Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 20, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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a.lUC. Library Serials Sept. Box. 870 C&apel BUI, H.C. Wanted! One secretary. Must be beauti ful, hopefully can paste and type well. Call DTII afternoons or 967 2383 after 11 p.m. Ask for dirty old ntan. s It's Close Only one more shopping day remains until "Beat Dok Day.' Students should be careful what they buy. Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service Mm Tbr- JCin.fr 0 Answers Hoover FBI Chief Hits Rights Leader BIMINI, Bahamas (AP) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said Thursday the FBI under the di rection of J. Edgar Hoover is "following the path of appease ment ... in the South." The Negro integration leader, smarting under criticism by Hoo ver, also accused the FBI chief of "faltering under the heavy burden and the criticisms of his office." His comments came in reply to Hoover's statement in a rare news conference Wednesday that King "is the most notorious liar in the country." The FBI, King said, "is follow ing the path of appeasement of political powers in the South. If this continues, the reign of ter ror in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia will increase rather than subside." King, who came to this tiny Bahamian island to write his speech accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, said he was certain Hoover cwould not have made such a vicious accusation without being under extreme pressure. . "This pressure," he said, "has come on the racial front and from the Warren Report raising seri ous questions about the effective ness of the FBI." In an exclusive interview with the Associated Press, King re peated some statements he had made earlier in a telegram to the FBI director. King drew support from six other Negro leaders, who told President Johnson they share King's views that the FBI has not provided protection for Negroes in the South. "We expressed our disagree ment with Mr. Hoover's charac terization of Dr. King," said Roy Wilkins, executive director of the National Association for the Ad vancement of Colored People. Wilkins said the Negro leaders expressed themselves incidental ly about King and the FBI dur ing an hour-long meeting with Johnson in Washington. He said Jchnson "simply listened and gave no comment and no opinion." King directs the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Hoover, in his news conference, said King had advised Negroes not to report civil rights viola tions to the FBI office in Albany, Ga., because the staff members were southerners. The FBI chief said King also refused to make an appointment with him to receive proof that four of the five Albany agents were born in the north. k i i ; ,. r r Commission Charge Gets Quick Response WASHINGTON UP) FBI Di rector J. Edgar Hoover drew a quick reaction Thursday with his criticism of the Warren Commis sion and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Hoover charged the commis sion with "a classic case of Mon day morning quarterbacking" in criticizing the FBI for not notify ing the Secret Service that presi dential assassin Lee Harvey Os wald was in Dallas, Tex. Allen W. Dulles, a member of .the, Warren Commission which investigated John F. Kennedy's assassination, told' a reporter he had no specific comment on Hoover's complaints about the re port. But Dulles, a former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, lauded Hoover's "great service" to the nation. A Review By ALAN BANOV and TIM REARDON Paul Winter took Chapel Hill by surprise. The 837 people at his con cert Wednesday night seempd ur-rcpared for the excitement raaiated by his jazz sextet. But it took only a few numbers be fore the UNC audience was arl--dlng them fervently. '-.y college entertainers ccr.::nunicate artificially with t!:? cudience by joking about 1.-1 brothels, homosexuals and f::::L.:i rivals. The Paul Win tit C:xtet just played. .r brought out the best i -rv - I It - J, J 1 f Jp J - ,'A w s y I ' i ' 1 ., - ty C ' " m ' - - i T' '' y '' " " 1 F " v - - k k ( v. 3 (y,r Axfe THE BIG APPLE is what the above members of preparations for the Alpha Delta Pi Sorority are working on. starts today at 3 Their youthful helper is aiding them in their Rinaldi Goes To Prison Under Sentence Of Life HILLSBORO UP) Bespectacl ed Frank Rinaldi, conviced of slaying his wife, was taken hand cuffed to Central Prison in Ra leigh Thursday after he was form ally sentenced to life imprison ment. Efforts to win him a new trial were immediately set in motion by defense attorneys Barry Win ston and Gordon Battle. They gave notice of appeal to the State Supreme Court, which is expect ed to hear the case next spring. Meantime, Rinaldi will remain in a cell on death row at Cen tral Prison pending the appeal. District Solicitor Thomas D. Cooper Jr. opposed a request that he be released on bond. "If he did in fact do what the jury said he did, I don't want him turned loose on the people of North Carolina," Cooper told Judge Raymond Mallard. Mal lard refused the bond plea. Rinaldi, 35, was a graduate student and part-time English instructor at UNC when his wife, Lucille, 34, was found slain in his apartment in Chapel Hill last Christmas Eve. The couple mar ried last July 31 after being child hood sweethearts in Waterbury, Conn. She was pregnant about 18 weeks when she died. Judge Mallard rejected motions that the verdict be set aside. He then denied a motion for a new trial. The jury of nine men and three women spared Rinaldi from the state's gas chamber when it recommended mercy in its ver dict Wednesday. A mercy request on a first degree murder convic tion carries an automatic life sentence under North Carolina KENNEDY MEMORIAL "An Essay On Death," a tele vised memorial to John F. Ken nedy, will be shown at 8 tonight on WUNC-TV. The program will not deal directly with Kennedy or t'Ae assassination, but will be a "poetic reflection" on' death of all men. inter feexte in each musician, as they played solos and their own compositions. All made fine attempts at stealing the show. Jeremy Stern, playing the flute an unusual instrument for a jazz band succeeded best. Uninhibited, he allowed his body to swing to the rhythm of his exciting notes. Stern sent the audience into chuckles by making his flute "talk" and perform other musi cal antics. He said later he ' preferred being funny musical ly on the stage to being humor ous in other ways. The classical guitarist, a product of the sextet's 1962 Latin American tour, was en law. Only a few persons were in the courtroom when Judge Mallard pronounced sentence. Rinaldi, continuing to show no visible emotion, was asked if he had anything to say. He replied, "No your honor." Attorney Winston told news men he spent 24 hours prepar ing Rinaldi for the possibility of a murder conviction. He said, "I told him not to break down." Winston said Rinaldi was sur prised at the verdict. He shook hands with his lawyers in a hall way back of the courtroom be fore he was hustled to a near by jail to prepare for the trip to Raleigh and prison. He said goodbye Wednesday to his father, Paul Rinaldi of Waterbury and a brother and uncle. Prison W'arden K. B. Bailey said Rinaldi would be kept in "a safekeeping cell." He added he would be allowed to exer cise periodically. eary And Tired, w Canadians Arrive After a long bus ride of 24 hours, the 26 Toronto Exchange students pulled into Chapel Hill last night. Getting "40 winks" of North Caro lina sleep filled their schedule for Thursday night. Beginning today the Canadians will be kept busy by their 26 UNC hosts. The official welcome will be given tonight by Chancel lor Paul Sharp at a banquet. "The Meaning of Freedom in the Aca demic Community" will be Dean of Men William G. Long's add ress for the evening. After the Duke-Carolina foot ball game, Gov. Terry Sanford will head an informal question and answer session with the ex change students and hosts in Morehead Lounge. "The. Exchange Program is in valuable to everyone taking part," trancing in singing "Girl from Ipanema" and other melodies from his native Brazil. In this country only a few months, he has already learned to sing part of his repertoire in Eng lish. Although the other band members were more than ade quate, the drummer played fantastically, performing one solo for 10 minutes. The sextet's first number, "Repeat," suggested a Dave Bruebeck inspiration, and Winter on saxophone present ed images of Paul Desmond. He confirmed such suspicions when interviewed later: "Des mond is my favorite alto-sax player." fro IO the Beat Dook parade which p.m. Photo by Jock Lauterer. Attorney Battle told Judge Mallard the verdict was "con trary to the weight of the evi dence." He said witnesses had offered conflicting testimony. "On one side of the coin," he said, was state witness Alfred L. Foushee, a Negro handyman. On the other side, Battle declared, was John F. Sipp and other de fense witnesses. Sipp told the court he was with Rinaldi on a shopping ; trip., from S:45ta.m. tQj, 1:35 p.m. the day Mrs. " Rinaldi : was killed. A pathologist set the time of death at between 10 a.m. and noon. Sipp said he and Rinaldi found the sprawled body of Mrs. Rinaidi when they returned to the apartment. A scarf was knot ted about her head and she had been beaten about te face and head. "On the weight of the eviden ce," Battle said, "the defendant could not have committed the crime." Roxanne Kalb, co-chairman of UNC Toronto Exchange said. She explained that the Toronto students are selected carefully. "High intelligence and a keen in terest in international affairs" are typical traits of the chosen Canadians. ' "These are students with ideas different from ours; the success of the discussion groups depend upon these differences," she said. COMBO PARTY The Graham Memorial combo party will be tonight, not Saturday night as previously an nounced. Little David and the Wanderers will play at 8 p.m. in the Rendezvous Room. The par ty is open to students and their dates. Asked if he was disappointed by the poor attendance, Win ter said the campus needed "more exposure' to modern jazz and all good music in general." "Trash" is his evaluation of popular music, including that of the Beatles. They're "good actors," Winter said, and they present a "very funny skit." But the English group is smart, he added, to be able to make so many millions. A personal friend of Bob Dylan, Stern said backstage that the folk singer is a "genius" as a writer, but he doesn't consider Dylan a singer in the "musical sense, but in the intellectual sense." xeiting Parade JBea Foot-Stomping Time Set Tonight At Fall Germans It'll be a foot-stompin' time tonight at 8 in Memorial Hall when the Brothers Four and Ian and Sylvia combine tal ents for the Fall Germans folk singing concert. ., Chance meetings and con siderable talent combined to make the two groups a success. Bob Flick, Dick Foley, Mike Kirkland and John Paine were fraternity brothers at the Uni-' versit yof Washington' when they started singing together. They decided to try it as pro fessionals and were an instant success with their recording of "Greenfields." Since then they have made other recordings and appeared on radio, television and the stage. Ian and Sylvia both worked for the same folk club in To ronto, Canada, in 1961 but they worked alternate nights. After a few performances they sang together and have worked as a unit since. Ian Tyson is a fine arts grad uate of the University of Brit ish Columbia. He couldn't find the graphics art designer's job he wanted, and ended up folk singing. Sylvia Fricker is a folklore scholar who grew up in a small Canadian town near the American border. Jef f Adams Gets Post Jeff Adams was named yester day as director of Campus Af fairs Department of Student Gov ernment. The announcement was made by Student Body President Bob Spearman. Adams will serve as coordina tor of the seven Campus Affairs Committees ,of Student Govern ment. Adams recently announced his resignation as University Party Chairman in order to devote "more time to academic respon sibilities." He was appointed to the post because of his past or ganizational efforts in campus af fairs. In announcing the appointment, Spearman said of Adams, "I feel that he can add much to the co ordination of the Campus Af fairs Department. I am most ap preciative of his willingness to join Student Government in this capacity." Neighborhood Peace Corps Is Launched WASHINGTON (AP) Sec retary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz launched the neighbor hood youth corps Thursday with the announced aim of helping young people who live economically on "dead - end streets." "This is one of the most im portant elements in the Presi dent's anti-poverty program," Wirtz said in formally an nouncing the program and naming to run it a Labor De partment official experienced in helping youths with the job problems, Jack Howard, 40. Wirtz said between $110 mil lion and $150 million will be spent in the first year of the program to help" train 150,000 boys and girls age 16 to 21 in both urban and rural areas. Up to one million youths in the nation need such help, he said, adding that the program will be concentrated on "not the easy cases but the hard ones" in training youths who, in many cases, have never held a job. The federal program, in co operation with state and local governments, will employ youths in "w ork w hich would not otherwise be done," Wirtz said. . .LDoojk Sit X war ( a WHAT! Somehow one of the Brothers Four got in the Ian and Sylvia picture. It doesn't matter, though since both groups will share the Memorial Hall stace tonight for the Fall Germans folk concert. Looks like singing and picking a'plenty. For Students At CC. A Matter Of 'When By KERRY SIPE DTII Staff Writer "It was never a matter of 'whether' we would become a member of the Consolidated Uni versity, but rather, 'when' we would become a member." John Scott, president of the student- body at Charlotte Col- j-lege, - said this week- that the students there are "pleased and proud" at the - possibility of be coming part of the greater Uni versity of North Carolina. . An announcement by Univer sity trustees Monday made it possible for Charlotte to become the fourth campus in the system, pending approval by the North Carolina General Assembly. Bonnie Cone, . president of the college, received a standing ova tion Monday night at a meeting of the Charlotte student legisla ture. "We wanted to let Dr. Cone know that we were 100 per cent behind her and her efforts in behalf of the college," said Scott. "We've all been aware of the possibility that it would happen for some time now," he said. "Everything that came out in the papers was followed closely by everyone. There has always been an interest about this around Charlotte." ' Student government has been aware for some time that the change was going to come about. The Charlotte student legislature is recently beginning to make constitutional changes which be came necessary when Charlotte moved from junior to senior col lege status. . "There will be a lot more changes to be made," said Scott, "but everyone is looking forward 930. . -X .jta " fSSs . 's ' ..--..'.', .A. i, ' I t ! - ! F 1 ' .Li ' ' ' ' . ' h . i - x ' " ' f, M WIPE-OUT! Well, not exactly. It is the dry ver sion of surfing and it is here demonstrated by land-surfers (1-r) Chauncey Roister Jr., Kenny III K 9 f t : Iti v v to it. We've always admired the student government organiza tion at Carolina. We will be look ing forward to working more closely with your student lead ers." Other Charlotte students are as enthusiastic as Scott. "I feel like sending President - Friday - a thank-ycu note," said Dick Helbein, a Charlotte senior. Helbein expressed concern that the other three UNC campuses would be hesitant to welcome Charlotte into the University family. "I've heard some talk, especially from Chapel Hill, that UNC did not want Charlotte Col lege as a member," he said. "I hope UNC, State and Woman's College will welcome us." Dave Nanney, president of the Charlotte debate team, agrees that the change "is going to mean (Continued on Page 4) Alan Dugan Hits Poetry Circuit A Pulitzer Prize winner who has been called the "Ingmar Bergman of the so-called younger poets" will appear here Dec. 3, as one of the readers of the North Carolina Poetry Circuit. Alan Dugan will be presented at 7:30 p.m. in Peabody Hall. The author of two volumes, "Poems" and "Poems 2," Dugan is a native New Yorker. He received the 1962 National Book Award and the Rome Fel lowship of the American Academy ot Arts and Letters for 1962-63. MIX I n ; i r 0 TM Off T Pep Rally Set Today On Franklin It's here at last. Friday. The weekend of the season's last football game Till! t;am. After a week of ruiirr-s. or worrying about next week's quizzes, UNC is ready for boine fun. Unofficially, it started lat night at the Grill. O.Ticially. it starts at 3 this afternoon with the Beat Dook parade. Betsy Ross, junior from Con cord, will have the place of honor on the queen's float in the Pi Kappa Alpha-sponsored parade. Betsy, Everett residence hall's entry in the Beat Dook beauty contest, was chosen queen from a group of live finalists. The other four women, who will comprise her court, are: Denni Saunders, Kappa Delta; Pam Hooper. Phi Gamma Del ta; Zackie Murphy, Delta Delta Delta; and Karen Gibbons, Phi Kappa Sigma. The finalists were chosen Tuesday night by judges C. O. Cathey, dean of student af fairs, Mrs. Fred Schroedcr, wife of an assistant dean of men and A. J. Beaumont, cam pus police chief. Today the campus abounds with students who never want to see another serap of crepe paper in their lives. Most of them worked lafe into the night finishing the 25 floats en tered in the parade. A few will probably be adding final touches when the entourage leaves Woollen Gym and heads down Raleigh St. toward Frank lin. The UNC, Chapel Hill Hk;h and Lincoln Ilih bands will provide foot-stomping, hand clapping music for the specta tors. This usually serves to keep the feet and hands warm, but it seems pure enthusiasm will have to be the incentive for noise-making activities this summer-fall. Naval and Air Force KOTC units will do some foot stomp ing of their own in the parade. Students, and other specta tors who feel moved by the spirit, can vent some anti Dook wrath by taking part in the pep rally which will be held in Franklin Street imme diately after the parade. Tonight's officially listed ac tivity includes the Germans folksinging program of Ian and Sylvia and the Brothers Four in Memorial Hall and a combo party at 8 in the Rendezvous Room of Graham Memoiial. Little David and the Wander ers will play. I v. 5 Brown, and Jim Gwathmey who were tryin their skill yesterday afternoon outside BaUJe-Vance-Parker residence hall. Photo by Jock Lauterer.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1964, edition 1
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