Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 15, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
'tt.N.C. Library Serials Dep-u , Bar 870 Chapel Hill, iuc. Pepitone's Grand Slam Evens Series le And Maris op Card. omers Maml By JACK HAND , ST. LOUIS (AP) Back to back home runs by Roger Maris and o Mickey Mantle and a grand slam by Joe Pepitone tied up the World Series in an 8-3 New York Yankee victory Wednesday and left everything up to St. Louis' Bob Gibson and Yankee Mel Stottlemyre in Thursday's final game. Both Gibson, the flame-throwing former Harlem Globetrotter, and Stottlemyre, the 22-year-old rookie with the sinker ball, will be coming back with only two days rest. Gibson, beaten in the second game, went all the way Monday, winning on Tim McCarver's three-run homer in the 10th. Stottlemyre, route-going winner of the second game, was lifted for a pinch hitter after seven innings Monday. Jim Bouton became the Yanks' only two-time winner Wednesday although Manager Yogi Berra took him out in the ninth inning after his right shoulder tightened up. "The way the boys played," said Berra, "I'd rather be play ing the seventh game here. The boys seem to hit better in this park." "We're even all tied up," said Card Manager Johnny Keane. "The race is close again. We're used to that. We had to scrap all year. We can do the job to morrow." Keane left himself an out in case 28-year-old Gibson isn't ready when he warms up. Ray Sadecki, the lefty who won the opener but was knocked out in the first inning Sunday, would then be the pitcher. Berra had Whitey Ford, his ace, loosen up in the bullpen in the seventh inning but Whitey reported he was not ready. Un less there is a quick change, the best Berra can expect from him is a relief job. Maris and Mantle broke open a 1-1 duel between Bouton and 35-year-old Curt Simmons with a quick flash of old Yankee thun der in the sixth inning. Pepitone's slam atop the roof of the right field pavilion climaxed a five-run burst in the eighth. Until the M and M boys cut loose on Simmons in the sixth, this had been a rerun of Satur day's battle between the same two pitchers, won by Mantle on. a ninth-inning homer off relief man Barney Schultz. It was Schultz again in this sixth game who was roughed up in the eighth although Pepitone's clout cams off Gordon Richard son, a lanky left-hander. Bouton, a strong youngster who throws himself at the plate with every pitch, finally needed re lief from lefty Steve Hamilton to put out a last-gasp Card rally in the ninth. It was Bouton's sec ond victory in a Series that now goes down to Thursday's deci sive seventh game.' Nobody had hit back-to-back homers in Series play since Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig accomplish ed the feat in both 1928 and 1932 until Maris and Mantle ripped into Simmons in the sixth. Maris drive to right was just barely fair down the line and landed atop the pavilion. Before the crowd of 30,805 at Busch Sta dium had settled down, Mantle drove Simmons next pitch into the screen over the 322-ft. mark in-right. The ball stuck in the screen, gleaming in the bright summery sunshine. Bouton, losing his cap periodi cally as he finished up with his hard follow through, had to get the base hit that squared matters in the fifth after giving up a Card run in the first inning. Singles by the speedy Curt Flood and Lou Brock, the first two men to face Bouton, put men on first and third with none out. When Bill White rapped into a double play, Flood scored. That run looked big as Sim mons handcuffed the Yanks with his tantalizing change - up and fine control until Tom Tresh bounced a ground-rule double in to the stands in left to open the fifth. Simmons, working carefully, struck out Pepitone and made Clete Boyer roll out. But Bout on took a ball and then hit a change-up pitch into left for a single that scored Tresh with the tying run. Then came the quick flashes by the M and M boys in the old tradition of Ruth and Gehrig. It was the fourth time players had hit homers in succession in a Series. Mantle's blow, plus a walk in the eighth, boosted his Series total bases to a record 120, erasing a mark held by Yank Manager Yogi Berra. It was still tight at 3-1 when the Yanks came up in the eighth but Johnny Keane, the Card man ager, had yanked Simmons after the two homers and had to pinch hit for Ron Taylor, his successor. . Schultz, the knuckleball expert who played such an important part in the Cards pennant drive, simply did not have it again. Phil Linz singled to open the eighth and moved along on Bob by Richardson's sacrifice bunt. After Maris went out. Mantle was walked intentionally. E 1 s t o n Howard contributed a single to center, scoring Linz. After Tom Tresh walked on a 3-2 count, loading the bases. Keane replac ed Schultz with Richardson. ' V 'X s Governor's Day The N. C. State Fair contin ues today in Raleigh. Guess what! It's Governor's Day. Have fun. no) off item Mm Night Editor Needed The DTH needs a Night Editor to work from 7:30-10:30 p.m. each night of publication. Pay is $17.82 a week. Interested stu dents contact the Tar Ilerl man aging editor Monday from 3 5:30 in the Tar Heel office, GM. Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPELiilLL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service .King Receives .Mobel Peace Prize OSLO, Norway (AP) Dr. Mar tin Luther King Jr., American Negro leader in the national civ , v il rights movement, was award ' ed the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize Wednesday. In announcing the 1964 winner of the coveted award, the Oslo Nobel Institute said "Martin Luther King has consistently as serted the principle of nonviol : " ence." In an Atlanta hospital for a routine physical checkup King said, "I'm deeply moved, grati fied and honored to be chosen for such a significant award, "I do not consider this merely an, honor to . me personally,, but . a tribute; to discipline, wise ' restraint, and majestic courage of the millions of gallant Negroes and white persons of good will who have followed a nonviolent course in seeking to establish a reign of justice and a rule of love across this nation of ours." King said every dollar of the : prize money would be spent on the civil rights movement. King is the 12th American and the third Negro to be awarded the peace prize. Dr. Ralph J. Bunche, U.N. undersecretary for special political affairs, was the first American Negro so awarded winning the prize in 1950. This year King was also made an honorary doctor at Yale Uni- versity and was awarded the John F." Kennedy prize by the Catholic Council for Cooperation Between the Races, in Chicago. King, 35, will receive the No bel gold medal and diploma and the cash prize, which this year is $53,123,in Oslo Dec. 10. King began his civil rights cru 5 sade from the pulpit of Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Mont gomery, Ala., in 1955, after earn ing his Ph.D. in Systematic The ology at Boston University. The stocky Negro cleric pat terned his campaign after the nonviolent methods of. India's Gandhi, preaching peaceful dem onstrations and passive resist ance. One of his treasured mem mentos is a small ivory carving of Gandhi. "Nonviolent protest is the most effective weapon of an op pressed people," King often said. In I960, King went to his home town Atlanta, created the South ern Christian Leadership Confer ence and became its first presi dent. He was also co-pastor of Ebenezer Baptist Church with his father. In the months that followed, King joined or led widescale as saults on segregation in Albany, Ga., Birmingham, Ala., and else where in the South. He was jail ed a number of times and be came the target of threats and bombs. The other Negro Nobel Peace Prize winner was South African Leader Albert Luthuli, in - 1960. Housing Tonight Controversy over the Univer sity's recently repealed discrim inatory housing policy is expect ed to break out in Student Legislature tonight at 7:30 in New East. The issue has been prompted by a resolution introduced by President Pro Tern Charles Nee ly (SP) which praises Student Body President Bab Spearman for his part in the old policy's replacement. The bill, which was held in committee for an extra week, is still undergoing modification before tonight's session. In its most recent form, the resolution praises the new hous ing rule which "reserves solely to the student the selection of roommates with whom he can I 1 Around The Campus 5 S!3 m I m Power Cut Off A two-hour electrical power cutoff affected six campus build ings yesterday and made emer gency wiring necessary at Gra- t ham Memorial for Yack pic tures and DTH publication. Power was o'f in New East, Davie Hall, the Alumni Build ing, Hcwell Hall, and Graham Memorial between 4 and 6 p.m. The cutoff was part of a campus-wide updating of the electri- . cal system, according to a utilities division official. The i Need A Job? 0 i The following companies will recruit on campus next week: Monday Shell Companies and Union Carbide Corp. (Nuclear Division). Tuesday Shell Companies, Up john Company, Xerox Company, and Ethyl Corporation. Wednesday Federal Power Commission, Union Bag-Camp Paper Corporation, and Naval Analyses Center. Thursday Lehigh Portland Ce ment Co., General Electric Co., J. P. Stevens Co., and Dow Chemical Company. Friday Bureau of Census, Gen eral Electric Co., and R. J. Rey nolds Tobacco Company. Students desiring interviews with company representatives should contact the Placement Service. project, begun last December and now about 75 percent com , pleted, will .triple the capacity . of the University's power setup. Class Ring Sfde Class rings will be on sale to-' day in Y-Court from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Second semester juniors and seniors may order their rings at this time. Sharp Speech Make the first college year more exciting and freshmen will take greater advantage of the cultural treasures around them. Chancellor Paul F. Sharp pro posed this, theory Tuesday night to students ct Nurses' Dorm. "We have not made the freshman year as potentially exciting as we could," he said. Students often fail to get a "complete" education, Sharp fears, because they aren't stim ulated by the new cultural op portunities of the campus. He expressed concern about the "remote but benign" position in which chancellors of large colleges are forced. "American higher education has become in creasingly remote" from the in dividual, he said. The talk was sponsored by YMCA Dorm Speakers' Program. Committee Chairman Sandy Hob good introduced Dr. Sharp. be compatable." Conservative and moderate elements of the body are ex pected to attack the new policy ibecause it does not fully reserve the right of students to choose roommates. Tiie University does not have in effect a system which noti fies each new student who he is going to room with or asks the student what qualities he wants in a roommate. Legislature will also consider the latest bill to modify the General Elections Law. The bill, which was held in committee for a week, calls for half of the seats in legislature to come up for election every semester, hopefully to assure an even turnover of experienced leadership. Introduced by Student Party Floor Leader Arthur Hays, the bill is the forerunner of a mam moth and comprehensive mea sure to modify the Student Gov ernment Code. Two other resolutions have yet to be acted upon by legisla ture. One calls for an investigation of student seating and the prices of date tickets at athletic events, and the other asks for an investi gation of a more practical bus system between Chapel Hill and Grensboro on Saturday nights. The body will also consider part of a backlog of six appro- I priation bills. j WORLD -NEWS BRIEFS' Isbell Slashes Into Florida MIAMI, Fla. (AP) Hurricane Isbell laid a trail of death and destruction across Cuba, lashed at the Florida keys and raged on yesterday into the marshy, sparsely - populated southwest Florida coast. Hurricane warnings were dis played on the Florida east coast from Fort Lauderdale to Vero Beach and the Weather Bureau said they would be extended northward later to Cape Kennedy and Daytona Beach. Metropolitan Miami, with more than a million population, was expected . to experience only squalls with winds up to 60 miles an hour and a few gusts near 70. House Of Commons Up For Grabs Today LONDON (AP) British voters elect a new 630-seat House of Commons today, deciding wheth er to keep Prime Minister Douglas-Home's Conservatives at the helm or to replace them with the Labor Party led by Harold Wilson. Home and -Wilson made 'last minute pleas for support Tues day night and trumpeted conflict ing claims of victory. Their tone and the worried expressions of their aides indicated, however, that they were none to sure. Disaster Areas Designated In N. C. RALEIGH (AP) Sections of North Carolina "adversely af fected by severe storms and flooding" were designated as major disaster areas by Presi dent Johnson Wednesday. The President wired Gov. Ter ry Sanford that he would "make available an allocation of fed eral disaster relief funds when the full extent of eligible work is known." The President continued, "Please extend my sympathy to the people of North . Carolina. I am hopeful that the situation will rapidly improve." Deep South Governors Back Wallace SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) Gov. George C. Wallace of Ala bama won support of deep South governors yesterday in his fight against federal court jurisdiction cf school affairs but he was blocked by two border state lead ers at the Southern Governors Conference. . The governors voted unanim ously for a resolution by Gov. Paul B. Johnson Jr. of Mississip pi supporting a constitutional change to allow factors other than population to be used in apportioning legislatures. Barry Raps Handling of Baker Case DENVER, Colo. (AP) Sen. Earry Goldwater, campaigning in the midwest yesterday again at tacked the government's handling of the Bobby Baker case after a Senate investigation was post poned until after the election. Sen. B. Everett Jordan, D-N.C, chairman of the Senate Rules Committee, said the investigation had been postponed because of the inability to get a quorum of committee members. Jordan al so stated there was a general feeling by committee members of not much chance, for a fair hearing during the closing weeks of a political campaign. Ike Says He's Too Old For Trip GETTYSBURG, Pa. (AP) Former President Dwight D. Eis enhower, asked on his 74th birth day to comment on the prospect he might go to Viet Nam, said they probably would want a younger man for the job. The question referred to a re cent proposal by Republican Presidential candidate Barry Goldwater that if elected, he W'ould ask Eisenhower to head up a mission to seek peace in Viet Nam. 437 New Demos Register New voters who registered in Chapel Hill and Carrboro on the first of three registration Satur days labeled themselves Demo crats by an almost 3 to 1 mar gin. Total registration was 599. New Democrats totaled 437, new Re publicans 90. Independent and no party registrations numbered 39. In the 10 precincts in Chapel Hill and Carrboro, heaviest reg istration was in Country Club. Smallest was in King's Mill. With one exception, all persons now registered in ' Chanel Hill k Township are eligible to vote in cnapel Hill. The exception re sults from a precinct change made by the County Board of Elections in August. Chapel Hill residents who live south of Bol in Creek and north of the former Town limit, between the Airport Road and the Durham Road, must change their registration to East Franklin precinct Un less voters who live in this area change their registration to East Franklin Precinct, they will not be eligible to vote in the election. Registrars will be at polling places Saturday and Oct. 24, from 9 a.m. to sunset. Registrations also may be made at registrars homes by appointment during the week. To be eligible to . register, a person must be 21 years old, have lived in the state for a year, and in his precinct for 30 days by the day of the election. Absentee ballot applications may be obtained by writing, or applying in person to County Elections Board chairman Sam T. Latta, Box 546, Hillsboro. Re quest for these applications may not be made by telephone, and must be made only to Latta. University students are quali fied to vote in Orange County if they satisfy the state and pre cinct residence requirements; if they change, or have already changed, their registration to an Orange County precinct and if they consider their residence in Orange County to be permanent. Voters will mark five ballots the election: for national of fices (president, vice president, congress), state offices (govern or. It. governor, and commission ers of various state agencies), county offices and county repre sentatives to the state legisla: hire; township constable; and for the proposed $100 million state Wide school bond issue. f f V; ' 9-J" II ' rl07:f l b Iff A I 1 hf - 1 f i ' y f t i "ii-im'j" j fT" - - - - ' 1 I ' - " if t I , I r t $ - , 1 - l , ';- ', , : WIIATIZIT?? Students gather in Y court curious- port. Hie whole thing is a publicity stunt to ly gawking at what appears to be a flying chair. attract students to work overseas next summer. Actually it is a mini-helicopter built by the Ben son Aircraft Corporation of Raleigh-Durham Air- Photo by Jock Laulerer Academic Freedom Stressed Members of governing boards of colleges and universities have a duty to safeguard academic freedom at their institutions, Dur ham attorney Victor S. Bryant said here Wednesday. An institution of higher learn ing must "insist on the extension of the . known boundaries of knowledge by a relentless search for truth," Bryant said. "It must be independent of politics, for the search for truth and the prac tice of politics have little in com mon ..." Bryant, a member of the exe cutive committee of the UNC Board of Trustees, addressed a -banquet session of the 42nd an nual meeting of the Association of Governing Boards of Colleges and Universities last night. "I would think it advisable for an institution to have on its fac ulty members representing as many respectable but different viewpoints as possible," Bryant declared, adding that a trustee or regent "does the institution a disservice when he tries to slant faculty selections in a direction of his own choosing." He asserted a professor "should have full freedom in research, and the right to publish the re sults of his research ... he should have absolute freedom in his teaching . . . beyond his chosen field the teacher should have the same right as others have to formulate and express his opinions." Bryant said "the mere fact that one is a professor does not, however, relieve him from the inexorable tests of integrity, com petence and citizenship." At the same time, he added, "in the enjoyment and exercise of aca demic freedom it is inevitable that at times a faculty member will collide with established, and orthodox beliefs. "Trustees would be derelict in their duty if they failed to pro tect to the fullest a teacher's rights of academic freedom," he said. Bryant, who has served on the Board for many years, said trus tees and regents of institutions also must see to it that "ade quate salary schedules exist for the administrative officials as well as the faculty." Students Are Conservative, Television Panel Concludes UP Sets Nominating Convention Sunday University Party nominating convention -will be held at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in Gerrard Hall. The convention date was set Tuesday night at a UP meeting. UP formed four committer at the meeting issues, coordinat ing, membership and publicity. Jeff Adams urged UP mem bers interested in working on any. committee to contact him in the student government of fice in GM. Don Carson, student body vice president, was principal speak er. Four college newspaper edit ors in a televised panel discus sion this week concluded that today's students are conserva tive because they are secure. The editors appeared on the WUNC-TV "Encounter" series in a program entitled "Are College Students More Conservative Now?" Panelists included DTH Co Editor Hugh Stevens; Mike Pet erson, editor of the Duke Chron icle; Melinda Holder of the UXC-G Carolinian; and N. C. State College Technician editor Cora Kemp. Spence Perry, fcrmer Harvard Crimson staff member and Pro fessor William Geer of the UNC History Department also took part in the discussion. Moderator was Dr. David Lapkin of the UNC Economics Department. Geer explained the general conservative trend among col lege students in terms of the economic security which has prevailed in recent years. The r group agreed that students to- I day do no see a need for change. Peterson's opinion, however, was that conservatism is also rooted in concern over growing government intervention. He predicted that the economic is sues in the current presidential election will not be dropped alter Nov. 3. The editors of both i'r.e Caro linian and the Technician said political thinking was just be gining to awaken on their cam puses. Stevens sugeted the lack cf conservative student or ganizations at UNC was caused by intense interest in student politics. 'There's just net cnouuti in terest in national affairs to keep such groups going" he said. The panelhts decided the terrrs "liberal" and "conserva tive" defied definition, although Geer proposed that conserva tives pre 'or the status quo 'and liberals favcr moderate change. "Students," he declared, "would like to return to a mythological past that never really existed." UN SEMINAR INTERVIEWS Interviews for places on the UN seminar to New York sill be held Friday and Monday from. 3-6 p.m. in the CCUN office Y-Building.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 15, 1964, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75