koethe, Hunter, Tom How ard, Senator and Jim Martin, the at torney who got Koethe's accused killer off without prosecution on that charge. Acting Strangely , Howard, Ruby's original chief attor ney (who arrived at the police station a short time after Ruby shot Lee Har vey Oswald), died of a heart attack (not verified by autopsy), March 27, 1965, although friends said that for the three previous days he had been act ing strangely and did not appear to recognize them or others. . Earlene Roberts, manager of the roominghouse where Oswald lived, died of a heart attack (again not verified), Jan. 9, 1966, after being, as her rela tives report, right up until her death " 'worried to death' by the police." Nancy Jane Mooney, a Ruby night club stripper who provided an alibi for. Darrell Wayne Garner, accused assail ant of Warren Reynolds, a witness to the flight of a suspected killer of Tippit. Picked up a week after she cleared Gar ner, on a minor charge, "police said she hanged herself with her toreador pants, in her private cell at the Dallas City jail." Hank Killam, whose wife worked for Ruby, and one of whose friends lived in the same roominghouse as Oswalds, took a deep unexplained interest in the as sassination. He was hounded by "fed eral agents" (whose authenticity was never verified) until St. Patrick's Day 1964, when he was found bleeding to death, with his throat cut, in Florida, where he had moved. William Whaley, the cabdriver who drove Oswald away from the area of the assassination, was killed in a car crash December 18, 1965, "the first Dal las cabbie to be killed on duty since 1937." When Penn Jones went to inter view the general manager of the cab company about Whaley's death, he was literally pushed out of the office. "If you're smart," said the manager, "you won't be coming around here asking questions." Edward Benavides, shot in the back of the head in mid-February, 1964, in an "unsolved" case with no apparent motivation. His brother having been a witness to the Tippit shooting, there is strong presumption that the death was a case of mistaken identity. Star Threatens Dorothy Kilgallen, whose death by "acute barbiturate and alcohol intoxica tion" in New York, Nov. 8, 1965, can not be directly linked to the Kennedy Oswald case, but who was the only re porter to have been allowed a private interview with Ruby since the killing of Oswald, and who allegedly told a friend "in the last days of her life: In five more days I'm going to bust this case wide open'." Lee Bowers, who had testified to strange goings-on in the Grassy Knoll area immediately before and during the assassination. He died after an auto ac cident, when his new car apparently went out of control, but a doctor who attended him before his death said, "He was in a strange state of shock, a dif ferent kind of shock than an accident victim experiences. I can't explain it. I've never seen anything like it." Ramparts attributes several direct and indirect links between Jack Ruby and Lee Harvey Oswald, as reported by various witnesses, which date back far before the assassination. It divulges many of Ruby's gangland connections, his routine violations of Texas' liquor laws in favor of members' of the Dallas Police Department, and his pimping for the strippers appearing in his club. The magazine calls for further in vestigation of the summarily-dismissed affidavit of attorney Carroll Jarnagin, which alleged that Ruby hired Oswald as part of a plot to do away with Texas Governor John Connally. Breed of Kooks? Ramparts reports extensive and in tensive harassment of the amateur in vestigators who have gone to Dallas to try to uncover information of interest to them. "If many will treat these ama teur investigators as some unique breed of kook," it says, "the Dallas police take them seriously. When Shirley Martin, a housewife from Hominy, Oklahoma, made trips to Dallas to interview wit nesses, the police would tail her, open ly following her car at short distance, and stay in her shadow until she left town. The FBI takes one of the 'sleuths' seriously enough to tap his phone. Two San Francisco sleuths report that even their mail is habitually opened before it reaches their door." The magazine said witnesses are avowedly too frightened to talk and, "more than all the persuasive and well - documented books on the sub ject, it was that fear that reached us, in our intestines; convinced us that the Warren Commission was wrong. If Lee Harvey Oswald did the job all by him self, then what are these people afraid of? Whom are they afraid of?" Ramparts said it does not maintain that the 10 deaths are necessarily a conscious pattern of extermination but that the existence of known cases of threats and murders are sufficient to warrant the reopening of the investiga tion and the release of evidence still being withheld from the public by the administration. Specifically it calls for: 1. Voice-printing of the garbled trans missions received by the police dispatch er at 1:08, the approximate time of the shooting of Police Officer J. D. Tip pit. These transmissions, believed by police to have come from Tippit's car, might shed light on the mystery of his death. 2. Release of the missing and-or classified evidence. ("More than one third of the assassination-related docu ments in the National Archives are withheld by the 'interested agencies About half of the FBI reports and 90 per cent of the CIA reports are still classified." 3. A new investigation into the assas sation and related deaths.

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