Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 24, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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TOC Library Bss 870TO Lady SPXi CVy Fair ffljr , tonigfft i!i Memorial Hall, jne play will run through Mon ay. Curtain time is 8:30. Mm Registered? Today is the last day to regis ter to vote Nov. 3. See story on this page for times and places to register. Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CARQLINALSATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service 17 1 I I I i I I I II SL Reserves Right To Pass On Affiliation With NSA By JOHN GREENE ACKER DTH Staff Writer Student Legislature voted inursday night to reserve the power of final determination on student Government's affiliation with the National Student Assn. ciation with the legislature. A campus-wide referendum on the issue, however, will be held tlurmg the fall elections. An amendment making the referendum's results binding on the legislature was defeated by 3 vote of 19-25 because of its s wording, constitutional reasons and personal reasons of the leg islators. Tbe referendum bill, which is the compromise of two similar measures, will have UNC stu dents vote yes or no to the state ment, "The Student Government of the University of North Caro lina at Chapel Hill should remain affiliated with the United States National Student Association." When the bill was introduced on the floor, University Party Floor Leader Mai King moved that tiie body accept another ar ticle to the text of the bill. King's proposed amendment said the decision of the Student Body in the referendum "shall be binding when the 1965-66 budget is adopted. "The wording of the referen dum itself asks the opinion of the Student Body," King said while introducing his amend ment. "I think that as long as the students , are going to consider this question they might as well make the final decision," he said. King's amendment was sup ported by Clark Crampton (UP), who reminded the body, "The way we derive our power is through our constituents. "To not allow cur constituents to have this power back," Cramp ten said, "is against all demo cratic precepts." . it it ir- Statement This is Student Party Floor Leader Arthur Hays' statement concerning his vote on the NSA issue in Thursday's meeting in Student Legislature. Last Thursday night the Stu dent Legislature defeated an amendment to the NSA referen dum resolution making the vote of the student body binding upon subsequent legislative action con cerning USNSA. I voted against that amend ment because, as finally offered, it was poorly written and uncon stitutional on its face. It also y carried the implication that the Student Legislature could not be trusted to abide by the decision of the student body in this mat ter. The vote of the Student Body should be final. It should not be necessary for Student Legisla ture to take any action concern ing affiliation subsequent to the vote of the student body. For that reason, I plan to in troduce in committee a resolution with an active provision as fol lows: "The results of the refer endum on the USNSA shall de termine whether the Student Gov ernment of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shall continue to be affiliated or shall be .disaffiliated from the United States National Student Association." Trio Holds V. S. Wrong' In Policies Toward Cuba By ALAN BANOV DTH News Editor Three youths who broke the .State Department ban on travel to Cuba said here Thursday night that they "were allowed complete freedom to visit anywhere, any one on the island." Allen Lowe of California, Steve Newman of Columbia University and Mary Mayer of New School, among 84 U. S. guests of the Cas tro government for two months last summer, discussed the trip and showed slides. They spoke at Odd Fellows Hall, sponsored by Student Peace Union.- The trio said they went to Cuba to test the travel ban and learn " what was really there. "It gave us insight into what was happen ing there and in our own coun try," Lowe said. "Going there opened our eyes to a lot of con tradictions." He deplored "more than just the lack of information about Cuba, but also the whole attempt to isolate its people." Citing the confusion about the U. S. block ade when hurricanes damaged the Because many legislators had expressed doubt that such a bind ing referendum was in accord ance with proper procedure, Crampton cited a precedent in which the legislature had passed a bill calling for a . binding ref erendum. Bob Wilson (SP), who attacked the proposed amendment, asked, "If NSA was voted down in a campus-wide opinion poll, should you as representatives of your constituents be bound to vote against it? "This Legislature was indeed elected by the Student Body," he said, "but the power invested in us is to reflect the views of our own constituents." - Student Budy Floor Leader Ar thur Hays said he would vote in accordance with the results of the referendum, but he objected to the wording of King's amendment. Junior Handed Si For Lying At A junior was suspended for two academic semesters for lying in a previous trial in a Men's Coun cil case Thursday. The student was already on probation this semester. He had beexi accused of steal ing merchandise while employed at a lunch counter last spring and had been tried by the coun cil. During that trial he claimed that the stolen goods amounted to about $10 in value. His employ-. er had found considerably larger shortages. This fall, he confessed that he had been responsible for steal ing and giving away goods valued at about $300. He said that he had been trying to minimize his own guilt in the spring trial and that he had been covering up for other employees doing the same thing. He impli cated four other students. The student, under his proba tionary sentence, would have been automatically suspended for one semester if the council gave him N. C. Quartet Sets Program On Tuesdav The North Carolina String Quartet will present its first con cert of the season at 8 p.m. Tues day in Hill Hall. This will be the first appearan ce of the quartet with Charles Griffith, cellist, new member of the UNC music faculty. Other members of the quartet are Ed gar Alden and Earl Wolslagel, violins, and Dorothy Alden, viola. Griffith has had wide experien ce as a soloist, giving recitals in Ohio, Delaware, Pennsylvania and New York. He holds degrees from Oberlin Conservatory, where he was a student of John Frazer, and from the Juilliard School of Music, where he studied under Leonard Rose. Featured on the program will be the Fourth Quartet of Walter Piston, composed in 1951 and dedicated to Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge. island, Lowe said, "The whole United States policy towards Cu ba is wrong." The speakers noted a friendly attitude among the people there, coupled with a "terrific degree of political awareness." Cubans, Newman said, "are convinced the American people are their friends." "Racial discrimination doesn't exist in Cuba," he added, and "unemployment is nonexistent now. Cuba is well on its way to becoming self-sufficient . . . it's a very rich country, for its size and population." More Cubans haven't traveled to the United States, the youths said, because the state imposes a $100 limit on an individual's travel expenses. Newman explained the discon tent of Castro's sisters by say ing, "some people have lived all their lives under a capitalist, bourgeois system so that when a radical change comes, they can't make the adustment." "Cuba's heart is with China, and its stomach is with Russia," they said. Calling the proposed amend ment unconstitutional, Hays sug gested the amendment be defeat ed and each legislator state on record that he would vote in accordance with the referendum. King's amendment to the bill was defeated in a roll call vote. Legislators voting for the amendment were Representatives Allen, Brinkley, Brown, Dear born, Harmon, Hubbard, Ingram, January, Kiug, Maupin, Rutledge, Smith, Stanley, Sterling, Warden, Webb, Dickson, Cannon, and Crampton. Those voting against the ppifirripnt were ReDresentatives Blackwell, Brame, Burden, Bur ton. Eastwood, Foy, Froneberger, Hays, Hockfield, Hodges. Lind scy, Little, Lowe, Neely, O'Toole, Patterson, Pepper, Scales, Weil er, Wright, B. Wilson, D. Wilson, (Continued on Page 5) ispension Council Trial any sentence of official record. The council decided that the offense was more serious than this and deserved a two-semester suspension. In two other cases Thursday the council heard testimony con cerning the four students accus ed of stealing, in the first case. All four pleaded innocent. After a four-hour hearing, the Council postponed the case until Tuesday to obtain more witnesses. U.S. Attor nev Ruled Guilty Of Contempt JACKSON, Miss. UD U. S. Dist. Judge Harold Cox Friday ruled U. S. Atty. Robert Hauberg guilty of contempt of court and ordered proceedings against act ing Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzen bach because they refused to draw up indictments for a federal Grand Jury here. Judge Cox announced his order in a drama-packed courtroom scene, then agreed to delay five days before putting it into effect to let the Justice Department ap peal to the 5th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals at New Orleans. The formal order, filed in late afternoon with the court clerk, ordered Hauberg confined in the Hinds County Jail in federal cus tody "to remain until he purges himself by performing his official duty for the Grand Jury as re quested in the several (about five) pending cases before them." It also directed Katzenbach to "appear before this court and show cause why he should not be ad judged guilty of contempt of this court for his instructions and di rections to the United States At torney to disregard and disobey the orders of this court . . ." In his recital of events listed in his order. Judge Cox said Hauberg and an assistant sat with the Grand Jury and explain ed "in detail to the Grand Jury the perjury laws . . . The Grand Jury heard witnesses throughout the day (Wednesday) ... "On the morning of Oct. 22 the Grand Jury . . . made known to the court in open court that they bad requested Robert E. Hauberg ... to prepare certain indict ments which they desired to bring . Registration Closes Today . Today is the last day to regis ter to- vote in the Nov. 3 gen eral election. Registration books will be open ata polling places from 9 a.m. to sunset at 5:29 p.m. Total registration for the past two Saturdays is 1,353. This in cludes 1,022 Democrats, 197 Re publicans and 101 independent and no party. With one exception, all persons now registered in Chapel Hill town ship are eligible to vote in Chap el Hill. The exception results from a precinct change made by the County Board of Elections in August. Chapel Hill residents who live south of Bolin Creek and north of the former town limit, between Airport Road and Durham Road, must change their registration to East Franklin precinct. POLITICS Gavin Talk Slated Today At Eastgate Republican gubernatorial can didate Robert Gavin will speak at Eastgate Shopping Center to day. Gavin will be at the center from 11:15 to 11:45 and deliver a brief speech. He will be intro duced by James McNider, Or ange County GOP chairman. Gavin will attend the UNC-South Carolina homecoming game aft er the rally. Goldwaler Blasts Securitv Measures FULLERTON, Calif un Sen. Pot-ry Goldwater said Friday an FBI report may clear Walter Jen Kins oi damaging any national security interests, but it doesn't clear the White House of laxity in security matters. The Republican Presidential nominee, whistle stopping , down the southern California coast, brought the Jenkins case into his active campaigning for the first time following release of an FBI report on Jenkins, the resigned White House aide. The report said FBI investi gation showed no information that Jenkins had "compromised the security or interests of the United States in any manner." Goldwater delivered the speech on the security matters at Pico Rivera, en route from Los Ange les to Fullerton, after launching his multi-city trip with a news conference in Los Angeles at which he repudiated a campaign film on morality. The film, "The Choice," spon sored by Citizens for Goldwater Miller and Mothers' for. Moral America; a campaign organiza tion, showed newsreel clips of rioting, including scenes of riot ous Negroes. . Goldwater said: "I saw it in Philadelphia. And I said, 'Don't show it anywhere. Call them all in' . . . it is noth ing but a racist film." He said the the Jenkins affair raised "real and serious ques tions of national security" and also charged that some 150 per sons in the state department have been permitted to handle U. S. secrets without full security clearance. At his whistle stops, Goldwater hammered away at the Jenkins case, the Bobby Baker case, and the issue of corruption in high places. Humphrey Addresses Mass. Businessmen BOSTON UP) Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey attended memorial services Friday for Herbert Hoov er and conferred with President Johnson and then eased off on a jab at Sen. Barry Goldwater to night before a Boston business audience. The group was the Associated Industries of Massachusetts and Mrs. Edward (Ted) Kennedy, wife of the Massachusetts senator, remarked on the group's political leanings this way: She noted she had been cam paigning for her husband, still recuperating from injuries suffer ed in a June airplane crash. She said he had told her, "If I could get out and face a group of Re publican businessmen, I'd prove my mettle as a , campaigner." Humphrey, in fact, drew some of his biggest applause when he mentioned the name of Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen. Humphrey noted that he had conferred with the President in New York after attending services for the late President Hoover. He said he and President John son had talked about matters of state as well as "affairs of the Democratic Party and the pros pects for this election." In his prepared text, Humphrey had some hard words about the Republican standard bearer, com menting for instance: "The election of Sen. Goldwater would destroy the confidence of the international banking commu nity." But he changed "destroyed" to "weaken" and threw out this paragraph entirely: "It would threaten our alliances, it wold result in a raid on the gold reserves and it could shatter the great credit structure of Europe in America." lii P ft I P ' '' BLAST THE BIRDS! That's the theme of the members of the Sigma Nu fraternity as tbey touch up their red and orange gamecock which hancs in front of the house. A cannon in the Homecoming Activities Students By KERRY SIPE DTH Staff Writer It is Homecoming Day. Quarts of poster paint are dry ing in the warm, balmy autumn air. Yards of crepe paper flutter above the majestic white columns of fraternity row. Dozens , of musicians tune their instruments in anticipation of a victory celebration.' Thousands of alumni make their way to Chapel Hill in hundreds of cars, buses and airplanes. Gallons of liquor is bought and stored. Thousands of dates are arranged and anticipated. Hun dreds of fall suits are freshly pressed and laid out. Carolina is preparing itself for a good time. It began last night, when a doz en motorcades converged on Em erson Stadium and nearly half the student body whetted their en thusiasm on the loudness of their own voices. Even the crickets in the tall grass near field, sat back and marvelled at the thunderous chirps that 4,000 University stu dents can make when they all yell the same thing at the same time. Horns horned and drums drum ned. There were prizes for the lucky. Six gorgeous semifinalists in the Homecoming Queen competition reached their shapely arms into a tub of entry blanks and gave away prizes donated by Chapel Hill merchants. More pretty coeds converged to greet the football heroes as they entered the stadium amid the noise and movement. Winston To Become Woman s Dormitory Winston Hall, ' now a. men's dormitory, will temporarily be come a women's residence h.aH next September. This conversion will be taken because of an increased enroll ment of women next fall, when 1,043 new men's spaces will be made available by the completion of Cameron Morrison Hall. A notice of the temporary change was sent to Winston resi dents, according to Dean of Men William G. Long. Annual eel omecomie Prepare For Football Meanwhile, back at the dorms and Greek houses, decorations and displays were going up. Chicken wire, and tissue paper, and cardboard and crayons and glue took the shape of tangible enthusiasm. A judge is making the rounds this morning and more UNC Senior Car Strikes Ralph K. Viverette, UNC sen ior, was killed early yesterday morning when his car went out of control and crashed, two miles east of here on Highway 54. Viverette was returning to Chapel Hill when his auto struck two mules in the road, went out of control, and plunged off the left side of the road into dense undergrowth. He was rushed to Duke Hospital. He was pronounced dead on arrival from a broken neck. Campus Police Chief Arthur Putting on a mid-season rush, Tom Haney has thrown fear into the hearts of horrorscope leader Pete Gammons. Haney has put 12-3 weeks back to back to pull within one game of Gammons who slipped to 9-6 last week. Gammons now stands at 44-26, .629 while Haney is in IU Hf" h gf? Si SB SB 35 cS g Duke-Army Duke Duke Army Duke Duke Duke Pitt-Navy Pt Pitt Pitt Pitt Pitt Navy State-UVa UVa State State UVa UVa State Maryland-WF Mary lry Mary Mary Iary TCU-Clemson TCU Clem TCU Clem Clem TCU Florida-Alabama Fla Ala Ala Ala Ala Ala Tenn-LSU LSU LSU LSU LSU LSU LSU UCLA-RIinois M M IB W Ncrthwestern-MSU MSU Narth MSU MSU MSU MSU Kentucky-Ga. Kent Kent Kent Kent Kent Ga. Fla St-VPI FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU FSU Minn-Mich Mich Mich Mich Mich Mich Mich Wisconsin-OSU OSU OSU OSU OSU aSU OSU Texas-Rice . Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas Texas CaMJSC L'SC USC USC USC CU USC It '1 & .5 yard awaits its chance to blow the bird to bits. The displays will be judged this morning and winners announced today at the game. Photo by Jock Lauterer Event prizes are in store for the crea tors of the most original display. And then, this afternoon, the game. North Carolina has already made up its mind South Caro lina is going to lose. Now it's in the hands of the players. Killed After Two Mules Beaumont investigated the wreck and reported that it appeared to him the mules had been lying in the road some distance apart, and that Viverette had struck them separately. Viverette, a business admini tration major from Enfield had been active in the AFROTC unit here. He had attained the rank of cadet captain and had fulfilled the requirements for commissioning except graduation. Funeral plans are incomplete. botball Horrorscope third place with 43-27, .614. Al Kaplan with one less week is in second place with 35-21, .625. Bill Lee and Pete Cross are bringing up the rear. This week's guest, Ed Norwood, the seer of Woollen Gym's men's basketrocm, has promised to bet ter the record af last week's U i i air Gary Black To Direct Heel Attach By LARRY TARLETON DTH Sports Editor It's homecoming today as the Tar Heels square off with the South Carolina Gamecocks at 1:30 in Kenan Stadium. A crowd of about 35,000 is ex pected to fill Kenan and watch the Tar Heels try to get back on the winning track- Coach Jim THE LINEUPS UNC USC Darnall LE Wilburn Gallagher LT Sears Eudy LG Harbour Hanburger C Johnson Malobieky RG Hertwig Hill RT Berry Atherton RE Tucker Black QB Reeves Willard RB Smith Jackson VB Gil Kesler FB Branson M.:.w..x-;.;...;v.x.:;;-y,:o:'- Hickey has declared the game as "Dad's Day." More than 45 fathers of squadmen are expected to participate in the program. The Homecoming Queen will be crowned at half time. Both the Gamecocks and the Tar Heels were given the nod er with disappointing records. The Gamecocks haven't won in 13 games. They opened the sea son with a tie with Dook's touted ' Blue Devils, but since have had little to cheer about. . A tie with Georgia is sand wiched between three losses to Maryland, Nebraska and Florida. In rre-season, speculation. thA Tar Heels were given the ned as the best in the ACC. They still may well be, but bad breaks have been costly and the Heels have a 2-3 record thus far. The Tar Heel passing game got a boost from the performances of Gary Black and Ronnie Jackson last week, and the Big Blue may take to the air once again this afternoon. Black will start at quarterback, but sophomore sen sation Danny Talbott, who was injured in the LSU game, will probably see some action this afternoon. Quarterback Dan Reeves will lead the Gamecock attack. Reeves leads the conference in passing with 58 completions in 110 at tempts and is second in total of fense. Reeves' bread-and-butter play is the pass-run option. The Tar Heels will counter with the running of big Ken Willard. After two sub-par weeks, Willard is anxious to break loose. Ken is second in rushing in the con ference with 372 yards in 105 car ries. guest, co-editor Hugh Stevens, who compiled an 8-7 slate. Norwood said, "This won't take but a minute," called some stu dents over to help him and breez ed ' through the choices. "What happens if I get them all right," asked Norwood. Well, Ed, let's wait and see.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 24, 1964, edition 1
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