J-N.C. Library Bx 870 Chan! -FUJI. M r Pork Report' r' Butcher hogs were selling 50 to 75 cents higher Tuesday on the Chicago market. The top price was $22.75, which was 25 cents higher than the top price for slaughter steers. Volume 74, Number 43 ri For South Campus The check cashing booth for South Campus will reopen Monday in Morrison. Check limits this year will be $25. Only one check per customer will be cashed each day. j0 Write Well Is Better Than To Rule' CHAPEL HILL, N. C. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 JiM ill? mis AG Clarifies Campus Code On Posters T' omrces Predie t r m hh liiiMi iiiiiiiiiijii-j...a.fi urTTim-f Mpn's Attorney General Frank Hodges yesterday sought to "clear up a techni cality" in the matter of de struction of campaign posters. Tuesday's DTH had report ed that according to the ad ministrative chairman of the Elections Board, destruction of campaign posters is a cam pus code offense. "There are no specific cam-; pus or honor code laws deal-; ing with this matter, neither are there any election laws calling destruction of posters an offense," Hodges said, "And even though we frown upon such actions, we thought we should clear up this tech nicality." Hodges said tHat if a can didate saw someone destroy ing a poster, he could bring charges against him, other wise there would be no legal action that the Atorney Gen eral's office could take. Charges were brought against a student for poster destruction last year, Hodges said, but it was not consid ered a campus code offense. The student was given an of ficial reprimand but was not otherwise charged because it was determined thtat the stu dent had not acted with ma licious intent or from partisan motivation. "Each case is decided indi vidually in matters such as this," Hodges said. am Troop Build-Up WASHINGTON(AP) Pen tagon sources predicted Tues day a stepup in the flow of American troops to Viet Nam in the next few weeks which will elevate U. S. strength in the country to a year - end to tal of about 382,000. This is 46,000 or roughly the equivalent of an army di vision and its supporting ele ments above the present force level in Viet Nam. It is an open secret at the pentagon that the next ma jor deployment of troops to the war is likely to involve ele ments of the Ninth Infantry Division based at Fort Riley, Kan. Defense officials dismissed any suggestion the adminis tration is deliberately holding off ordering additional fighting men to Viet Namv until after next week's elections. They pointed out that the Ninth Division, activated last year, began training only in January and was not sched uled to be ready for action until late this year, the out fit is virtually combat - ready now. By official figures there are now 336,000 men in Viet Nam, not counting about 50,000 sea men offshore in vessels of the Seventh Fleet. This compares with 148,300 in South Viet Nam a year ago and with 327,000 in - country troops in Korea at State Students To Buy From Boycotted Grocer AWAY FROM IT ALL Here's one way to escape the grind of mid terms and 8:00 class es: get up at 5 a.m. and go climbing with the UNC Outing Club. Here Hugh Owens, leader of the Christmas-scheduled climb to North America's third highest peak, scales the "Sentinel," of Moore's Wan in the Hanging Rock park complex northwest of Chapel Hill. Watch for a page feature in the near future on the club and the Mexican climb. Cutting Classes? me Mexican cumu. O Tl A DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer A HgC 4 RALEIGH (AP) A group of North Carolina State Uni versity students and Raleigh church leaders have schedul ed a caravan for noon Satur day to buy merchandise from a Greene County grocer who said his store is being boy cotted by the Ku Klux Klan. Stanton Hoegerman, a State graduate student said, "we want to register our personal chagrin that this type of thing is going on." He said the group was or ganized to buy groceries to help break the boycott and to show how the citizens of Ra leigh, feel about the matter. Hoegerman cited S. Collins Kilburn, pastor of the United Church of Christ and W. W. Finlator, pastor of Pullen Me morial Baptist Church, as en dorsing the expedition. Harry Taylor, Hookerton grocer, said the Klan mem bers have been boycotting in an effort to force his wife's resignation from her position as attendance counselor for the Greene County Board of Education. Taylor said the Klan claims that Mrs. Taylor tried to get Negro students to enroll in white schools. Her job is to encourage both white and Ne gro younsters to attend school. Grand Dragon J. Robert Jones of the United Klans of America in North Carolina de nied that his group was par ticipating in the boycott. He termed those taking part "a group of idiots." Mother ' Discovers Lost Daughters Under Masks Independents Bid For Class Offices LOS ANGELES (AP) "Don't you know these girls?" asked the woman lead ing two tiny trick - or - treat ers to Mrs. Roger Lee Wil liams' door. "No," replied Mrs. Williams, 31, wWose two little girls and banker husband disappeared last July at the same time $536,000 vanished from a bank's vault. "Are you sure?" the wom an persisted. , "Are these my daughters? Is this a halloween prank?" asked Mrs. Williams. , She took the masks off the Jtwo girls anid burst into :tears. Before her were her miss ing daughters, Kelley, 4, and iRochelle, 5. Joining in the joy jful weeping were Mrs. Wil liams' two other children, Ric jkey, 10, and Sharilyn, 12, who 'have been with her right Jalong. Authorities have conducted 'a nationwide hunt for Wil !liams, 27, since he disap peared July 14. He was assis tant cashier of a Security -First National Bank office in Briefs Student Aid The Student Aid Office needs students who would like to work part time reading to blind students or caring for students and townspeople who are physically incapacitated. Call 933-2193 or came by 2 Hanes Hall and apply with Mr. Geer. Absentee Ballots A written request for an absentee ballot must be , made to the Election Board prior to 5 p.m. six days be fore campus elections except when a student has to leave the campus on emergency no tice. The written request must be made individually and must include reasons for the absence from campus. It must include the student's campus address as well as the address during the absence from cam pus. Class should be specified. Absentee ballots must be re turned to the Elections Board in a sealed envelope before the polls close on election day. nearby Riverside. Coinciding with his absence, authorities said, was the dis appearance from the vault of a suburban Fontana branch of the bank of $197,000 in cash, $158,900 in travelers' checks and $180,000 in blank money orders. Williams was charged with bank larceny. Authorities said a goateed man checked in at a motel three blocks from the Wil liams home last night and hir ed a baby sitter. He told her to take the girls trick - or -treating and wind up at their home. Steven Schmitt, manager of the motel, said today that he saw a man drive off shortly afterward in a white car, leav ing a trailer behind. "He left a hell of a lot of money in that room," added Schmitt. He refused to say How much. Schmitt said he made a re servation for the man and two girls yesterday. The motel manager said the FBI interviewed him last night and again today. Agents talk ed to the girls last night. The man had black Wair and a goatee, he said. Williams is blonde. His wife said the girls told authorities their father had dyed his hair. At a news conference today in the modest white frame, Wil liams home, Mrs .Williams said the girls told her Wiliams' be came angry when he saw photos of the girls in news papers after their disappear ance. "I guess he thought he had destroyed all the pictures," she said, "But I had a couple of negatives." Mrs. Williams said she filed for divorce a month ago. "Would you take your hus band back?" a newsman ask ed her. "I don't know," she replied. "Do you love him?'' "I don't think I could ever trust him again." - " J - r r I", til Xrf try . i v"V t&A.M ' "i feax 57 W tin 4 k, V TtenBsa c Olin Belsinger Frank Serra Two students announced yes terday that they are independ ent candidates for sophomore class office. Frank Serra is running for sophomore class president and Olin Belsinger is running for sophomore class vice presi dent. "The reason we are run ning," they said in a joint statement, "is as independents we will not be responsible to a political group and there fore we'll be freer to follow the wishes of our constituents. "We also feel that we are exhibiting greater interest in the office and the class, rath er than being sponsored by a party." Serra, from Oyster Bay, N. Y., was president of his high school student body and was a member of last year's freshman finance committee. Belsinger, from Huntington Valley, Pa., was secretary of the senior class at German town Academy and a member of the student council. After the plight of the gro cer was brought to the atten tion of the public, sales went up to $6,000 after dropping 50 per cent during the boycott. Taylor said his weekly av erage before the boycott was usually about $4,000. Paull Case Suggestions Coming Soon A recommendation on ac tion to be taken in the Mich ael Paull "Coy Mistress" con troversy will be made to the chancellor "in the next few days." Charles Cherry, a member of the English Department committtee , investigating the charges that part-time instruc tor Paull assigned his class a theme on seduction, made the statement yesterday. Cherry said the committee looking into the case has met every day since being ap pointed by Dr. Raymond Ad ams; acting chairman of the English Department. Graduate Instructor Cherry said though "there are still a lot of people we want to see. We are leaving no stone un turned and we don't want to rush the investigation." Paull was removed from his class by Sitterson on Tuesday, October 18, after a Raleigh television station charged he had made an assignment on seduction. Paull has said that an as signment on the 17th century poem "To His Coy Mistress" was misinterpreted by several members of the class. In the resulting furor over Paull's removal from his class, the chancellor issued a statement returning the con troversy to the English De partment, Friday, October 21. The five member investigat ing committee was appointed on October 28. V.-' ....." Girls Prepare For Prowler Chapel Hill Police continued to question subjects in an investiga tion of two appearances by prowl ers in women's bedrooms during the past week. The first incident took place at 5 a.m. Thursday in Winston Dormi tory and the second at the Tri Delt Sorority House at 4:30 a.m. Sunday. In both cases the intruder fled after coeds saw him. Warnings have been circulated to all house mothers to take extra precautions. By KAREN FREEMAN DTH Staff Writer Sympathy should be extended to the prowler if he happens to wander up to one hall of a cer tain woman's dorm. The girls there are ready for him. After a round of ghost stories and tales about past murders at Chapel Hill had put them in the proper mood, the girls kept an all night vigil Monday night. Before securely locking them selves in and closing the windows, which will not lock, the coeds turn ed "vigilante" and made a thor ough search of all storage rooms, closets, washing machines, etc. vThen they settled down to wait for the dawn daylight. Ordinarily, they only left the room in pairs, but one" brave coed ventured outside her room once during the night armed with a pair of scissors in each hand. The tension was increasing as the time of the prowler's previ ous excursions drew near, when suddenly a scream was heard. The "nightwatchmen" ran in the direction of the scream to find themselves in combat with the largest cockroach yet found in the dorm. If the prowler had been around at that time, the ensuing screams probably made him think someone else had beaten him at his own game, and that he'd bet ter try another night. As far as the girls are concern ed, the sooner the police solve the case the better. If the prowler isn't caught soon, they will be too tired to even scream by the time he finally comes around. Jt: - time J 4, - . I m " - t. - 2 '- ' St " " ' " 1 --., ... JWi : I . i I .. . j.j . - ' f " ' ' : f f '' ' ' 9 ' ' ' ri i - f I-. - " ? , . WOULD YOU BELIEVE the Great Pumpkin? Halloween couldn't be over when professors like John Eyre spice up their classes by call ing in foreign dignitaries to lecture. Here. Uncle Charlie, voted The Most Popular Man in NATO, explains to the Geography 153 class that France doesn't want U. S. planes over French air space but would love to have many more rich American tourists. DTH Photo bv Jock Lauterer the peak of the conflict. Sources also foresaw a con tinuing increase in the U. S. commitment to the war after the first of the year to well beyond 400,000. Exactly how much higher the buildup will go is now under consideration in the defense department. In the final analy sis the decision hinges on what military officials believe will be needed to overcome the communists in Southeast Asia. But manpower increases al so are necessarily linked to budgetary planning, and the services are now in the pro cess of laying out their mon ey needs. With Viet Nam demands growing, over - all U. S. mili tary strength Has continued to swell beyond planned levels. In fact, the announced goal of 3,093,000 men in the Arm ed Forces by mid - 1967 was reached a full year ahead of time. Worldwide strength now stands at 3,228,3,000 or 135,000 above planned totals. Each of the services is well above pro jected strength. The Army with the biggest sHare at .1,310,100 is turning out 45,000 soldiers a month at its training centers. Beyond meeting replacement needs, the Army is getting a net gain of about 25,000 men a month with no end in sight for this rate of growth. This could mean the Army will hit the 1.5 million mark next spring if the current pace continues, but offictfcals are quick to point out that chang ing conditions could bring a slowdown. At this point, the army is 76,450 men above the level It was due- to- reach next- year. Navy strength is 739,902, of 12,000 over its projected level. The air force stands at 897, 672, up 44,300. And Marine strength totals 280,659, about 1,500 higher than originally projected by the end of this fiscal year. Spokesmen for tWa services say they are unable to predict what future growth will be. The expansion of the mili tary has, of course, been ac companied by corresponding, increases in the draft. During the past six months, draft calls have averaged over 34,000. October's was 49, 300, the highest manpower re quest since Korea. The November call originally was set at 43,700 but was cut by 6,100 because more men volunteered for duty than was expected. Only 12,100 men are being sought for December but the Pentagon has said it expects' draft calls to bounce back to around 33,000 in Janurary. The. December call is low bcause, of Christmas. No men will be inducted during the last two weeks of the month. ' All-Asian Conference Requested UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) President Ferdinand E. Marcos of the Philippines, following up the Manila sum mit meeting on Viet Nam, is pushing ahead with plans for an all - Asian peace confer ence, Secretary - General U Thant was told today. "It's very much alive," Am bassador Salvador P. Lopez of the Philippines said after a 20 - minute meeting with Thant. He gave Thant a first - hand report on the Manila meeting and told him of Mrcos plans for the future. Thant express ed interest, Lopez told a news man. Burma has agreed to be the host country for the con ference, the ambassador said. But he added there had been no discussion of dates yet and there is no definite list of the countries that will take part. He expressed the hope that both Thant and Abdul Rahman Pazhwak of Afghanistan, pres ident of the General Assembly, could attend the conference and suggested they might serve as meoiaiors. See CONFERENCE On Page 6 : i rrr