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Ser-UU 5 apt, Baz S7Q Wkt The Weather Sunny and Mild Greenfield Hill Edition 1 Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CABOLINAS ATURD AY, APRIL 11, 1964 United Press International Service mbroiled With Civil Mi islatuare 17 1 I I I I I II II Leg is I , , I18 3 V, ' vi if W 1 ft"-"nnMnY n: ifiiinumi iniMmwifiinTTw imiMfiMMMMnnwiiiiiiinii FOOTBALL? It was a wild afternoon in flere, number 74 on the Blue Bruisers moves in Kenan Stadium yesterday afternoon as the girls for a tackle. went to it in their Powder Puff football game. Photo by Jim Wallace Jrowaer Pof Game; At Least Umiquie By EVE IIIGGINS The final score was 6-0 and Kenan Stadium has never seen anything like it before! Billy Galanti's Blue Bruis ers captured the powder puff football title on a 35-yard run by Sally "Zip Top" Canby. The losing Red Rompers, led by Coach Harrison Merrill, in tercepted several passes most of them from referees Paul Chused and John D wight. Besides cutting fancy figures, the girls played rough 'n tough football. The Blue Bruis ers gained 36 yards rushing; the Red Rompers, minus 15 yards. 200 fans and one St. Bernard watched as the Bruisers, led by Shirley "Punchy" Patterson, Nancy "Rampage" Rammage, Sally "Cement" Nixon and "Zip Top" Canby raced down the field chasing their coach es. Those who wondered why the Bruisers took so much tilme in the huddle discovered that with two coaches, Galanti and Richie Zarro, it took twice as long to write down tele phone numbers. In the first quarter, Sis Graver and Kay "Swivel Hips" Hoyle battled for possession of the penalty flag. Carol "High Life" Miller was penalized for failure to yield and "Ram page" Ramage was offsides. At the half, Bruiser coach Zarro said, "The game has been slow, but I expect better things in the second half. We'll start sending 'em around the Election Districts And Polling Places Listed The following are the election dis tricts and polling places as established in the General Election Laws for next , Tuesday's election. Men's Dist I area outside corporate ' limits of Chapel Hill and Carrboro; vote '. at Y-Court or Victory Village housing office. Men's Dist II all buildings not own ed by UNC and in area bounded by Col- ' umbia St. on west and Chapel Hill city limits on north, south and east ; vote at . . Y'-Court or GM. Men's Dist III area bounded by . Cameron Ave. '(south) Columbia St. , (east) and Chapel Hill limits (north and , west) and area within city limits of Carrboro; vote at Y-Court or Scuttle- ' butt. Men's Dist IV area bounded by Col ombia St. (east) Cameron Ave. (north) and Chapel Hill limits (west and south) ; . vote at Carolina Inn and Naval Armory- Men's Dist V Old East, Old West, B-V-P, and Carr and Memorial Hall; vote at respective dorms. Residents of Carr vote in Old East; Memorial Hall, S Old West. 1 Men's Dist VI Ruffin, Mangum, end!" Statistics at the end of the first half were Bruisers, no yardage, Rompers, 10 yards rushing and three 15 yard penalties for a net gain of minus 35 yards; coaches, no luck yet. Romper Sis Craver, termed "really fast" by Coach Merrill, was tackled by Carol "Moose" Holt as she swept around left end. In defense, according to Coach Galanti, it's what's up front, that counts, and the Bruisers have got it. Referee Paul Chused was loudly booed when he attempt ed to throw Harrison Merrill out of the game for offensive holding. His "Red Rompers" came to his defense and chased Chused across the field. A bribe to Referee Dwight rein stated him, however. It was third down in the third quarter when Sis Craver, tremendous on passing, was tripped by "Rampage" Ram mage. Her pass was almost in tercepted by Barbara "Fender Bender" Lender. Later in the quarter, Sally "Zip Top" Canby intercepted Roxanne "Skyscraper" Kalb's pass and ran a 35-yard touch down. The attempt to kick the extra point, permitted by the referees in spite of all rules to the contrary, was no good. Team spirit was tremendous and coaches stood behind their teams all the way staring! Pat "Groggy" Szolscek called the signals for the Bruisers, and Carver quarterbacked the A 4 f -x. Rompers. As the Bruisers kicked off to the Rompers, Madeline "Tattletale" Gray downed the ball. Catherine "Choo-Choo" Lane ran the ball to the 45 yard line of the Bruisers. Craver then sent "Swivel Hips" Hoyle around left end. Time was called when Hoyle was in jured on the play, so that the referees could thoroughly in vestigate the injury. They em phasized the danger of playing .the game without padding. The Red Rompers were penalized later for roughing the referees. The "Statue of Liberty" play was used often and successfully by the Romp ers, though they never seemed to get anywhere with it. A highlight of the game was Joy "Sugar" Cain, who tripped over the football when receiv ing a pass. Referees repeatedly warned each other against unnecessary roughness in handling players, but the coaches kept a zealous eye on the action. The winning coaches were carried and dragged off the field by the proud Bruisers. They were delighted. Coach Merrill's comment at the end of the game was "What can I say, we lost! But what a team!" The coaches are happy, the teams are tired, the spectators are sunburned and the Junior Class is richer. What more can you ask? And what it was, was football? I Manly, Grimes, Emerson Stadium; vote at respective dorms. Emerson Stadium vote at Ruffin. Men's Dist VII Graham, Aycock, Stacy, Everett, Lewis; vote at respec tive dorms. Men's Dist VIII Joyner, Alexander, Connor, Winston ; vote in respective dorms. Conner vote in Winston- Men's Dist IX Avery, Parker, Tea gue; vote in respective dorms. Men's District X Ehringhaus; vote at Ehringhaus or Y-Court. Men's Dist XI Craige; vote at Craige or Y-Court. Women's Dist I Residents of Victory Village, and buildings not owned by UNC; vote at Y-Court and GM. '. Women's Dist II Alderman, Mclver, and Kenan; vote in respective dorms. Kenan vote in Mclver. Women's Dist III Spencer, Smith, and Whitehead; vote in respective dorms. Women's Dist IV Nurses Dorm; vote at Nurses Dorm. Women's Dist V East Cobb, West . Cobb ; vote in respective dorms. Chilean Literacy Project: Stray Greeks Wash Cars Want to see girls wash in pub lic? The Stray Greeks, led by head washerwoman Susan Zehmer, will conduct a car wash today at Barclay's Texaco gas station on the comer of Franklin and Columbia Streets. MacArthur On View The old soldier, a combat general in three great wars, will be buried with full mili tary honors Saturday in the marble rotunda of a century old building, selected in 1960. as the "General Douglas Mac Arthur Memorial." Friday was designated by Norfolk Mayor Roy B. Martin as a day of mourning. All day under a bright sun, as they had through the night, mourners trooped along City Hall Ave.,., and past the open casket in the memorial. Senator BALTIMORE (U P I) A would-be assassin shot Mary land's only Negro state sena tor, Mrs. Verda Welcome, 48, from ambush early Friday and police launched a dragnet for a Negro who tried to break into her house earlier in the week. Two of the five 32-caliber bullets grazed Mrs. Welcome's foot and hip. The three others shattered the windows of her automobile. She said that although the would-be killer fired at almost point-blank range she did not see him as he walked up to her automobile as she was re turning home, nor when he fled after the shooting. Policies CHICAGO (UPD Sen. Bar ry Goldwater said Friday night the United States under ad ministration policies is risking defeat in the cold war and a future with "no choice but surrender or holocaust." He said the nation has no clear goal nor understandable course in foreign relations and is reaping "the fruits of a poli cy that has tried to buy friends rather than stick to principles." Goldwater attacked what he called a "laggard leadership" in an address prepared for de livery at a Youth for Gold water rally four days before the Illinois presidential pri mary. His speech was to be telecast live throughout the state by stations in six cities. Troops Withdraw WASHINGTON (UPD The United States announced Fri day it will withdraw 7,500 front-line combat troops the first yet from German soil starting next month. The Defense Department said these troops include nearly the last of the reinforcements rushed in for the 1961 Berlin crisis, now no longer needed. The pullout still will leave 233,500 men in Germany, or the six combat divisions the United States has promised its NATO Allies it will keep there. "The West German govern ment was fully informed and made no objections," one offi cial said. In Bonn, Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's government said it "fully supports the de Benefits from the big washup will go to the University of Con ception in Qiile to help finance the Chilean student literacy campaign. This caropaiga has been backed by the United States National Student Association, f So if your car is at ail dirty, get clean with Zehmer. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By late afternoon, more than 25,000 persons had entered the rotunda where the gray coffin lay on a raised cata falque over the circular crypt that will be the tomb of Mac Arthur and his widow, Jean. I The memorial was opened to the public shortly after 6 p.m. (EST) Thursday and remained opened through the night. Only in the hours just before dawn did the line of mourners di minish and by mid-morning it again extended for about four blocks, with people standing four abreast. Attacked Mrs. Welcome had returned to her home from a religious meeting in downtown Balti more. She reached into the back seat to get some papers as the first bullet smashed through a window. It missed her. So did the second. The third and fourth bullets grazed her, and the fifth missed. She said it was not until the second bullet was fired that she realized someone was try ing to kill her. "At first I thought it was just something else going on and I just happened to be in the way," she said. "When the second bullet fired I realized it was happening to me." Attacked The Arizona senator and Sen. Margaret Chase Smith, (R.-Maine), were the only can didates on the ballot in the Il linois presidential preference primary. Write-in campaigns for former Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon and Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge were scrapped on orders from Nixon and from- Lodge's campaign managers. Goldwater was regarded an overwhelming favorite in Il linois, which was termed "Goldwater country" by both major contenders for the Re publican governor nomination Charles H. Percy, chairman of the 1960 GOP National Con vention platform committee, and state Treasurer William J. Scott. cision" and that "we feel the action will not harm Wsetern defenses here." Indications here, however, were that West Germany, which has vigorously opposed any planned U.S. troop with drawals in the past, reluctant ly agreed this time not to raise any objections. The pullout was expected to ease the U.S. balance of pay ments deficit slightly by elimi nating an estimated $10 mil lion a year in gold losses. The Defense Department stressed that the pullout next month of three artillery batta lions, an armored battalion and an armored cavalry regiment involves 5,100 men "in excess of the U.S. commitment to NATO." Rules Suspension Is Beaten By Straight Party Voting Nathaniel Fight Opens Up Again By GARY BLANCIIARD Controversy has been re kindled in the case of Dennis Nathaniel, dark-skinned UNC graduate student from India who was denied treatment at Moses Cone Hospital on Easter Sunday after he injured his nose in an athletic match there. A nurse who said she was on duty at the time has written a letter to the editors of several newspapers challenging Na thaniel's account of the facts surrounding the incident, which received widespread at tention. Queried about the matter, Nathaniel said the nurse's facts "are hot correct." A telephone check with other persons close to the mat ter supported Nathaniel's ver sion of what happened. Hospital employes contacted about the matter, including the nurse who has challenged Na thaniel's account, were highly reluctant to discuss it with a reporter. The nurse, whose let ter asked that only her ini tials be printed, refused to dis cuss it. Nathaniel was turned away from the hospital with the sug gestion that he go to the Negro hospital, " L. - Richardson, for treatment. After receiving emergency treatment for a fractured nose at the Negro institution, Na thaniel returned to Chapel Hill and was admitted to the Stu dent Infirmary for several days. He has since been released and is reported mending well. Benjamin Cone, president of the Cone Hospital Board of Trustees, and Harold L. Bettis, director of the hospital, have publicly apologized for the in cident, ascribing it to a pos sible error on the part of the nurses. "They were doing their best under the circumstances to carry out instructions from the hospital's board of trustees for the handling of such cases in a manner which the trustees con scientiously have felt to be in the best interest of the com- cunity as a whole," their state ment said. Cone personally apologized in a visit here Thursday. , The nurse's letter, which contained an apology to Na thaniel, said: "Since Moses H. Cone Hos pital has been so widely criti cized on the treatment of Den nis Nathaniel, I feel it is time that the true facts are told. I am the nurse who was on duty in the Emergency Room and I Mallard Trial of almost a thousand cases stemming from racial demonstrations is scheduled to resume in Orange County Su perior Court Monday as Judge Raymond Mallard returns to the bench. All respondents must be in court Monday morning when their cases are called, according to the Sheriffs Office. In a three-week session end ing March 20, only three cases had been completed. Each was a jury trial. Orange County's criminal court dockets are sparse. By law, the county holds four one-week regu lar terms of criminal court a year. ROSS IS INSTALLED Dr. Robert A. Ross of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology of the UNC School of Medicine was recently in stalled as president of the North Carolina Chapter of the American College of Sur geons. The chapter is conducting a two-day spring meeting this week in Chapel HilL feel justly qualified to state them. "When this man entered the emergency room ... he was walking and came immediately to the desk. He was covering his nose with a cloth on which there was some blood, but when I removed the cloth his nose was not bleeding; it was swollen. The pupils of both eyes were equal. The patient was asked if the blow had knocked him unconscious and he stated it had not." Nathaniel said, "The facts stated are not correct. I did not walk up to the desk, my friend B. K. Ishrish (also a UNC graduate student from India) helped me walk into the room. "I was not attended at all. No one looked at my nose or even spoke to me." The nurse's letter continued: "I was not informed of Mr. Na thaniel's nationality, and since the hospital policy has always been to refer patients of the negro race who were not ser iously injured to L. Richard son Hospital, I explained the policy to him and suggested that he go there for treatment." Nathaniel said he went to the hospital with, two white women and his friend Ishrish. He said one of the white wom en went into the hospital with Ishrish while he waited with the driver, Mrs. Judy Madry, in the car. "Mr. Ishrish came back in a few minutes and helped me into the emergency room," Na thaniel said. "My nose was still bleeding and I kept the cloth to my nose. "The white lady who had gone inside was talking with several nurses when we came in. The nurses were explaining to the white lady how to get to the Negro hospital. I was feeling a little dizzy. "The white lady came to us and said very politely, 'Let's go back to the car.' . We got back in the car and Mr. Ish rish asked the lady if I was refused treatment because of the color of my skin. "She said, 'We are trying to do away with this problem.' " Nathaniel said they returned to the playing' field to get someone who knew the way to the Negro hospital, then went there and was treated. "The Negro doctor asked me if I had gone to Moses Cone Hospital. I said yes, but I was directed here for treatment. He said he was sorry this hap pened to me. He said he would talk to the people at Cone Hos pital about the matter." Returns Under ideal conditions, a Su perior Court can get through about ten jury trials a week, District Solicitor Thomas D. Cooper said. If the civil rights cases went along at this pace and followed the Orange regular court sched ule, it would take years to try all the Chapel Hill cases, he said. The debate that is slowing up the cases revolves around the en tire philosophical question of civ il disobedience which is being brought up in most demonstration cases in the South. HEY, DAD, LOOK . . . Want to know the latest on "cool" styles for men? Ask IFC President Ned Mar tin. Martin, a junior from Chapel Hill, participated recently in a four-day Dupont CollegeCareer Fashion Conference in New York City. He met with other college students in panel discussions on style trends. The outcome of the discussions will be the basis for campus styles next fall. (Ed. Note: Due to the political implications of the event de scribed below, the Daily Tar Heel requests that each party floor leader submit a statement of their party's position on the matter for Sunday's paper.) A surprise motion to suspend the rules Thursday night to con sider a resolution for a referen dum on the student boycott of segregated businesses in Chapel Hill brought on one of the hottest debates in Student Legislature this year. The debate continued through the writing of this story yester day afternoon. The Student Party said it was a political move and a "dirty trick." The University Party, which introduced it, said it was neces sary for students to air their views on the controversial topic and bring it out in the open. The motion to suspend the rules was killed on a strictly party vote: SP, 14 UP, 12. The move, in effect, represent ed a defeat for the bill itself. The resolution, presented by George Ingram (UP) for Speaker Bob Spearman (UP), read: A Resolution directing the Elec tions Board to submit to the Stu dent Body a referendum on the issue of the student boycott. Whereas: The civil rights situ ation in the Chapel Hill commun ity is of pressing concern to the entire community, and Whereas: The president of the Student Body and the Student Legislature have called for a boycott of segregated establish ments, and Whereas: Many students on the campus desire the opportunity to express their personal opinion on the issue of a student boycott. Now therefore be it resolved by the Student Legislature of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill that: Article I: The Elections Board is hereby directed to submit to the Student Body in the all-campus elections on April 14, 1964 a referendum to read as follows: I support a student boycott of segregated establishments in the Chapel Hill area. ( ) Yes ( ) No After stormy debate, the bill was finally read out to Legisla ture, but the ensuing motion to suspend the rules to consider it was defeated by a roll-call vote. Prior to the vote, Ingram told the representatives: "For this referendum to be presented to the Student Body on the election day 'of April 14, 1964, this reso ( Continued on Page 31 Campus Code Hearing Set For Monday Students who feel that the Campus Code should be changed are invited to attend hearings by the Honor System Study Commission Monday from 3 to 4:30 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room. The discussion will center on two topics: 1) How far should the Cam pus Code extend? Should it remain in effect over vacations and when the student is at home? 2) What types of offenses should the Code cover, and should it be more specific? The Commission was set up last February by President Mike Lawler at the request of Whitney Durand, then Men's Council chairman, to study honor system problems and specifically to re-evaluate the Campus Code. The Commission, has been studying appeals procedures and penalties over the past month. Monday will mark the first of a series of hearings for students interested in airing their views on the Campus Code. Several students have ex pressed interest in coming to the hearings. Dean William G. Long will also be invited to at tend. The Commission is com posed of the attorney general and his assistant, the chairman and vice-chairman of the Men's Council, the chairman' of the Women's Council anud the chairman of the legislative Ju diciary Committee.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 11, 1964, edition 1
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