Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 13, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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UNC Library SecX&is Be pi. Box 870 Chapel HIU, H. C. A Thought When men speak ill of you, live so nobody may believe them. - Plato Mm A Thought? The earth's surface is two-thirds water, but the other third is land. DubofjJU Founded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service TUT TJ H Of Russia And UN By ALAN BANOV DTII News Editor , "The United Nations is no ten nis club, where members can be voted out for not paying dues," a former president of the U. N. General Assembly said here yes terday. Dr. Charles H. Malik, former Lebanese ambassador to the U. N., said at a brief press con ference in South Bidg. that Rus sia should not be forced out of the U. N. for failing to pay back assessments to the world organi zation. "You can't do anything about it," the gray-haired, husky gentle man said. "It is more an internal United States policy problem than a United Nations one." Malik, last night's Weil lectur er, said the Soviet Union has ac- - i' J: .Malik At UNC tually paid its dues regularly, but the U. S. press has presented a "distorted picture" of the situa tion. In fact, "Russia makes it a point to hand in its dues check each year," he noted, "at least an hour before the United States hands in theirs." The jovial former diplomat em phasized that Russia had refused to pay only special assessments for the UN peace-keeping forces in the Congo and Middle East. The Soviets are complaining, Malik said, because these funds were requested by the General Assembly, not the Security Coun cil. "Red China is not represented UP Chairman May Quit Post University Party Chairman Jeff Adams will resign from office next Monday, according to UP officials. Adams, head of the UP since last Nuv,. is said stepping down because of academic commit ments. A new party Chairman would be elected at the next meeting of the UP if Adams resigns. f 1 r V 1 t':. .ll I "1 as . i ' 1 s toiT;iWtiiiiiiiiiiirniihfifrffliTiimvt-iiinTrnnnw-MMiiin-ii-nr -iiniiii-i 1h Jsi-'1riria I - . . ! I iff rsrr HAULING AWAY ILLEGAL PARKERS? Not really. This is DTII photographer Jock Lau(er er's suggestion for a solution to UNC's parking problem. The cars keep coming and the spaces as 'Distorted' (in the UN)," the world figure explained, "because there are other representatives to sit in her chair. It is not correct to say they are not represented there." Nationalist China was one of the founding members of the United Nations, Malik pointed out, and possesses the veto as a mem ber of the Security Council. "Those who represent China in the chair in the United Nations are representatives of the old China." He also said that Red China may not even join the world or Good-Bye To Mom And Dad: Local Women In Dorm Rooms By ERNIE McCRARY DTII Managing Editor Coeds whose homes are in Chapel Hill will not have to live with Mother and Daddy anymore. Dean of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey said yesterday that Chap el Hill women now have the same rights to residence hall space as other coeds. . "For years we've been admit ting girls with a bonafide Chapel Hill address to any program on the same basis as men," he said. He called the rule unfair be cause a girl could live far out MRC Grants Support To New Program The Men's Residence Council Wednesday night unanimously supported plans for pilot projects for the residence college system ?n the Lower Quad and in the Parker-Avei5-Teague complex. Jim Fullwood, MRC president, pointed out that proposed area student governments would aid the success of the residence col lege plan. The MRC also announced Ever ett is leading in the residence hall point competition, followed by Craige, Alexander, Battle-Vance-Pettigrew, Stacy, Joyner, Teague and Ehringhaus. The council approved plans for a joint drive with the Carolina Woman's Council for contribu tions to needy families during the Christmas season. Awarding a trophy each year to the hall in each residence col lege with the most intramural points was discussed and tabled. The MRC challenged the IFC to a football game. SPANISH PARTY The UNC Spanish Club has scheduled a party Saturday night at 108 Pain Line. Members are asked to assemble at 7:30 p.m. in the parking lot below Dey Hall and should bring cars if possible. Coffee and cookies will be served, and members may bring their own refreshments. " 1 - j is 1 1 i View Malik ganization if invited. "The Com munists say they will not send representatives unless we give them Formosa." Malik explain ed. "The problem is between you and China," he asserted. "And you Americans are more worried about China's admission to the UN than China herself." The animated speaker closed the conference by saying, "The future of the United Nations is in the hands of God. Since I believe in God, I am obviously optimistic." in the county and still be eligible for admission as a freshman as long as she had a local address, while a girl living just a few miles away in Durham County was ineligible. The Administration's recently announced "new approach" to ad mission of coeds is responsible for the rule change. Since "especially well qualifi ed" girls are to be accepted in to any curriculum from now on, there is no longer any distinction between the acceptance of the Chapel Hillians and non-Chapel Hillians. In all programs except nursing, dental hygiene, physical therapy, medical technology and pharmacy the local girls will be considered for residence space on the same "especially well qualified" basis that other girls compete. "Because of the small number of accommodations for girls we will have to restrict the number who will be housed to those 'especially well qualified,' " Ca they said. "The minimum stand ards of acceptance for women will necessarily be higher than those for men." . , Cathey also provided a glim mer of hope for those coeds who want to move in the other direc tionoff campus.. "Off-campus housing for under graduate women is a completely open question as far as I'm con cerned," he said. "Some college age girls are mature enough to be on their own, others never will be. Let's just call it a prob lem of the future." Harold Wilson Plans Talks With Johnson LONDON ( Prime Minister Harold Wilson intends to ask President Johnson's support for a vast new system of internation al credit, British informants re ported last night. The plan being shaped up by the Labor government aims at staving off what Wilson sees as the peril of a world slump. Wilson will visit Johnson in Washington Dec. 7 and 8. In formed sources said they plan a second meeting early next year. A major purpose is to swap ideas about the reorganization of the get fewer, creating a real imposition for campus drivers. Lauterer refused to comment on how he got the cars stacked up that way. Trouble At Wake GREENSBORO (AP) A Bap tist minister accused Wake For est College President Harold W. Tribble of incompetence Thurs day as he called for his dismis sal in a strongly worded state ment in the Baptist State Con vention. The surprise move by the Rev. Robert Brown of Powellsville was voted down overwhelmingly be fore the convention ended an ex plosive session. , The action came shortly after Wake Forest College students registered a strong protest with the convention over the defeat Wednesday of a proposal to al low North Carolina's Baptist-supported colleges to broaden their trustee base. Three Wake Forest co-eds who came to Greensboro with two other student leaders to deliver the protest resolution shed tears after the Rev. Brown proposed that Wake Forest trustees consid er firing Dr. Tribble. College leaders have said the trustee change was needed to enable the colleges to obtain outside finan cial assistance. The proposal would have permitted one-fourth of the trustees at the seven col leges to be non-Baptists and from out of state. The Wake Forest students chal lenged the convention "to submit immediately a positive plan" for providing financial support to the colleges or consider the possibili ty of severing college ties with the convention. The resolution was adopted unanimously by the college student body only a few minutes before it was read to the convention by Cliff Lowery of Raleigh, student council presi dent. Defeat of. the trustee proposal touched off student demostrations at Wake Forest Wednesday night. They burned a 12-foot cross on the college plaza. The Rev. Brown accused Dr., Tribble, 65, of making what " he termed "reckless statements" to the television, radio and news media "concerning the actions of this convention in session. Tribble, who received a vote of confidence from the convention in 1957, had said earlier he was "heartbroken" at the defeat of the trustee issue because the col lege's $69 million expansion and dvelopment program "was vital ly involved." Atlantic Alliance with emphasis on future nuclear weapons man agement. But the economic dif ficulties facing the non-Communist world. The British leader was portray ed as being convinced urgent in ternational discussions leading to a world economic conference at summit level are needed. Wilson, while opposition lead er, made this problem of creat ing international credit the theme of a speech to the National Press Club in Washington in April, 1963. He also discussed it at length with the late President John F. Kennedy. To prepare for his economic, defense and political talks with Johnson, Wilson has arranged a special conference of key British ministers. Lt. Governor Lieutenant Governor-elect Rob ert Scott will speak here today in the community room of ' Orange Savings and Loan Association, at a reception given in his honor by Democratic Women of Orange County. By ANDY MYERS If every student with a car drives to his 8 o'clock class to morrow morning there will be a 2,000-car traffic jam and at least that many cut classes. Two thousand because that's how many more cars than park ing spaces there are on campus. The totals are 2,909 to 5,000, in favor of cars. Student drivers aren't the only ones with problems. Only 1,628 parking spaces are provided for the 2,500 f-aculty and staff mem bers with cars. Of these, 900 are faculty and administrative per sonnel and 1,600 are secreUJies, custodians and the like. If all 1,600 non-faculty members parked on the central campus Campni 1 w itoes Offer - I' 1 .4s " yry''zm ?k Sb fes, ' , ,v I ' if V- 3 ' ii i " -I -' " HI t ' - I p v i - ' if S "f , ' v i V,'' Wo r Itry " " flr irfrir i ry n r r 'tf-i" ffr ---wflflfrifrrtir r lumnnn nnafgii ' iTiin i BEWARE! FRIDAY THE THIRTEENTH! Graduate in Industrial Finagling J. Melvin Fritzgrugber peeks out cautiously of his year round aiiode. J. Melvin comes out only for national holidays, Ground Hog day, and an occasional UMOC contest. Photo by Jock Lauterer Play makers Drama Promises Variety "Ghosts, murder, comedy, poet ry and action." Tommy Rezutto, director of , the Playmakers upcoming production of "Hamlet," promises the play will provide all this. Rezutto said the Playmakers will not alter the play drastically, "but a strictly Elizabethan pro duction would be too academic for modern enjoyment. The mean ing of the play and its theatrical enjoyment are what we want to portray." "Shakespeare wrote it as an adventure story so that his audi ence would enjoy it. We are ap proaching it not so much as a piece of literature, but as a per formance of a great play." Elizabethan costumes will be used, he said. "The tendency now is to do it in modern dress. This makes the play too dark, without enough contrast. The play needs gaiety with Hamlet's per sonal tragedy." David G. Gullette of Raleigh Beanbirds Sivoop Up 10 Chicks . The Order of the Old Beanbirds swooped down to gather new fledglings at dawn this morning. Selected were: Peggy "Scarlet Rumped Roadrunner" Reynolds, Nita "Wagtailed Oystercatcher" Cox, Billy "Grosbeaked Jungle Babbler" Burris, Bruce "Pompa dour Puffbird" Doney and Bud "Shortbilled Bush Wren" Joyner. Also Sue "Screaming Kooabur ra" Battle, Judy "Greater Yellow Legged Woodcreeper" Cowman, Jack "Slaty-Backed Lapwring" Emery, Nancy "Montezuma Nut catch" Frye and Paul "One-Winged Nighthawk" Barefoot. jrarjiLi3i (which they have a right to do) there would be only 28 spaces eft for professors and adminis trators. . According to Campus Police Chief Arthur Beaumont, the 2,909 student parking spaces include he Bell Tower Lot (TOO), the lam's Head Lot (340), the Craige lot (421) and other small lots and streets around campus. The 'big lie' is street parking, Beaumont said. "Suppose there's a convention in town. All the students come . back to their dorms and there are no spaces . left. Anyone can park there " The Craige and Ram's Head lots are so far from campus, he said,-that many students find it inconvenient to use them during Tells From 111 4 ? will portray the Danish prince in the Dec. 8-15 production. Gullette, a graduate student in English, : appeared in - Playmaker produc tions of "Twelfth Night," "Mur der in the Cathedral," and "J. B." Other players in major roles are: Anne West, Ophelia; Ran dolph Umberger, Claudius ; Mar garet Cathell, Gertrude; Lloyd J. Borstelmann, Polonius; Pascal Tone, Laertes; and Jim Slaught er, Horatio. Reserved seat tickets go on sale to season tickek holders Nov. 30. Sales to the general public be gin Dec. 3. Red Leaders Leave Mosco w; Chou Remains MOSCOW LP) The last East European delegations went home Thursday after talks with the new Soviet Leaders, leaving Chou En-Lai and other Asian Commu nists in Moscow. Official silence continued to hide talks that delegations from every Communist-ruled nation ex cept Albania held here since com ing last Week for celebrations of the 47th anniversary Bolshevik Revolution. . Communist sources reported without confirmation that Leonid I. Brezhnev, the new first secre tary of the Soviet Communist Party, and Chou, premier of China, agreed on. two steps to halt public arguments in the Soviet-Chinese dispute. They were postponement of a Dec. 15 pre paratory meeting for a world Communist conference and talks in Peking early next year on dif ferences between the two biggest Communist powers. . . the day. If a student wants to park near the central campus he must use the Bell Tower Lot or the sheets a total cf 2,148 spaces. This means less than one-half of stu dent drivers may park near campus at one time. The shortage of parking space s nothing new at UNC. Since granddad traded his surry for a T-Model the problem has increas ed steadily. Last year the University issued 4 870 student stickers, this year 4,96893 fewer parking spaces. Beaumont said the acute park ing problem this year is not the result of increased enrollment, but results from the many con struction v.orkers near campus. O Defend. Fourth Court Day For Rinaldi Case By KERRY SIPE DTII Staff Writer A witness for the prosecution in the Frank Rinaldi murder trial testified yesterday that Ri naldi offered him $500 if he would 'kill his wife or get somebody else to." Alfred Louis Foushce of Dur ham, former employe of the Zoom-Zoom restaurant, said that Rinaldi had approached him "a half-dozen or a dozen times" about the murder. Tse testimony came in the fourth day of Rinaldi's trial on charges of the first degree mur der of his wife, Dec. 24, 1963. Foushee, who met Rinaldi while waiting tables at the Zoom-Zoom, said that he worked part-time ?s a housekeeper at the Rinaldi apartment in Chapel Hill. He testified that on one occa sion prior to Thanksaivins of last year, "Rin;i-di asked me if I was Council Puts Six Students On Probation Six students were put in proba tion, one for cheating and five for Campus Code violations, in Men's Council trials last week. A sophomore was given two semesters probation when he was found guilty of looking on an other student's paper and taking figures from it in a quiz. The defendant testified that he was going back over a problem near the end of the test when he accidentally saw the figures of the student sitting next to him on that problem. He tried to work the problem himself, then worked it incor rectly using the three numbers he had seen. His professor noticed that he had gotten the answer incorrect ly and turned him in. He pleaded guilty. The Council felt that since the offense was not at all premeditat ed or intended, the student should not be suspended. In the second case, five stu dents were tried for entering the apartment of three women against their will, taking food and mak ing themselves an annoyance. The Council found them guilty of ungentlemanly conduct and placed all five on one semester probation. In the last case of the evening, a sophomore was found innocent of cheating. A student sitting next to him had seen him reaching down and thumbing through a book during a quiz. The defendant pleaded not guilty, saying that he had only been searching for a piece of paper to outline an essay ques tion. The Council determined that the book his accuser had seen had nothing to do with that course and could find no relevant note in it. REV. KING SPEAKS Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., recent Nobel Peace Prize winner, will speak this afternoon at a luncheon meeting of the South ern Political Science Association in Durham. He will probably talk on the Negro integration move ment. 9 mieeze ' We have lost one parking lot near Woollen Gym," he said. "But more important, there are many men working near Wilson Hall, out at the new dorm con struction site and near Woollen Gym." Construction workers take up many parking spaces normally used by students, he explained. What's to be done? Larry McDevitt, assistant to Dean of Men William Long, said a parking study is under way. So far no recommendations have been made by the group studying the situation. One stumbling block, McDevitt said, is that the state cannot ap propriate funds for parking facilities. ant interested in getting a lot of money." "I asked him if he meant il legal whisky or dope peddling." Foushee said. "Rinaldi said No, much worse.' " Foushee said that he refused to kill Mrs. Rinaldi or to suggest someone else to Rinaldi who might. On that occasion, he testified, Rinaldi had placed his hand on Fouiee's leg and insisted that Yi "un-zip rny pants." Then "Rinaldi apologized and said that he was ashamed of what he had done." Foushee cited two other inci dences in which Rinaldi had al legedly spoken to him about his v ife. He referred to a telephone conversation in which he said Rinaldi asked him if he would go to Waterbury, Conn., where Mrs. Rinaldi was visiting rela tives, and murder her. "I said no' Foushee testified. Earlier in the trial, UNC stu dent Francis McNairy testified that he was present at a Chapel Hill travel agency last Dec. 23 when Rinaldi sought to buy an airplane ticket. He said Rinaldi wanted the ticket for someone else. McNairy could not recall the destination or the date of the flight "Rinaldi told me it didn't mat ter how I killed her," Foushce said. "Strangle, choke, rape or anything was all right with him." Foushee testified that on Christmas Eve of last year he met Rinaldi by chance at the Eastgate Shopping Center while doing some Christmas Shopping. At that time, he said, Rinaldi told him, "It's all over, Al. I did it." Foushee said that he did not call the police even after lead ing of Mrs. Rinaldi's deatn. Other witnesses for the piosc cution, including UNC student Victor Young, who was a fellow employe of Foushee at the Zoom Zoom, and Kenneth Putnam, manager of the restaurant, veri fied Foushe2s testimony by stat ing that Foushee had mentioned Rinaldi's requests to them. A request for mistrial by de- (Continued on Page 3) Orientation Program Set By Med Group The UNC chapter of Alpha Ep silon Delta, the national pre-med and prc-dental society, will ho'd its freshman orientation program Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in Howell Hall auditorium. All first-year students interested in medical or dental careers are urged to at tend. Dr. William Straughn, associate professor of bacteriology, will ad dress the meeting on the advis or's role in helping pre-med stu dents select courses and activi ties. Dr. E. M. Hedgpeth. admis sions chairman for the Medical School and Dr. R. J. Shankle, chairman of the Dental School Admissions Committee, will dis cuss the admissions requirements of their schools. Also on the program is Jerry Ilocutt, a fourth-year medical student and past AED president, who will contrast professional school life with undergraduate experiences. o u Beaumont remembers that in 1951 a plan to build a combina tion parking lot - fal'cut shelter "never got past the planning stage" because of the cost of $7 million. The structure would have been a four-level, 4.400-car garage on the site of the Bell Tower lot. It would have been larce e:vugh to house the entire Chapel Hill population in case of need for a fallout shelter. Beaumont emphasized that the present study must consider the future need; for parking in the immediate vicinity of the new student union. So, until somebody comes up with a parking panacea, it'll be fight for that space or walk. 111 UL
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 13, 1964, edition 1
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