tJ.n.C. Library Serials Dept. T5oi 070 Chapul Hill. B.C. WEATHER Partly cloudy and warmer today. 'PEANUTS' A choice must be made by the students. See page 2. Monday, occasional rain liktly and mild. High today, 55 65. FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE VOL. LXV NO. 70 Office in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 19S7 Complete Wire Service Wffl Idfetr O Brennan High Man For NCAA Champ s By BILL KING The Carolina Tar Heels started slow, picked up vicious momen tum, then slacked off again and in the process gained their 36th straight basketball victory with a 70-58 victory over the South Caro lina Gamecocks in Woollen Gym yesterday. The slow start was due to the Gamecocks' clever little game of 'hold onto the ball.' the momentum quickened about midway the first half and lasted until midway the second with all the Tar Heels supplying about equal scoring punch, and the slight relapse came in the final ten minutes when the Gamecocks got hot, and the Tar Heels got cold. That was about the story as Frank McGuirc's charges continued tn nHrl lustor tn that fabulous winning streak which started over a year ago. It was the fourth time Gamecocks during the streak. LEAPING LEE Lee Shaffer (12) leaps overthe outstretched arm of South Carolina's Dick Hoff man (35) for two points. Shaffer hit for a total of eight points in the 70-58 win. (Norm Kantor Photo) Self Defense Considered By Jury In Its Acquittal Of Buddy Payne itv i;i itotvi,.v! VrUt;iy niijht i the annual mock 1nt tin jury rij-iU'd lour possihlo vcrdii t in rYltitn n filth, th;t of not iruiltv. .tuiiinst thi- state's thaiuc th.it Buddy Payor c 1 1 c t wil fully, with miihic and aforcthouuht kill I'ctt r.rcnn.m. JiuUc M.ih nlm Scawcll explained liii' iiiciiiin-S nl tin- possible ver dict; to the jurors. and observers lcl his cliaruo enabled the jury to !': urn the not uuilty verdict. T ir state had attempted to prove I'.iViie went to the scene of the kill in:, with a iistu in his pocket to murder Brennan. Testimony from I cause it was felt . Payne had acted i r.jiil WiUimiham Implied that Payne i in self defense. .nl threatened both her and Uren- nan as early as Sunday liefore the Villiim. The second-decree charge omitted tie premeditation requirement and included only malice, which was de fined as hate and a condition of m. nil to take another's lite unlaw fully. Manslaughter includes neither maiicc. not deliberation, but implied incidental killing This possibility was discarded by the jurors, one of them disclosed after the trial, be- The defense testimony attempted .nd apparently did show Payne's Brinnin Speaks Of British As 'Rebels Without A Cause' lly VIRGINIA SANDIlXiK 'Rebels without a cause ts a good name for the angry young men of postwar Britain." said Prof. John Malcolm Brinnin. delivering his lee tore on "The New British Poets and the Ancry Voting Men" Friday night in (errard Hall. ' The poets aie not angry young men. In their quiet rooms they speak softly. They do not make pub lic spectacles of themselves as the aiv.'.ry young men sometimes do," flic prof asserted. Th name "angry young men" is attached to people who do things that others only dare to think about. They are not an organization of people; instead, they are a diverse group, which reflects a new note in English literature, he explained. "These people are products of the tune. They are of the lower middle class, educated (hiring the war years when class levels were levied, ami bewildered now that class dis tinction has returned in Britain," said Prof Brinnin They have been t '.-.reats to Miss Willincham and 1 1 rlcr rennm were jokingly delivered. In the words of witness Fred Swear irgen. "lie said them to blow off steam." Defense witness Betty Hoffman : neatly torpedoed prosecution wit ness saran van eyns iesumun by declaring that 'she was in a per fect position to see the fight be tween Payne and Brennan and that she saw Brennan shove Payne to the ground. She added that it seemed to her that Brennan was the aggressor throughout the light. Payne verified this testimony on the stand. He said he was surprised to meet Brennan. that Brennan yelled to him. "You're going to see my woman," .and that Urennan shoved him to the ground. Payne added that when Brennan a knife from his belt, he Negro Rapes Wake Forest Coach's Wife WuXSTON-SALEM, Dec. 14 tv A Negro service station attendant today was charged with raping Mrs. Al DePorter, attractive youn wife of the Wake Forest College assistant basketball coach. Capt. YV. It. Burke, chief, of Win ston-Salem detectives, said Charles Moore Jr., 27, signed a atatement "which contained very little dif ference" from the story related to police by the 25 year-old Mrs. De whose husband was the captain of the Wake Forest basket ball team in 1955 56. as saying Moore had brought the DePorte. family car from a service station to their apartment and insisted he drive on the return trip to the station. Mrs. DePorter said the Negro threatened her with a knife and attacked her on a deserted dirt road. Winston - Salem Police Chief James I. Waller said the side road is in "as isolated section as can be found within the city limits." GM's Slate The following uctivities are m h. iluli il for (iraliam Memorial toil ay: (1MAB. 7-12 p.m.. Main I. mi n m", F.piscopal, 9:t a.m.. Williams-Wolfe; C hristian Science, (t: IVUi::;o a.m.. (irail Uoom; Friend-. II a.m.. (irail Koom; Presbyterian, 9: 4.i a.m.. Koland Parker Lounge 1, 2. 3; Student J'arty. 9 : .10-1 0 : :i0 p.m.. W'oodhouse Conference Room; Community t hutch. 11:1.1 a.m., Beiitlt svou Koom; Presbyterian Choir, 9:1" am., HeinJeHViiiii ItiMim, graduated from the "red brick uni versities' of Great Britain, universi ties other than Oxford and Cambridge.' "Aside from fighting the class dis- ; drew Unctions, these young journalists j Payne tried to wrest it from him. find it necessary to fight the desire In the struggle Brennan apparent ly the average British public for ly rolled onto the weapon, he saidd. horror in its daily newspapers. On j Payne testified that he had re one day. a British new spaper was I solved the day of the killing to for !).") percent police records on sex j the whole "mess" between he crimes This newspaper has a cir-I and Miss W'illingham. He said he dilation of seven million." he added. Several nicknames have been at tached to the young writers. "Mes siahs of the milk bars." is one. Somerset Maughm put it this way: T consider them stum." Important members of this group ere Kingsley Amis. Colin Wilson. .John Wayne and John Osborne. The tempers of these men turn on three factors: poverty, lack of opportun ity and the sense of the war and the hydrogen bomb. Continuing, he pointed out that the ; philosophy of these writers is that "it is the young writer's duty to have a profound sense of responsi bility, a responsibility to write in a way that will arouse people from satisfaction with the world as it now is " As yet. the angry young men have not written much. "The poets are of a quieter na ture. They have published antho logies, which have served to stimul ate interest in contemporary Eng lish literature. "Dylan Thomas was one of the radical poets. The rest are mostly librarians, editors or teachers. They I live in or near London, with the (exception of a few. They have been j graduated from both Oxford and ! Cambridge and the 'red brick' uni i v crsities," he concluded, Capt. Burke said Mrs. DePorter told them she freed herself and drove to her apartment and a friend notified police. Burke said Moore left on foot, went to a serv ice station where he had been em ployed previously, and had a friend telephone police he wanted to surrender. The police captain said through directions provided by Moore, the knife was found about 20 or 30 feet off the dirt road and about 200 feet down the road lrom where the attack occurred. the Tar Heels have beaten the South Carolina was tough, the Tar Heels were tougher. The North Carolinians grabbed an 11-9 lead with 10:48 left in the first half and never gave it back. But. the boys from the Palmetto State j kept fighting back as evidenced in the final 10.48. Carolina held a 53-33 lead with 10:38 remaining, but at 2:53 the scoreboard read 64-55 in favor of the Tar Heels. From that point the McGuirc- men took but one shot from the floor and that was Tommy Ream's two-pointer with -four seconds to go. Harvey Salz in the meantime had hit four free throws to build the Tar Heel back to a respectable 10 point margin. Top man for the Tar Heels was forward Pete Brennan. but practic ally everybody got in the act. Bob Cunningham hit 14. his replace ment Harvey Salz stripped for 12. Kearns poured in ten. Dick Kepley had nine and Lee Shaffer had eight. The Gamecocks' got the first basket after three minutes of th.? first half. From there, the lead changed hands four times before fhc Tar Heels finallv went aheac. for good. The Tar Heels had 12 point advantage, 36-23 at halftime and that was just about the mar gin they had held throughout the last ten minutes of the half. Three quick baskets by Cunning ham, Kearns and Kepley at the start of the second half gave the Tar Heels a 41-23 advantage but the McGuiremen could never get that 20 point advantage until 9:22 had elapsed in the second period. A field goal by Cunningham made it 51-33. Mike Callahan nit ior See TAR HEELS Page 4 wM W? I KEARNS HITS Scrappy Tommy Kearns drives in and hits for two against South Carolina. Tom my scored ten points in Carolina's 36th victory in a row. Trying in vain to break up the play is the o , , . . e , ,jii (Norm Kantor Photo) Gamecock s Bob Franti, (41). v"""1 NSA Urges That Harding invite Former Negro Student To Return RALEIGH A regional conference of the National Student Association urged here Saturday that Charlot te's Harding High School student body invite a humiliated Negro girl back to classes there. The girl, 17-year-old Dorothy Counts, withdrew from the Charlot te High school soon after she en- tion Saturday, said Harding students tered last September at the order of recently demonstrated their favor the Charlotte School Board. The of Miss Counts' return when they school board s ruling was based on gave Dr. Frank P. Graham a stand the N. C. Pupil Assignment Act . ling ovation after he had addressed Delegates to the Caronnas-Vir- j ginia regional conference of NSA, in passing the readmissions resolu- i Men's Glee Club, Choral Club To Present Concert Tuesday the Harding student body. Dr, Grahairv- former president of the University of North Carolina, urged in his address that the Ne gro girl be allowed to resume her education at Harding High School. The Chapel Hill Choral Club; program with a group of ! and the UNC Men's Glee Club will went to the Tri-Delt house to get class notes from Miss Molt Butler. The defendant further testified that he had possession of a pistol that night because he had just ob tained it from his roommate to do some target shooting.. which he said he had often done in the past. His roommate Fred Swearingen substantiated Payne's statement. Miss Hoffman said Payne appear ed shocked after rising from the ground and seeing Brennan remain .'till. She said she heard Payne say sorrowfully. "I didn't know he had a knife." Payne testified under cross-ex amination by the state that he fig ured he could get back into the good graces of Miss W'illingham by slowing her he was the man of love he had supposed. "I thought I'd scare her to get her to see something better in me," he said. On the stand Miss W'illingham, attired in a close-fitting brown sheath dress, said Payne saw her in the library Tuesday before the killing and loudly cried, "If I can't have you nobody can.'" She said Payne said something about an apology and accused her of leading hci on and two-timing him. Miss W'illingham admitted under See TRIAL Page 3 Moore, who commutes to his work at the service station here from High Point, made no denial. police said. The rape warrant was signed by Det. Sgt. J. H. Lcntz. Moore was held without bond for arraignment in Municipal Court on Tuesday. He will be giv en a preliminary hearing in the same court on Friday, DePorter was notified immedi ately and hurried home. Phi Mu Alpha Fraternity To Go Christmas Caroling Christmas carolers from Phi Mu Alpha, honorary music fraternity, will make a round of houses and dormitories here Sunday night, be ginning at 8 o'clock. The carolers will wind up their tour at Gravely Sanitorium and Memorial Hospital. A 10-piece brass band will ac company the groups on its caroi ir.g tour. The brass band will rep resent some of the festivities char acteristic of older Yuletide cele brations. Phi Mu Alpha fraternity members will sing several rarely heard English carols. present a Christmas concert on Tuesday at 8 p.m. The program under the direction of Dr. Joel Carter will be given in Hill Music Hall. The featured work will be the "Christmas Oratoria" of Camille Saint-Saeas to be performed by the Choral Club. This work, one of the composer's earliest, was written in 1863. The following so loists will be heard in the Ora torio": sopranos. Gladys Teague, Barbara Peacock and Quillian White; mezzo-sopranos. Dolores Edwards and Inge Rader; altos, Marilyn Zschau and Helen Jones. Tenors, James King and Gene Strassler; basses, Roy Sommer fpld Everett Hall and Edgar vom . . . r, T..: J, I Lenn. Harpists ;uzann uavius and Emily Kellam , and organist j Lee Bostian will accompany the ; "Oratorio lour French Christmas nieces. A -5th century Gloria by Dufay will be followed by three carols: Noel de Frere Jacques arranged by Pen dleton, Le Sommeil de l'Enfant Jesus arranged by Gevaert, and Pat-a-pan arranged by Davis. The second group of numbers vill be sung by the Glee Club and will open with a fifteenth century Ave Maria by Arcadelt. Miss Counts became one of the first Negroes to attend a formerly all-white North Carolina high school when she entered Harding in the fall. She voluntarily withdrew, how ever, after demonstrators spat and threw articles at her. In passing the UNC delegation sponsored resolution, the conference voted to send copies of it to the Harding High School student body ip:esident and to the school princi pal thefe. The readmissions resolution was The familiar carol. Bring a Torch among several passed on the tinai bv Jcanette Isabella and arranged day of three-day conference held at by Davison, will follow. the N. C. State College Student The next number, Thou Must -T building here. Others passed Leave Thou Lowly Dwelling, is included: . from the "L'Enfance du Christ" j 1. A resolution affirming the be of Hector Berlioz. The carol, The , lief that a student-operated honor Babe Divine, arranged by Fox-; system is both feasible and desirc- Strangwavs. will conclude the , able. group. Familiar Christmas carols will also be included in the program The audience will be asked to j-in the Choral Club and Glee The Choral Club will open the i Club in singing them. Summer Job Opportunities Open At Placement Service UNC students desiring summer applying later for permanent em Buckets Of Paint And Them Good Ole Days! The judge remembered when he was a college student and the rivalry between Carolina and Duke, so he was indulgent with Carolina students caught with a bucket of paint and brush on Woman's College campus. The judge, William M.Poteat of Municipal-County Court, chimed the two 17-year-old students for picking Woman's College for their proposed statue painting. "Why," asked Judge p'oteat of William Honeycutt and Richard Martin of Chapel Hill, "didn't you think of taking that paint over to Duke instead of Woman's College?" The boys remained silent as the judge continued. . . Back when I was a student at Carolina, it was customary, if there was any painting to be done, to do it over at Duke." He then fined the pair SI and costs each. THE GREENSBORO DAn,Y NEWS, jobs have been asked to register with the Placement Service in 204 Gardner Hall as soon as possible. The bureau is now assembling in formation about opportunities for summer employment. The opportunities are many and varied. More and more businesses. organizations,' and governmental agencies are sponsoring training programs for sales, accounting, of fice work, research, and social work. These not only offer an income for the summer but also good work experience, so important to Coed Open House The Smith-Evergreen Christ mas Open House, as reported in yesterday's Tar Heel, will be held in the parlor of Smith Dorm with coeds from both Smith and SmitKEvergreen par ticipating. Time for the event is today from 3 to 5 p.m. plovment. according to the Place ment Service. Already, many of the companies have set up dates to visit the campus. Not so lucrative, but offering good experience and fun, are camp jobs. Representatives from several of these camps visit the campus every year. Resorts in western North Caro lina, New England. Canada, and in the West offer hundreds of oppor tunities for woldbe waitresses, bellhops, desk clerks, and social counselors. The Service has ad dresses and descriptions of many of these. Information on opportunities in social service projects, work in mental hospitals, crop measure ment, recreation and commission sales is also available. Students who want summer jobs should start looking early, reports the Placement Service. After March most of the training pro grams are filled, and resorts are swamped with applications. 2. A resolution urging that foreign students studying in the United States not be charged unduly high tuition at state supported institu tions. 3. A resolution urging that a) I secondary schools in this region of NSA increase and strengthen their requirements in both college pre paratory and in vocational courses; ib that requirements for high school education should be , set up by each respective state education al boards on a level that would de velop each high school student's ability to gain the maximum from their high school education; and 3i that colleges in this region raise their requirements for entrance in order to eliminate important courses of a secondary school nature. Story Of AA? Could this be the story of Al coholics Anonymous? Wilson Library reports that one tray in the public catalog is labeled: "Hangover (to) Happiness." IN THE INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: Miss Betty Webster and Roger Foushee, Robert Bernhardt, Rob ert Easley, William Poplin, Wil liam Allen, Arthur Fountain and Jerry Partirck, . . r-. , r i

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