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tT.TT.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 if BOTH SOVADS SEEK TO BETTER 4-4- SEASON RECORDS eel eeJfe r Tar Straight! 7 th win v cu. BY PETE GAMMONS Asst. Sports Editor The UNC Tar Heels travel today to Char lottesville to face the Virginia Cavaliers in the 69th meeting of the South's oldest major col lege rivalry. Both teams have 4-4 records and both con sider it a big game. UNC must win to remain in contention for its second consecutive ACC title. The Heels have lost two games while N.C. State has lost one with one league game remaining. The Cavaliers consider this game the big gest of the season. They lost to Carolina in the last two meetings by 11-7 scores and haven't Yion in this rivalry since 1957. Virginia's hopes ride on the physical condi tion of star sophomore quarterback Bob Davis, Help! Now that the silly joke craze is almost over we'll add just one more for your consideration. What's blue and goes "ding . dong?" (answer tomorrow, if we remember) Founded Feb. 23, 1893 Dr. King Says Poverty Still Plagues Negroes By ALAN BANOV DTII News Editor " "Negroes are still at the bottom of the economic ladder, chained to the last rung by a double lock ?f color and poverty," Dr. Martin rather King said in Durham yes terday. The 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner said the Civil Rights Act "profoundly affected public ac commodations in the South," but poverty must now be eliminated for Negroes to enjoy them. "What good is it for a Negro to be served in an integrated wry i V 1 MARTIN LUTHER KING restaurant if he can't afford to take his wife there to dine." Addressing a meeting of the Southern Political Science As sociation, King said the Negro is "not struggling for some ab stract rights," but concrete bene fits from life. He is "not seek ing charity and doesn't want to languish on walfare rolls any mere than the next man." Constitutional Amendment OK'd Final tabulations show that the Constitutional Amendment voted on in Tuesday's election passed 3,758 to 1,093. The amendment was needed to make the Student Constitution conform with UNC's newly creat ed judicial appeals structure. Results on the amendment were released after final tabulations were made on the NSA referen dum and class officer and Honor Council elections. ussia By MIKE YOPP DTH Managing Editor A former United Nations Gen eral Assembly president said here Thursday night that only Russia can reconcile differences between tiie East and West. Dr. Charles Malik called Rus sia "the connecting link between East and West. In time Russia and Russia alone is going to bring about reconciliation ... No other nation is capable of do ing it." Thea Lebanese diplomat and educator delivered the annual Weil Lecture before a crowd of about 300. Malik, 1953 head of the UN General Assembly, is now a i professor of philosoohy at American University of Beirut. Maik predicted that in time the West will have to come to R The Negro wants practical, real istic aid, he explained. "One must assume that he hears and reads of the country's prosperity. He is naturally cynical about the war on poverty when he reads about a rocket shot to the moon costing more than the whole pov erty program." King said he welcomes Presi dent Johnson's "war on poverty," as a cautious beginning. How ever a "real war requires full moblization of resources . . . if poor whites and Negroes are to be full partners of the land's pros perity." Praising the "time-honored tac tics" of non-violence, the Negro leader said demonstrations against private accommodations "called attention to the evil, aroused the conscience of the community and eliminated the evil itself." Non-violent demonstrations are "tactics, not principles, which may be used only as long as they Political Science Group Blasts N. C's 'Gag Law' The Southern Political Science Association labeled North Caro lina's "Speaker Ban Law" "a dangerous restriction of the free exchange of knowledge and opinion, essential to the educa tion process." The organization said that it will "abstain from holding any of its meetings upon state-supported campuses of higher edu cation in North Carolina ... until the law is repealed." The resolution lamblasting the Speaker Ban was passed unani mously by the group. Also known as the "gag law," the ban was imposed by the 1963 General Assembly, prohibiting any person from speaking at a state-supported institution of high er learning who is classified as: A known member of the Com munist Party; or known advo cate of the overthrow of the gov ernments of the United States or North Carolina; or takers of the Fifth Amendment in answer to any question concerning subver sive activities. The association's resolution de clared that the "danger to a free society and to learning and to the pursuit of knowledge arising from abuse of free speech is small MALIK GIVES Cited As the aid of Russia against China. He said the time will come when "Russia will not only seek West ern assistance but when the West cr.nnot sit back and let Russia be overwhelmed." However, Malik sees closer ties bstween Russia and China in the next five years. During this time ".Greater pressures will be exert ed on all peripheries of the Com munist world, Southeast Asia, In dia. Africa and Eastern Europe." The close relationship will end, he said, because China seeks suc cess of world communist through war flnd Russia seeks it through peaceful mans. He cald Ch'"nR "tv rising mnare to neonle fr and near." Russia will not risk a conflict, psprtod because "he who can conquer through peace will not who injured his shoulder last week against Wil liam and Mary when he dived over a defender into the end zone. During the past week there has been specu lation that he will not be able to throw well and that he might move to halfback to take advan tage of his running ability. If Davis does play halfback, senior Tom Hodges will take over at quarterback. He has adequate experience and saw considerable ac tion in Virginia's big win over Army. If Davis stays at quarterback then the Cava liers will start Carroll Jarvis at left halfback. He is another sophomore who has come a long way this year and is now a definite threat. Bob Prusmack and John Pincavage will start at fullback and flanker respectively. Pincavage is second in the ACC in receiving behind UNC's Ronnie Jackson. are effective," King asserted. Nevertheless, he deplored, using as a solution "fantastic gimmicks causing injury and possible death to others." "To attain first-class citizen ship we must never use second class methods." The Negro has "fortunately been able to grapple with the problem of segregation with non violent resistance, "King said. "This has a way of disarming the opponent, as it weakens his morale and works on his con science." Students who participated in non-violent demonstrations, he said, "are a refreshing oasis in a desert sweltering from the heat of injustice.1; '. ' "v "Somehow we may be able to get over to the world that no nation can win a war. There must be either non-violence or non-existence." He claimed Negroes "have been given a piece of liberty. compared to the dangers arising from attempts to curtail or sup press free speech." The action was taken by the group during the business ses sion of its 36th annual meeting at the Jack Tar Hotel in Dur ham. Ackland Sets Print Shoiv Ackland Art Center will exhibit 32 prints from the Metropolitan Museum of Art for several weeks, beginning Tuesday. Entitled "Prints by Great Masters," the exhibition will include woodcuts, engravings, etchings and litho graphy. On display will be 15th-century illustrations of Biblical episodes, landscapes by Jacques Callot and J. M. VV. Turner, portraits by Rembrandt and Robert Nanteuil, and allegorical subjects of Goya and Pieter Brueghel the Elder. The Ackland galleries are open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and 2-6 on Sun day. The exhibitions will end Sunday, Dec. 6. WEIL LECTURE East-West Lint risk war." Communists believe "the Free World is dyng a slow death . . . that it's fundamental values have disappeared." The West holds the values of freedom "too loose ly," he said. "War is neither inevitable or a real possibility today," the dip lomat said. The real war in the world is "the war of ideas." Malik said "strength is abso lutely necessary for the preven tion of war." Only through su prior strength" can aggressive nrfions be suppressed. Not . only military strength is necessary, he cautioned, but "eco nomic and industrial strength and political and diplomatic vigor." He warned the "United Nations cannot alone secure peace It is not meant to." The Lineups UNC UVa Darnall LE Poates Gallagher LT McFalls Eudy LG Hart Stringer C Sludd Malobicky RG Torok Harmon RT Myers Atherton RE Carrington Black QB Davis Willard LH Jarvis Jackson RH Pincavage Kesler FB Prusmack Season Record: UNC 4-4, UVa 4-4 Place: Scott Memorial Stadium (26,000) Time: 1:30. CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER rosecution Completes In Tr DTH Newsman Reprimanded Six newspapermen, including two DTH reporters, were repri manded yesterday by Judge Ray mond Mallard for "deliberate con tempt of court" during a recess of the Frank Rinaldi murder trial. Tom Clark and Kerry Sipe of the DTH; Jim Clotfelter of the Durham Herald; Curry tKirkpat rick, correspondent for the - Char lotte Observer, both UNC stu dents; and two other reporters were called to the bench by Mal lard after he noticed them stand ing near and examining a photo stat of a letter written to Rin aldi by UNC English instructor Charles Jenkins of Chapel Hill. No charges were filed against the men. The letter was entered by Coun ty Solicitor Thomas Cooper as State's evidence in the case. Defense Attorney Barry Win ston objected to the letter on grounds that it was among evi dence obtained from Rinaldi's apartment by "illegal search and seizure" by the Chapel Hill po lice. Mallard ordered the docu ment put in a sealed envelope and filed away. During a recess break, several reporters saw the letter lying on the Court Recorder's Desk. Mallard demanded identifica tion of the reporters and turned them over to the temporary cus tody of the Orange County Sher iff's Department. Mallard said that the contents of the letter had not been ac cepted as part of the legal pro ceedings and "If one word of that letter appears in print, all of you will be brought back here to face charges of contempt." NEW YORK TRIP A five-day, $45 trip to New York City is being sponsored by the Episcopal Student Congrega gation. The price includes trans portation, lodging at he Roose velt Hotel and luggage tips. Stu dents should sign up by tomor row at the Episcopal Chaplain's Office in the Episcopal Student Center for the trip, which starts Nov. 25. z However, "the world without the United Nations is more dan gerous than a world with the United Nations." Malik prefaced his political ob servations with a philosophical discussion. The world is "bewil dered," he said. "There is peace among nations, but not in the mind and soul." Man is headed toward a "mor el collapse . . . the distinctly human is in eclipse." He cited a current attack on truth and reason where "reason is no longer the Court of Ap peals" and truth must be always qualified. His hour-long speech drew a standing ovation from the audi ence. The snppch will be broadcast over WUNC at 7 tomorrow. mm raer p,UHVJWWW.UU'. A! I j iy :::-. :: iZi til iiii Bob Scolt I cott Won't Guess Political By ERNIE McCRARY DTII Asst. Managing Editor Lieutenant Governor-elect Rob ert W. Scott said here yester day that his one-sided victory in the recent election has not en couraged plans to run for higher office. Official election returns just re leased show that Scott beat Gas tonia's Clifford Lee Bell 815,994 to 526,727 in the race for the number-two spot in the state govern ment. He polled more votes than any other candidate in the Nov. 3 elections, including President Johnson, who had 800,139. In an interview during a recep tion in the Community Room of Orange Savings and Loan As sociation he agreed that in the past the position of lieutenant governor has been relatively ob scure, but he has no specific plans on how to overcome this. He said, "In the next four years I want to upgrade the importance of the office in the eyes of the general public. I want to show how the role fits in with other matters of concern to the state. "I think people ought to give more thought to the lieutenant governor's ccntest, because in a , sense they're voting for their second choice of governor." Scott would not say whether he had expected to be elected by such a large margin. "I never tried to predict the outcome I only wanted to win," he said. One thing contributing to his victory, he said, may have been the fact that "my race was not contested." He said there were There will be no major lineup changes for the Tar Heels, who will be going into their fourth game with the two-platoon system. Gary Black, who needs six yards to have 1,000 yards total offense for the season, will once again be at quarterback. He is fourth in the league in total offense and second in passing. He has compiled most of his yardage in less than six games, since his understudy, Danny Talbott, played most of the Wake Forest and Michigan State games. The man Virginia will be keying on will be left halfback Ken Willard. The big senior from Richmond, Va. is third in the league in rushing with 607 yards despite the fact that he has been trailed in this department by at least one man on each opposing team this year. Jackson, who midway through the season blossomed into the top receiver in the ACC, ff! 14, 1964 rm V 5f S f 4 - s? ? v ft iff" s't f -' " ft j: v. Photo by Jock Lauterer At Reception Future few real issues in the campaign and "not many voters were in clined to have sharply divided opinions on it." Plagiarism Gets Senior Suspension A senior was suspended for one semester for plagiarism in a Men's Council trial Thursday night. The student admitted taking a feature from a newspaper and turning it in for an assignment in a writing course. He told the council that he had not been under pressures of time, but that he had been under some emotional distress at the time of the offense. The council recalled that most plagiarism cases are treated as a form of premeditated cheating and thus were subject to the sentence of suspension. In this case, the defendant copied the article verbatim. The council occasionally makes exceptions to this sentence in plagiarism cases involving fresh men or other students who turn themselves in without being told to do so. The defendant in this case had turned himself in after being con- j fronted by his teacher with the S fact that he had plagiarized. His sentence will terminate June 1 next year. trial Off R Court Recessed; Convenes Monday HILLSBORO, N. C. (AP) Defense attorneys worked me ticulously Friday in an attempt to establish an alibi for Frank Rinaldi, " charged with killing his pregnant wife. Ten witnesses placed him in or near business establish ments at Durham and Chapel . Hill last Chrismtas Eve day at the time a pathologist said his wife died of suffocation. . John F. Sipp, an insurance agent and a friend of Rinaldi, testified that the two were to gether that day from 8:45 a.m. until they returned to Rinal di's Chapel Hill apartment at 1:35 p.m. and found Mrs. Rinal di's battered body sprawled face down in the living room. He also denied that Rinaldi had seen or spoken to Alfred L. Foushee while in Chapel Hill about noon Dec. 24th. Fou shee, 27-year-old Negro handy man and the state's key wit ness, testified Thursday that Rinaldi had tried to hire him to kill his wife. Foushee also told of meet ing Rinaldi at about noon Dec. 24th. "It's over. I did it," Fou shee quoted Rinaldi as saying at that time. Dr. N. F. Rodman, a patholo gist who performed an autopsy on the body, estimated that GASTON LECTURE The 13th public lecture in the William Gaston Series will be delivered here Monday by Rev. John L. McKenzie of Loyola University. McKenzie, professor of history at Loyola and a past president of the Catholic Biblical Association, will speak on "Intellectual Freedom and the Scholar" at 3 p.m. in Carroll Hall. . Post NSA-Quicl In SL After last week's heated session on National Student Association, Thursday's Student Lctfi-s-lature meeting seemed quiet. SL commended efforts on campus to establish a pilct residence college system by pasinr a resolution. The resolution, introduced by Chuck Xeely (SP), was passed over objections that it hadn't been considered properly and was useless. The only other bill passed was a measure which defined the power of a legislative com mittee to retain legislation in committee and the criteria by which it cculd be brought out by vote or petition of the body. The legislature voted to excuse John Harmon (UP) from automatic unseatment because of absences, after he explained that he had b'jun confined for some time in the infirmary. University Party Legislators absent from Thursday's session were Lee January, Frank Willingham, and Tom Cannon. Frank I lodges was the only Student Party Legislator absent. Independent Legislator Simmons Patterson was also absent. will be at flankerback. He has 27 catches. The Heels' ground game may be helped by the fact that fullback Eddie Kesler may he running even harder than usual, for it was against this same team he suffered a broken nose last year, putting him out of action for a short time. The center of the controversy. Cavalier tackle and captain Bob Kowalkowski. says that he has heard that UNC may be "out to get hirn." and that he will be ready to "believe it when he sees it." He said that this game means more to him than even the Army game, which saw a fired-up Cavalier squad rout the Black Knights 35-14. The big tackle, who made All-ACC on the second team last year as a sophomore, has been hurt but is expected to return to the lineup for the game. The DTII Awards of the Week are back again. Students cm find out this week's Lizard of the Week by taking the effort to turn the page. Associated Tress Wire Service Case inaldi donth occurred between 10 a.m. and noon. Earlier testify ing as a state witness, Dr. Rod man had set the range at be tween 10 a.m. and 5 p.m., based on the medical condition of the body at the time of the autop sy late that night. During the Friday morning session, the state rested its case against Rinaldi, a Univer sity of North Carolina English instructor charged with first degree murder in the death of his wife, who was in her fourth month of pregnancy. Sipp's testimony came afler nine other witnesses reported seeing the pair at various busi nesses in Durham and Chapel Hill during the morning and early afternoon of Dec. 24th. Judge Raymond Mallard re cessed the trial in Orange Su perior Court until Monday morning. It will resume with Sipp on the stand, ready to testify as to what he saw ou entering Rinaldi's apartment. A packed courtroom of about 250 persons, most of .them university students fro'i nearby Chapel Hill, listened intently as the defense hied with painstaking care to break up the state's case. Sipp said Rinaldi, doing some last-minute Christmas shop ping, bought his wife a ma ternity dress and some per fume at a downtown Durham department store on the morn ing of Christmas Eve. He told the court they went to the Chapel Hill Eastgate Shopping Center on their rounds, leaving there between 12:30 and 12:45 p.m. He denied that Rinaldi had seen or spoken to Foushee during that visit.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 14, 1964, edition 1
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