Quang Due Edition . Today's Weather Variable Cloudiness and Cool. Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAEOLjNTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4. 1964 United Press Interna tional Service r-i j sir Am jj sA p9s 4 s I tor--" SATURDAY AFTERNOON Following the ar rests of 22 demonstrators on charges of block ing traffic and resisting arrest, this crowd gath ered iu front of the Town Hall to watch as the demonstrators were carried from the converted ORE By FRED SEELY A Negro integration leader threatened Sunday to burn him self in the streets on Easter Sunday if racial discrimination continues in Chapel Hill. The Rev. B. Elton Cox of High Point, North Carolina field Secretary for the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), told a rally at the First Baptist Church he would burn himself and encouraged other Negroes to do the same. "If I thought it would do any good," the Rev. Mr. Cox said, "I would come to Chapel Hill, talk to town leaders and univer sity officials. That failing, I would burn myself. "I have been contemplating doing it and am advocating that other iNegroes do it," said the 32-year-old minister, adding that J L a.V - .Megro IWvV'' 'iXv- : s4s I I t - -''.' ' ' " 4 ss t ; s, ' t ; 8. s s x v. jS r v . . s - s ;1 HKld s . iUyh REV. B. ELTON COX, a fiery integration leader from High Point, told a church rally here Sunday afternoon he was thinking about burning himself in Chapel Hill if racial discrimination continues. He ur-ed other Negroes to consider doing the same and said "Chapel im is as good a place as any to start." Photo By Jim Wallace UNC Won't Push Town Integration Chancellor William B. Aycock, backed by President William C. Friday has turned down requests Irom integrationists that the Uni versity use its economic power to jeed integration in local busi nesses. ' , At an executive meeting of the L'NC Faculty Council last month. Chancellor Aycock made the fol lowing remarks: "The Agenda Committee of tne Council requested my comments or? the policy of the University with regard to public accommo dations. As you know, arrange ments for official 'functions are gnade by groups or individuals Within the faculty, student body and the administration. No effort has been made to bring these r ft 7 i . - V r,T in milk wagon in the foreground into the jail. State Police aided Chapel Hill Police in controlling the crowd after the demonstrators were arrest ed as they sat in the street blocking traffic in Chapel Hill for a half hour. Photo By Jim Wallace If Discrimination Continues Official if Buddhists can burn themselves to embarrass officials in Sai gon, Negroes can do it in this country. "If -these Negroes can don uniforms to fight for the United States in foreign countries, then they, certainly ought to be able to give their lives for the basic right of human dignity," the Rev. Cox concluded, in quali fying his rally remarks for re porters. In New York, James Farmer, national director of CORE, said, "I am sure that Rev. Cox was not seriously suggesting that Negroes in this country adopt the protest methods of iBudd hists. "If he was serious," Farmer said, "I am sure he was speak ing only for himself and not for our organization." Farmer said he had promised Is. s 'si ' ,s ' , s I:;:.; I - s W -s, -s 'I s' s "ss, Nvs sv '-s ? ; -js .fiyi-i-oo-Mi'"1 functions under centralized con trol. However, we encourage the use of faculties owned by the University. This encouragement grows primarily from the fact that it is usually more economi cal to use University facilities. Also, inasmuch as all eating fa cilities operated by the University are fully integrated, we encount er no problem in this area. "Occasionally, it is necessary to utilize facilities in Chapel Hill not owned by the University. Such facilities may or may not be in tegrated. The policy of the Uni versity is to avoid making any arrangement for public accommo . dations which would result in discrimination against Univer (Continued on Page Three) Immo ; v " f ' j ' 'ssl laxion novel demonstrations in Chapel Hill, but added, "believe me V BULLETIN Some 34 persons, including about 10 whites, were arrested last night after a sit-down in front of a segregated drugtore. Police charged the demonstrators with obstructing the sidewalk and resisting arrest after sitting down in front of the Colonial Drug store on W. Franklin St. All had been denied entrance to the arrests brought the total since protests resumed Dec. 13 to 436. this is not what I had in mind." The Rev. Mr. Cox has been one of the most outspoken of all integration leaders and has led demonstrations in several cities and states. After the rally, about 220 Ne groes and whites marched si lently through downtown Chapel Hill to the Post Office, then re turned without incident. Earlier, police said the pro prietor of a segregated restau rant had been charged on two counts of assault and one count of forcible entry into the home of a white integrationist. Police charged Austin Watts with assault and forcible entry after they said he forced his way into the home of Rosemary Ezra, 25, early Sunday and struck J. V. Henry, a white field worker for (the Student Nonvio lent Coordinating Committee. Watts, proprietor of Watts Motel and Restaurant, scene of several sit-in demonstrations since protests resumed Dec. 13, was released on $800 Lond. Miss Ezra recently staged a 15-day sit-in in the courtroom of the Town Hall, after the Board of Aldermen side-stepped a pro posed public accommodations ordinance. Police said Watts also was charged with assault for alleg edly kicking a Negro, David L. Davis, when Watts attempted to enter the headquarters of the Chapel Hill Freedom Commit tee later Sunday. Integration leaders promised Chapel Hill would be the scene of novel demonstrations if town facilities were not desegregated completely by Feb. 1. The novel demonstrations came in the form of street sit downs Saturday. Twenty - two Negroes and whites were arrest ed. Another 53 persons were ar rested Saturday night when they staged sitdowns in front of two segregated businesses, Brady's and the Rock Pile. A total of 39 demonstrators, including seven whites, were arrested Sunday night at Brady's Restaurant where they sat three deep on the establishment's front steps, blocking the front door. Urges Humphrey, Farmer Head Forum Slate For Spring If M By JOHN GREENBACKER Senator Hubert Humphrey, lib eral Democrat from Minnesota, and integration leader James Farmer are among those sched uled to speak in Chapel Hill this spring for the Carolina Forum. Forum officials said difficulty had arisen in scheduling all of the speakers who have accepted, as most wish to speak in April. Farmer, national director of the Congress of Racial Equality,: is supporting and helping direct civil rights demonstrations in Chapel Hill. Forum Chairman John Ulfelder said newspaper columnist Drew Pearson and H. Stuart Hughes, YALE LAW INTERVIEWS A representative of the Yale Law School will hold interviews for Yale's Law department Wed nesday. Applicants should contact Anne Queen, 942-1212 or 933-2333 to set up appointments. The in terviews will be held in the of fice of the YWCA between 1 and 5 p.m. College YRC Names Hooks The College Council of North Carolina Young Republicans se lected Charles Hooks, UNC jun ior, by acclamation as 1964 Chairman at the annual con vention in Durham on January 31 and February 1. Hooks, chairman of UNC's Young Republicans, was a mem- CHARLES HOOKS ber of the National Federation of Young Republicans Campaign Committee. He has served as mid-eastern liaison for the N. C. College Council and was con vention chairman for the fall convention. He is Republican speaker's chairman for the UNC Mock Political convention to be held in April. Other officers of the College Council are Sally Raulston, vice chairwoman, WUNCG; Jim Ban croft, Wake Forest, vice-chairman; George Heath, Duke, re cording secretary; and Duke Jones, Campbell, treasurer. By MARGARET LANEY New laboratory facilities in the William M. Dey Building have updated foreign language study at the University. The laboratory, occupying most of the eastern side of first floor Dey, was installed this past Aug ust after several years of com mittee work. It was dedicated in September. Anthony G. LoRe, director of the foreign language laboratory, describes the new laboratory ar rangement as "a complex of lab oratories with different rooms for different purposes." The laboratory consists of three distinct systems: the auto matic (audio-active) system, which functions from a central control the "audio-passive" sys tem, which is manually operated by lab attendants; and the "pho netics" system, which is manu ally operated by the individual student. The basis for the automatic system is Chester-Dialog Equip ment, which provides telephone switching apparatus and pro gramming for 85 student dial positions. Students recite into micro phones and hear their voices -' , , t s s ' 'f ' 's J V Language pacifist history professor at Har vard University, have also ex pressed their desire to speak at the University this spring. Ulfelder said the Forum is working with the Young Repub lican Club in trying to secure GOP nomination hopeful Barry Goldwater for a speaking en gagement on Feb. 28. Goldwater will be in North Carolina Feb. 28-29 for the North Carolina Re publican convention. YRC official Gary Lowe said that because of Sen. Goldwater's light schedule and security dif ficulties, the possibility of his ap pearing here is slim. Rinaldi Murder Still A Mystery To Investigators Continued police investigation of the murder of Mrs. Lucille Rinaldi here on December 24 has produced no indications of who committed the crime. Chapel Hill police detective Howard Pendergraph has been investigating the case with SBI agent Frank Satterfield almost daily since the first of the year. Pendergraph said investigation would continue as long as the case went unsolved, but that no new leads about Mrs. Rinaldi's death had been uncovered yet. Mrs. Rinaldi, the wife of UNC graduate instructor Frank Ri naldi, was found dead of suffo cation in Rinaldi's North Street apartment the day before Christ mas. , Rinaldi was charged with murder but was released after Chapel Hill Recorder's Court Judge William Stewart found no probable cause in a preliminary hearing December. 31 . . ' ""We've - e e n t investigating everything, we can .think of," -said Detective Pendergraph. He ex plained "everything" as includ ing "one to another and back and forth, everything we can come up with." Between 10 and 15 people have been interviewed by the police, Pendergraph said. He would not name these people, but said they had been ques tioned in the hope that they could shed some light on the matter. Interviews continue, but "We still haven't come up with anything more 'than we had to begin with." SBI lab analyses of blood stons on a pair of trousers and a flashlight found in the Rinaldi apartment the. day of the killing have not been completed. Pen dergraph said he had received verbal, though unofficial word from Raleigh Friday that the blood found on the trousers was of type B. He could not say what this indicated, if anything, because he said he did not re member what the results of an autopsy on Mrs. Rinaldi's body revealed about her blood type. Pendergraph also said he did not know whether enough evi dence existed to warrant taking the case to a grand jury. He had yet to confer with District Solicitor Thomas Cooper about 'that, he said. electrically through earphones. The equipment gives the stu dent a high degree of fidelity, and he has only earphone and volume control to worry about. Console are used in two of the laboratories for supervised lab work. These instruments are an in valuable teaching aid, for the in structor is able to communicate either collectively or individually with his students. He can also "dial" programs for his class through the console. Three extra classrooms are connected to this automatic sys tem by means of dials and speak ers. Professors may dial pro grams on the regular schedule or special demand other items for classroom use. The audio-passive system is used for listening only. This lab oratory is generally used by stu dents who wish to listen to taped material not available on the automatic system. "But the heart of all three sys tems," LoRe said, "is the switch ing room and the recording room." The switching room is the cen ter of machine control, while the recording, room is used for preparing programmed tapes. Lab eei Free Throws Give UNC ACCWin By CURRY KIRKPATRICK Billy Cunningham's exciting passing was pretty much the whole show last night as an ad mittedly "ragged" North Caro lina defeated Virginia, 89-76. The final shooting statistics, which show the Tar Heels hit ting 54.1 per cent from the field, do not accurately tell the story of the Carolina perfor mance which was sluggish after a 16-day layoff. Cunningham matched his aver age (26) point-wise, but it was his deadly passing to the open men under and around the bas ket and his fine defensive work on the Cavaliers' 6-10 Rich Katstra that kept the. game out of the yawning stage. The UNC AllAmerican also had 17 re bounds. "We don't keep assists, but Billy had a passel out there to night," said Coach Dean Smith after his team had won its third straight conference game. "His passing was tremendous I'd say this was one of Cunning ham's finest games here." The Tar Heels, who are now in a three-way tie for the ACC's second place (with Maryland and South Carolina at 4-3), led 43-31 at the half and kept at least a nine-point bulge the rest of the game. Virginia came to 50-41 when reserve Jerry Sanders put in a lay-up with about 15 minute re maining. But Smith sent UNC back into the man-for-man de fense it had played most of the way, and the margin went to 15 as Cunningham converted a leap ing move for a three-point play and his 20th point. Chip Conner, who hit 19 points for the evening, brought the Cav- " aliers back on some sharp jump shooting, and it was 63-53 with over ten minutes left. But Caro lina scored eight straight to move it to 71-53 and sew up the (Continued on. Page 4) WUNC Plans New Program On University "This is Carolina," an inter view program picturing the spe cial services of the University available to the people of the State as a whole, as well as to the students, is one of several new series scheduled for WUNC radio. The first program, an interview with John Sanders, director of the Institute of Government, will be aired at 7:30 p.m. Wednes day. Subsequent programs, schedul ed for the same time each week, will show how the University serves the State through the News Bureau, Planetarium, Play makers, Memorial Hospital, Re search Administration, Commun ication Center, UNC Press and the Extension Division. James Wadsworth is the moderator. All tapes used for lab work are either live-recorded in two sound proof studios or taped. "We re-record even commer cial programs for our equip ment," LoRe said. "We always use native speakers for conver sational dialogues." But just what has been the in fluence of all this new and mod ern laboratory equipment on ac tual language teaching methods here at the University? "The student leans on the lab," LoRe said. "The lab serves as a teacher, brings him native speakers, and allows him more practice. "Laboratory work is a definite aid to foreign language study. There is a direct positive corre lation between language profici ency and conscientious lab at tendance." The new lab faculties have made possible further work with the audio-lingual method of lan guage instruction. "The audio - lingual method places emphasis on speaking and understanding a language above reading and writing," said LoRe. A post-World War II develop ment, the audio-lingual technique gained national momentum when Congress passed the National De Win f sis I t K f.KVS'. Z S SMASHING VICTORY? What appears to be a well placed punch by UNC's Bryan McSweeney during last night's game with Virginia actually isn't. The action came as McSweeney passed the ball over the shoulder of a Cavalier defender during the first period. Carolina went on to win, 89-76. Photo Ey Jim Wallace UNC Debate Team Takes 11th Place By EOT BOSMAS Two UNC students are com bining their efforts to make this year's debating team the winning est one in UNC history. Arguing their way to 25 -wins in el still, young season, Haywood Clayton, senior, and Bob Powell, freshman, are only three wins away from the school record of 28 wins. Three tournaments consisting of about 20 debates face the team before a try at the regional and, hopefully, the nationals. Although debating teams have never successfully won their point for a national rating system, UNC stands eleventh in the society, which consists of 116 member teams. Clayton may break an individ ual record this year as well, since he stands only two wins away from the UNC career re cord of 76. According to Clayton, the suc cess of the team depends on the toss of the coin, determining which side of the national topic the team will take. The national topic for this year is: "The federal government should guarantee an opportunity for higher education to all quali fied high school graduates." Clayton says he has high hopes as far as getting into the region als and thinks UNC has a good chance of winning a spot in the national finals to be held at West Point. "We should win enough to break the record of last year," he said. "We hope to make 40, that's our goals. As far as the region- improves Grades fense Education Act (NDEA). More emphasis was then placed on foreign languages as well as in other areas of study. The UNC Department of Ro mance Languages has been using a simple audio-lingual text pre pared by the Modern Language Association (MLA) for begin ning Spanish for the last three years. "In using this text," LoRe said, "the student first studies his les son and then practices it aloud. The most important feature of the method is oral practice." The MLA has also developed 24 films to accompany the dia logue lessons of this text. LoRe feels that these films are very helpful, because the student is able to visualize the dialogue he is memorizing. Lab emphasis is currently be ing placed on first-year work in French and Spanish. There are now 53 sections of 1 and 3x in these two languages, but LoRe estimate that by fall 1964 there will be 90 sections of Spanish, French, German, Italian, and Russian attending supervised lab. The more advanced language student spends less time in the supervised lab situation, but the I ' M 1 t ; r i 1 J:' i '' fr - . - A - V pi als go, I think there's a pretty good chance we'll go. We also have a good chance in the com petition, but when we get to the nationals, if we do, it all depends on the flip of the coin." Debate Team Battles Duke On Television UNC will debate with three other colleges over WBT-FM and WBTV in Charlotte as part of the station' regular Sunday pro gram, "Land of the Free." . Dr. Donald Springen, UNC debate coach and assistant pro fessor of English, will coordi nate the series. Other participants include Duke, Wake Forest and David son. The teams, consisting of two students and a coach from each school, will debate on subjects covered in the Foreign Policy Association's discussion series called "Great Decisions." Pro grams will be taped in advance. UNC will debate with Duke on Feb. 9 on "Is World Communism an Increasing Danger?," with Davidson on February 23 on "Can Stability be Achieved in the Middle East?", with Wake Forest on March 8 on "Is Cas tro's Cuba a Serious Threat to the Americas?" and with David son on March 22 on "Is the Present Concept of Foreign Aid Outmoded?" tape library provides innumer able tapes in literature, language, music, and civilization for his enrichment. In addition to its function as a teaching and learning center, the lab serves as a testing service. Lab facilities have been used in recent years by NDEA Institute Programs and the Peace Corps. The lab may be new, but its director is already looking to the future. "We never step our looking for changes," LoRe said, "We are constantly learning." He himself established in 1951 one of the country's first lan guage laboratories in the rear of a Delano, 4 Calif., high school classroom. Dey Hall has been wired for television in anticipation of even more advanced methods in lan guage teaching to be used in the future. Other laboratory personnel are Mrs. Martha (Cleveland, secre tary; Mrs. Donna Darden and Mrs. Jean Rose, office assist ants: Ronald Grieve, chief tech nician; Charles Hooks and John Palmer, technician - attendants; and Gail S. Troxler, Judith Mc Falls, Ronna Abbot and Diana Foote, attendants. i