UNC Library Ssrials Dept. Box 87Q Chnp,l Hill, 11. c. A Short Fairy Tale Once upon a time there was a beautiful princess. She caught leprosy and died. Attention -Athletes Those athletes who have earned their varsity letter are urged to attend the Monogram Club meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m In order to enjoy such benefits as reserved seats at basketball and football games, you must attend meetings. To ffVitg a gpf r Than To Rule' Volume 74, Number 44 CHAPEL HILL. N. C. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1966 Founded February 23. 1893 II raaocDe asJJi kit j J " I mom ifft c A7 ) I - At ITT) M B V mm .mm tm-. . Causing (P i 1 - 4 ,3r w I : i pwl - ti - . ai ''" isg. . . ii i ." .. i,7r!Trr i'ari?twc' ' . - . , :&te.J 1 Tornado winds peeled and roof of this home NSA Conference Meets Here Friday, Saturday The National Student Asso ciation Committee will be the host for the Fall Regional Con ference of the Carolina - Vir ginia Area of ths USNSA here Friday and Saturday, Novem-. Der 4 ana o. some iou scuaem leaders from North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia are expected to participate. The conference will center on the topic of Educational Reform. USNSA Campus Coordinator Teddy O'Toole said that UNC will have 12 delegates and al ternates at the conference and several observers. Ed Schwartz, National Af fairs Vice - President of the National Student Association, will begin the Conference with the keynote address after a banquet in Chase Dining Hall at 6 p.m. Friday. He is a dis tinquished writer in the field of student affairs. There will be seminar discussion on "What's wrong with my edu cation" later in the evening followed by a social at the ZBT House. Seminar discussions will fo cus on specific issues of aca demic reform on Saturday morning, including the "Free University" Concept, Course 'Beat Book' Entries Due Entries for the Pi Kappa Alpha Beat Dook Parade are due iMovemosr 4 at b p.m. witn a $2.00 entry fee. All frater nities, sororities and men's and women's dorms are in vited to participate. The parade will begin at 3 p.m. Friday, Nov. 18 at Wool len Gym after an inspection at 9 a.m. that morning. All floats are limited to a maximum height of 12 feet. Trophies will be awarded in five divisions: Best Men's Dormitory, Best Women's Dormitory, Best Fraternity, Best Sorority and Best Over- 11 T. , J Ua 7in T-TiirrrTlnC ' 7 :&rr. Rezzuto, Dramatic Depart ment, and Campus Police Chief Beaumont. Girls entering the Beat Dook Queen Contest will be invited to the Pi Kappa Alpha House for dinner at 6 p.m. Novem ber 16, followed by judging at 7 p.m. Escorts will be pro vided. The Queen will be an nounced at 3 p.m. Friday op- nncito Wnnll?n Gvm and sne and the four finalists will ride the Pi KaDoa Alpha float. Queen Judges will be Chan cellor Sitterson, Dean Long. Dean Katherine Carmichael, Dr. Daniel, Mr. Geer, and Charles Bernard, chairman. off walls near Gar ner, just east of Raleigh. No one was at home at the time. DTH Photo by Ernest H. Robl and Teacher Evaluations, Grading Systems, and Faculty-Student Educational Policy committees. Joe Wilson of the USNSA Insurance Trust and Julie Weekens of USNSA Student Services Desk will also speak Saturday. Following a panel discussion Escapes In TAMPA, Fla., (AP) An Everglades airboat was rushed yesterday to a two-acre swamp where tear gas, flaming ker osene, dogs, a helicopter and a swamp buggy failed in two days to flush out a suspect in a $72 robbery. "The amount of the robbery is not the part that makes it serious," said Police Chief J.P Mullins "He's an armed and dangerous criminal. He pistol-whipped an old man and fired point-blank at a police officer." The suspect, a tall, slender Negro, allegedly fired one shot at Patrolman John E. Maring, 24, and fled into the swamp when Maring tried to stop him for questioning in the robbery of a dairy store Monday night. Maring chased the suspect J" H18 "J? after calling r ;y: Capt. Charles Fisher said knee and hand prints were spotted today. Officers said $72.13 was ta ken at gunpoint from the clerk, Raymond Freelove, 73, and that 16 stitches were required to close a head wound Free love received when the gun man struck him with a pistol. Fisher said the man was seen twice yesterday, but a black ooze three to five feet deep and a dense overgrowth of bullrushes and sawgrass orevented pursuers from getting anywhere near him on foot. "He could have moved ten feet before we got there and we'd never see him," said Fisher. The sawgrass blocked the helicopter view. The grass was too green to burn. A swamp buggy, a vehicle with giant tires and designed to negoti ate mucklands, got stuck try- ing to skirt the edge 1 of the swamp, located between a re sidential area and a golf dri ving range. Sharpshooters with power ful rifles were stationed on extension liders and power $72 R Much Destruction my early in ghe afternoon, the conference will close with a Plenary where any resolutions or proposals will be presented for formal action. Campus Coordinator-.O'Toole praised "members of his cam pus committee who have been responsible for planning the Conference. obbery Suspect Everglades company lifts to watch con stantly for any movement. A steady cold rain fell to day as guards with shotguns and side arms walked the peri meter. "If he's in there he's got to be scared," said one officer. STORM REMNANTS of the isolated twisters All that hit the outskirts of Raleigh ploughed over ill! Chapel Hill yesterday afternoon, causing p blustery winds and sporadic showers. From jOflC the t0P of Morrison, the sky looked like an inside-out. black alpaca wool sweater. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer By DON CAMPBELL DTH Staff Writer Raleigh "Just as soon as I hit the floor I started bouncing like a rubber ball." That's how Lois Williams de- scribed the ordeal she experi enced yesterday morning when a tornado hit the trailor house she was in in Weston's Trailer Court near Garner. The same tornado touched down in several places in the Garner area doing extensive damage, but causing miracu lously few injuries. Only four injuries, none serious, were reported. The trailer Miss Williams was in was one of four at the trailer park that were com letely demolished. When the tornado was gone, Miss Williams was in the mid dle of a pile of furniture, about 75 feet from where the founda tion of cinder blocks remained. About 50 feet farther from the pile of twisted and torn furni ture lay the floor of the trail er. "It turned over at least three times," Miss Williams said. "I felt like I was in a whirlpool." Miss Williams had a cut on her right leg which had re quired several stiches to close. Across a broken down fence, two more trailers lay flattened. The floor of one lay upside down with the wheels bent crazily. Behind Miss Williams trailer B. B. Salmon walked around the battered remains of his house trailer. The trailer's walls were plastered against the trees some 150 feet behind where his trailer once stood. The TV was sitting in the back yard, the' refrigerator was ly- irig in the front yard. Luckily Salmon was at work when the tornado hit. Though the trailer park was the most heavily damaged. The tornado did extensive damage in at least four other areas. In Garner's Forest Hills Shop ping Center, most of the plate glass windows were blown out. All that was left in a record shop was a large pile of glass and a few record folders. Both the front and rear windows of the store were gone. Next door to the Record store the Post Office was missing its front windows also. Across the parking lot, a large grocery store sign read "GGLY WIGGLY". And in the parking lot several cars were parked minus their rear windows. Four miles east of Garner, on a county road, the back wall of a farmhouse was all that remained. The roof and front of the of the house, in little pieces, was strung across the road and down the hill through a cow pasture. And at Vandora Ave. and. Lakeside Drive in Garner a woman stood looking at her neighbors roof lying in the neighbors backyard and said this: "I was looking one way, and before I knew what had happened, it had come and gone." Jesse Helms Won't Speak Controversial television com mentator Jesse Helms has de clined an invitation to speak at Morrison Residence College, saying he "scarecely believed" the invitation was serious. . Bill Braswell, president of Armstrong House, wrote to Helms last week, asking him to appear here whenever he could. Braswell's letter invited Helms "in view of the stand which you have taken on the Michael Paull case and in light of the fact that this stand has met with antagonistic re sponses from many members of the student body and also in the light of the fact that you are indeed a controversial and respected North Carolini an. . ." Helms is the executive vice president of WRAL-TV in Ra leigh. It was he who recently stirred up the still-unsettled controversy over Paull's as signing his freshman English class a theme concerning the love poem "To His Coy Mis tress." Helms a frequent critic of goings-on at the University at Chapel Hill, declined the invi tation, saying in a letter re ceived Tuesday by Braswell: 'I scarcely believe that you really expect anyone, under similar circumstances, to give serious consideration to an 'invitation' such as yours, co pies of which had been sent to five newspapers and to your college publication. "During the past few weeks," the letter continues, "I have been forced to decline in ex cess of 100 speaking invitations, all of which would take pre cedence over yours if I were in a position to undertake any new commitments at all. "I appreciate your 'cordial' invitation. In the same sense of cordiality, I decline. I am not sending a copy of this re sponse to anyone. I imagine that you will take care of that." Braswell said that he was "angry" and "disappointed at the way he took the letter. "It was meant in all serious- ness," he said. Erhard Makes Resignation Offers Plain BONN, Germany (AP) Chancellor Ludwig Erhard, be set by a crisis generated in part by difficulty in finding - money to fulfill promises to buy arms in the United States said yesterday he will resign if necessary. Some leaders of the party, the Christian Democrats, have urged him to quit. Though Erhard was West Germany's most popular politician when he succeeded Konrad Adenau er as Chancellor Oct. 16, 1963, he has been sliding downhill politically for several weeks. New taxes are considered necessary to patch a hole in the 1967 budget, a shortage of revenues estimated to range from $725 million to $1 billion. At least $450 million is need ed to complete promises to buy arms in the United States. See ERHARD On Page 6 &Si - iH.v4v&, k i Tornado victim Lois Williams stands in front of demolished family trailer. She and several Legislature Votes Funds For Residence Study Trip By LYTT STAMPS DTH Staff Writer A special session of Student Legislature Tuesday approved a $600 expedition by nine residence college governors, but postponed consideration of four constitutional amend ments. SL granted $607.99 for the governors to fly this weekend to the University of Massa chusetts where they'll study that school's long-established residence college system. The governors hope to ga ther ideas there for the, im provement of Carolina's resi dence college system, now two years old. Discussion of three of the four amendments was post poned until SL's regular ses sion Thursday. The fourth, which would create a Student Body Supreme Court, was gi ven back to committee. Two of the three amend ments to be discussed Thurs day also concern judicial re form. The three amendments provide: I Campus Briefs Election Poster Rules The University administra tion yesterday issued a list of long - standing rules concern ing the placing of election signs. J. A. Williams, University Business Manager, said the rules were issued every year at election time to remind stu dents of the proper proced ures. The rules are: Signs can be placed by cords from window to window. Signscan be placed on bulle tin boards in classroom build ings and dormitories. Signs should be placed no more than 10 days before an election. Nails and spikes cannot be used in placing signs. Signs cannot be placed so that they hang looso in the wind. LIMITING OF the Campus Code's jurisdiction to the "Uni versity community" and or ganized student functions. REWORDING OF the rights guaranteed to defendants ap pearing before student courts. GUARANTEEING Graham Memorial a fixed income. There was no provision made for when the fourth bill, the one concerning a supreme court, should be brought back before the entire legislature by the Judicial Committee. Th3 funds for the residence college governor's trip were approved by a roll-call vote of 28-7. Conservative legislators raised the same objections to the appropriation that they have raised to all finance bills this fall: "Student Government does not have the money to be able to afford this. We must draw the line somewhere," said UP floor leader Ed Wilson. Also presenting this argu ment was UP legislator Larry Signs cannot be placed on trees. Signs cannot be placed across streets or drives. Senior Hurt On Cycle Joe Falconer, a 21-year-old senior, suffered a dislocated hip Wednesday when his mot orcycle skidded out of control andstruck a car, Chapel Hill police said. The accident occurred about 2:15 p.m. as Falconer, an In ternational Studies major from Rockford, 111., who lives at the Pi Kappa Phi house, drove south on rain - slick S. Columbia Street during a light rain. His cycle skidded out of con trol and collided with a car driven by Mrs. Allene Gray Hobbie. 62, of 302 Wilmot Dr., Raleigh, who was turning left into the Memorial Hospital en trance, said Policeman George, Penny. other persons were in the trailer when the tornado struch. -DTH Photo by Ernest H. Robl Richter from Ehringhaus. Richter, who voted for the bill, said, "I bet the IFC will come to us next wanting mon ey to study deferred rush. Then comes the MHC and the WHC." Answering the arguments were Lacy Reaves, (SP) from Morrison, SP floor leader Steve Hockfield, UP chairman Dave Kiel and Steve Sal mony, UP chairman of the Ways and Means committee. "The development of the residence college is essential to UNC," Reaves said. "This trip is a key factor in that development." He said the Morrison Col lege Senate voted to send their academic lieutenant go vernor and the chairman of the Senate finance committee to Massachusetts a day early to begin study. "This can't be called a po litical junket," he said, "There is a large amount of work to be done." Kiel told the legislators that the objections to the expendi ture "do not warrant your re jecting the bill. They do not hold water. "The residence college is a bulwark against the 'multi versity.' We ought to have a damned good one," Kiel said. "If we don't send the gover nors, we are defeating the re sidence college systm," Hock field added. He pointed out that IFC has been here a much longer time than the residence college sys tem and that they have at tended national events. Also speaking against the bill was Rick Miller, UP can didate for junior class presi dent. "I see no good reason for sending nine persons. One trip of two days will not do it. I think we should send someone for a longer period," he said. Miller who voted for the bill, said he did not want to send nine people on an "air plane ride." All seven votes against the bill came from UP legisla tes. Twelve representatives nine of them SP were ab sent at the special session.