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Library 5ertals 50pt. Box 57o Chapn Hill, N.c, mm If 1 Weather cold. Thought Spiders are cross-eyed. Review Board Gets Appeal Case Today lvinc 5 Jumor, convicted of Co55.ii s.teaUng by the Men's the rU Carry his cas to night ReViGW Board t0 The student, presently under, a two-semester suspension sen tence appealed his original conviction of Oct 07 v, same Board two weeks ago. ine appeal was based on al- gea procedural errors and severity of sentence. The board found that the ueienaant had not been prop erly charged and that he had not been given 72 hours notice of the lying charge. The stealing charge, the de fendant claimed, implicated him m a large theft involving approximately $2,000 worth of goods from a snack bar where he was employed. He admitted -to having given away small amounts of goods to friends on repeated occasions, but said he had no connection with the larger theft. During the original trial, he pleaded innocent and stated that he had not taken anything at all. He was charged with lying when he changed his plea and his story midway through the proceedings. Under the student constitu tion, a defendant has the right of 72 hours advance no tice of a charge. The faculty remanded the case to the Men's Council for a new trial. The case was heard last Tuesday by members of the Council who had not been in the first trial. The stealing charge was rephrased to leave out any " implication in the larger theft. In the retrial, the Council again handed down a verdict of guilty and sentenced him to two semesters suspension. The defendant pleaded guil ty to the charges, but attempted to show that the offense was not as serious as indicated in the first trial. He felt that giv ing away small articles to friends should be difTerentiat ed from stealing for his own use. His defense pointed out that he had lied only to protect himself from implication in the larger theft and that he would not have lied if he had been correctly charged. A witness from the first trial said that the defendant had said he had not stolen or given away anything at all when questioned directly. 1 The three-man Review Board will hold a new hearing on the Yule Parade Chapel Hill will give UNC its answer to the Beat Dook Parade at 6:30 tonight with the annual Christmas Parade. The procession with the theme "Christmas in Nursery Rhymes," will include marching bands, clowns, floats and will be high lighted by the apperance of Santa Claus. Frank Cain, former circus clown and comedy star, will ap pear as a clown in the parade. Costumes of 50 nursery rhyme characters will be worn by Chapel Hill Y-Teens. The parade, sponsored by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Association, will proceed from the Morehead parking lot down Franklin Street to South Greens boro Street in Carrboro. The UNC Naval ROTC Drum and Bugle Corps and Air Force Band wiU be among bands participating. The Town's Christmas lights will be turned on today, and local stores will remain open until 8:30 or 9 p.m. It's Happy Birthday To Winnie His 90th TONDON (AP Sir Winston Churchill was 90 Monday. World statesmen sent greetings. Little boys and girls called with flowers. Britons rejoiced ... and the older ones remembered. Inside his West End apartment, where he spent the chilly day, the old man was left with his memories too. Frail and feeble now, he rested f6r the main celebration last nJtZ dLner with his closest friends and relatives. On the menu, a lifetime Churchill favorite: oysters. Every hour through the day post office trucks pulled up outside the apartment in Hyde Park Gate bringing, loads of telegrams, JSay cards. The total birthday mail is expected to be about 60,000 pieces. de GaS Dwight D. Eisenhower and Harry S. Truman, old wartime friends. ...... diiu nciny nersonal act of tribute a For thousands of Britons, it was a Pers,UI Galvanized' kind of specia, .zz::a rw-T 'said then, was Britain, finest hour. It was also his. once But he is a very old - warhorse T flashed fire and defiance M" stiU pugnacious, he cannot mZc one day in 1874 A two-line inser in The man wbo was to go down announce the arnval-ui a hurry-of tne m case tonight, calling on wit nesses from the first two trials and reviewing testimony. If the defendant should dis approve of the faculty's deci sion, he can appeal to the Chancellor. Winter Hits; Snow Is Here, Not For Long V ' A 5-year-old boy stood on the sidewalk on Franklin Street and held out two hands and one tongue to catch the fluffy, falling white flakes. "Look, Mommy," he said, "It's just like on telebishion." The first snow of' the season, no matter how wet, sloppy, and cold it is, holds a special en chantment. For the weatherman, yester day's snow flurries didn't mean very much except that it's cold and it's going to stav that wav. There was "less than one inch accumulation in most areas." ac cording to the snowmen at the Raleigh-Durham Airport Weather Bureau. Snow was scheduled to stoD late last night and to be replaced by bitter cold temperatures. It will continue to get colder the rest of the week. But to the little boy. it meant that Santa might have a clear path for his sleighride to Chapel Hill on Dec. 25. To the men in Craige and Ehr- inghaus Residence Halls, it's go ing to mean a long walk this morning and a thawing out of frozen shoes and socks when they get back. To New Yorkers and New Eng landers on campus the slush and snow means "I came South to get away from this sort of thing." ... r : To those who own cars it means chains, stalled engines, windshield scrapers and a deep respect for the makers of anti freeze. To the street cleaners it means a bonus in their paycheck. To storeowners it is messy floors and a store full of people who came in just' to get warm without any inclination toward buying anything. The hardware stores may sell a few shovels, the drug stores a few bottles of cold remedies, and the clothing stores a few pairs of rubber boots. The postman doesn't like it either. It reminds him of "Neith er rain, nor snow, nor gloom of night shall . . ." To the student body in general it brings to mind the good old days in high school when it might have meant no classes for the day. It would take a blizzard here. NEW ABC STORE? Chapel Hill may get another ABC store soon. The North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Board will meet Dec. 7 to act on a request by local business and civil lead ers that a new ABC store be erested in western Chapel Hill. Chapel Hill Police Chief Wil liam Blake told board members that for Negroes living in the western section of Chapel Hill it was cheaper to buy whiskey from bootleggers who sell their product in homes than to buy it at Eastgate. If approved, the store could possibly be erected in a lot at 325 W. Rosemary St. CHAPEL i ! 1 ' Jf ' t '1 1 iiiummrnnrnniKiiiiwiiMLiiLL BRRRRRRRR!! WINTER IS HERE! The sea son's first snow came Quick on the heels of Thanksgiving, catching most students off their indent ear Red By ALAN BANOV DTH News Editor Should Red China be admitted to the United Nations? Is a power ful third bloc of neutral nations emerging in world politics? Same 77 UNC students heard answers to these questions over Thanksgiving vacation from rep resentatives of eight countries at the United Nations in New York. Opinions were varied on China's admission, - but - most speakers thought the U. S. press had con fused the difference between neu tral and non-alligned powers. J. B. Phillips, second secretary of the Ghana Mission, said in Thursday, "There is no neutral power in the world today." In wartime a country may declare itself neutral, but a non-aligned country may decide not to be involved on a particular issue. He suggested that Red China be admitted to the UN and its Security Council and that Taiwan be admitted as a new member. Ghana thinks Russia should pay its back assessments for the UN's Congo operations, Phillips said, but "the UN Charter is so loose that the United States and USSR can both use tenable arguments." The UN owes Ghana $14 mil lion, he added. "God knows we can use it!" The First Secretary of the Yugoslavia mission, Dusan Gas pari, told the students his coun try advocates "peaceful and ac tive coexistence." Nuclear war is "detrimental to the whole of mankind ... no country would win." Although "Yugoslavia disagrees with Communist China on coex istence," the secretary said, his country believes "any country left out of the UN can only weak en it. "Yugoslavia is aways against nuclear tests by anyone, any where. The fact that China has exploded a bomb shows the in effectivness of disarmament con ferences. We must go faster to make new agreements, and bring China into agreements and force her to hold to them." WINSTON CHURCHILL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, ; Delegates 1 China Controversy Syria's first secretary at its UN mission said "There is no real third bloc. The idea came out of modern man's dilemma in choosing between two great forc es. He want a third choice, and actually there are many third choices." Akram Midani said his country believed in a "positive neutralist policy you can take action when you deem it necessary." Indians representative,- Nirmal: j. Singh, said his nation has been "neutral" because its initial purpose after gaining independen ce was to concentrate upon dom estic, rather than world affairs. "We wanted to remain friends with all countries. We did not want to give up our independence by siding with one side or an other." He noted that the United States was neutral also in its first years of independence. The two nations shared a common goal: "to build up the country, not to get involv ed in entangling alliances that are not necessary to their own Hubbard Named As UP Leader Jim Hubbard, a sophomore from Rocky Mount, was elected chairman of the University Party last Tuesday night. Hubbard is the former treas urer of the Freshman Class and a member of Student Legislature. Hubbard promised to achieve an expanded concept of the UP through efforts of new and en larged party committees. "We will appoint UP coor dinators , for residence halls, sororities and fraternities who will work to insure a large at tendance at UP policy making meetings," he said. Hubbard also promised to delegate some of the power currently being exercised by the UP Executive Committee to the UP members as a whole. in history as the greatest Englishman of his time. This is what the advertisement said: Birth: on the 30th November, at Blen'ieim Palace, the Lady Randolph Churchill, prematurely, of a son. They called the boy Winston Spencer. Churchill's lust for life thus began early. He began this big day today like any other: a light breakfast in bed brought by his wife "My Darling Clementine" and read the newspapers. Birthday messages flooded in. The first he was given was from Queen Elizabeth II. She also sent a bouquet of lilies and freesias. Among the day's callers was Prime Minister Harold Wilson. "He seemed very well," Wilson reported as he left. Outside the apartment ordinary folk pressed the doorbell just to say happy birthday. Secretaries and household staff took their messages. Churchill issued a special message to those who had sent him greetings, saying: "I am most grateful to all those who have remembered me on my 90th birthday. The number of messages I have received from all over the world is, it seems, greater than ever before and hope that these wf.io have had the kindness to write to me will understand if it is not possible for me to reply to so many. Their thoughts have given me the greatest pleasure." A secretary said many of the messages had come from well wishers in the United States. .' , JTUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, w - ,,, 3 guard. The exception is Joe Cline, a freshman from Belmont, who is qu'te well prepared for any and all cold weather. Photo by Lauterer. To U. N. affairs." . On Wednesday the students visited the permanent missions of the USSR and US, where both speakers reflected their nations' usual stands. Igor Kufmin, the Russian host said Khrushchev "was retired be cause of advanced age and bad health." The former Soviet lead er also did not mean he'd bury the ' U. S. by force, the mission representative added. "We will win over your system through peaceful competition." P. Y. Tsao, counsellor of the Chinese mission, countered argu ments for Red China's admission to the UN by asking "Does the Communist regime really repre sent the people? To be a member a country must be peace-loving. Any member country persistently violating terms of the Charter should be expelled." The Communist Chinese "do not believe in negotiations or treaties," Tsao asserted. "Red China believes only in military force," and should not be a mem ber just for disarmament. The English have recognized Red China and will accept its admission into the UN, accord ing to Peter Thacher, political adviser to the British mission. His country has no policy on Taiwan, he said, since Formosa "has no legal status under in ternational law.. "It is unreasonable and illogi cal not to have relations with a government that controls such a large area, especially when it has nuclear weapons," he con tends. "If you're going to apply mor ality to international politics," Thacher asked, "Why start with China? ... We don't want vic tory in the UN, just success." Dr. Frank Porter Graham, for mer UNC president and now a UN adviser, closed Friday's semi nar by discussing his work in settling the Dutch-Indonesian con flict. (A DTH interview with Dr. Graham will appear in tomorrow's DTH.) 1 0c: i ewis Combination 1 By LARRY TARLETON DTH Sports Editor Tonight is the night that all Carolina basketball fans have waited for since Bobby Lewis scored 51 points in his first freshman game last Novem ber tonight I American Billy Cunningham team together for the Carolina varsity. A sophomore-studrled Clem son team will have the task of trying to stop the Tar Heels' one-two punch beginning at 3 in Woollen Gym. High School Ail-American Larry Miller will lead the Tar Babies against the Clemson Cubs in a 6 p.m. pre liminary. The Lewis-Cunningham duo should give the Tar Heels a twosome similar to Michigan's Cazzie Russell and Bill Bun tin. Cunningham has made all W Academic Freedom Subject Of 'Closed' Prof Meeting The UNC chapter of the Ameri- K can Association of University Pro fessors held a closed meeting last night to discuss student aca demic freedom and the Speaker Ban Law. After the AAUP's freedom com mittee report by Prof. John Gra ham, President William C. Fri day was to lead discussion of the Gag Law. Prof. David Brown was to pre--sent the report of the committee an academic freedom, followed by discussion led by Chancellor Paul Sharp. Dr. Arnold Nash, president of UNC's AAUP chapter, refused a DTH reporter admission to the meeting. "This is a private meeting, be ing held for private discussion. We think that the professors will feel freer to speak out if they know representatives of the press are not present," Nash said yes terday. "We have a perfect right to bar anyone we want to from the Applications Open For Student Winter Trip To Yugoslavia A UNC student may have a chance to visit Yugoslavia, all expenses paid, if he can qualify for a mission organized by the National Student Association. The Yugoslav Union of Stu dents (YUS) has invited three students from the United States to visit their nation Jan. 5-24 for a "cultural exchange." Interested persons should contact Student Body President Bob Spearman. NSA must have all applications by Dec. 10. The YUS invitation marks the first time it has asked U.S. students to visit on an official basis even though it has had close contact with USNSA foi ls years. San Francisco Team Seen In Ken Willard's Pro Future Ken Willard, the Tar Heels' All-American halfback, says he is still "talking" with the San Francisco 49ers who selected him as their first draft choice. "We're still just talking right now," Willard said yesterday, "And probably will be negotiat ing by telephone all week. "I'm going out to San Fran cisco Friday, and hope we'll be able to come to an agreement while I'm out there." The Richmond, Va., native was the second collegian to be picked in the National Football League draft. Only Aifcurn full back Tucker Frederickson was chosen before the Tar Heels' leading rusher the last three years. "I'm real hapoy about being selected second," said Willard, "I knew that I would miss a lot of Ail-American teams because of our 5-5 record, but this real ly made me feel good." If the 49ers hadn't grabbed Willard, the Detroit Lions and the Minnesota Vikings were ready to pick him. No team in 7! 71 Tfft im T1 Wli OLJLJLiLJL JLJLIL ars Tonight the pre-season A 11-America teams and could be the best college player in the nation this year. Billy the Kid has led the ACC in rebounding the last two years and in scoring last year. Only one returning colle gian, Rick Barry of Miami, topped Cunningham in re bounding and scoring last year. The Kid averaged 26 points and 15.8 rebounds, but this year it's possibte he may not lead the team in scoring. The reason is the sensational Lewis. Breaking every possible freshman scoring last year, the 6-3 Washington, D. C. product averaged 36.4 points and 16 5 rebounds for the Tar Babies. Twice Lewis scored over bJ points and hit 40 with regu larity. Joining Cunningham and Lewis in the starting lineup meeting. Students have meetings where faculty members are not allowed,, and justifiably so so why can't professors have a meet ing where students are not allow ed" A committee on civil rights at UNC, including student participa tion in demonstrations, the extent of integration and equal opportuni ty employment, was to be made by Prof. Gerhard Brown, Other reports were to deal with income tax rulings, faculty sal aries and research and study leaves. State SL Interviews Are Today Interviews for the UNC dele gation to the 1965 State Stu dent Legislature will begin to day from 3 to 5 p.m. in Roland Parker I. Applicants must take a short written test on current events and parliamentary procedure and be interviewed by the se lections committee. The Carolina delegation will be composed of 14 voting dele gates, seven alternates and an unlimited number of observers. Delegates will have their way paid to the three-day mock legislative session in the state capitol Feb. 25-27. All applicants will be eli gible to participate as observ ers if they are not picked for the first two categories. Interviews will continue at the same times tomorrow and Thursday. The delegation will meet next week to select a topic for a bill to be presented in Raleigh. ' . KEN WILLARD the American League bothered to draft Ken because he had in dicated that he would probably play in the National League for numerous reasons. However, the Buffalo Bills were so high on Willard that Head Coach Lou Saban came t 1 1 Associated Press Wire Service gham Opens for the Tar IIccls will be sen ior Bill Brown G-2, 131) ut the quarterback spot, Ray Res pess (6-4, 203), a 13.2 scorer last year, at one forward, and either sophomore Mark Mil ken (6-6, 230) or junior Bob Bennett (6-3, lDii) at the other forward. .Bennett has been botlieri.Nl UNC Clemson Cunningham F Helms Rcspcss F Aycrs Mirken C Mahaffoy Lewis G Benedict Brown G Sutherland by a sprained ankle the lat week, but should be ready to night. "I hope he'll be ready," said Coach Dean Smith, -lie has been doing a real good job in our scrimmages." Lewis and Cunningham have been bothered by minor in juries but both will be in good shape for the Tigers. Lewis has been in the infirmary since Thursday with a boil on his neck, and Cunningham hurt his right arm in a scrimmage against Davidson in Charlotte Thursday. The scrimmage against Da vidson "showed some of our weaknesses," said Smith, but both coaches were pleased with the performances of their teams. Both squads were ranked high in the pre-season predictions, and the scrim mage showed that they were about, evenly matched. But last Thursday's scrim mage meant nothing. Tonight Billy and Bobby team together for the first time in a varsity game. Woollen Gym will be filled to capacity for the first act in the new show. Duke Chapel Clioir Presents 'Messiah' The great Christmas oratorio, the "Messiah" by George Fried rich Handel, made famous through the years since its first performance in Ireland in 1741, will be presented for the 32nd year on Dec. 6-7 by the Duke University Chapel Choir and four, outstanding soloists. Prof. Paul Young, director of choral activities at Duke, will conduct both performances which are being supported by a grant from the Mary Duke Bid die Foundation. The soloists, three of whom will be making initial appear ances at Duke with the 100 mem ber choir, are Alice Riley, so prano, Doris Mayes, mezzo-soprano of New York; Stanley Kolk, tenor; and Thomas Paul, basso. MRC MEETING All members of the Men's Residence Council are urged to attend a special meeting tomor row from 7-11 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room of GM. down to personally scout Ken in the Duke game. The 6-2, 220 pound halfback amassed 2,043 yards rushing ia his three varsity years at Caro lina. Only the fabulous Charlie Gioo Choo) Justice uith ocr 2,800 in four years tops Willard. Willard blasted for 4ffj yards his sophomore season and upped that to 742 yards as a junior when he wen the ACC rushing crown. This year Ken finished third in the rushing race, but still upped his mark to 83o yards in 223 carries, a 3.7 average. "Ken was a great player in many ways," says Coach Jim Ilickey. "He was durable as well as a strong runner. In three tough varsity years, he didn't miss a game because of injuries. When you needed the first dow n or the big play Willard uas always there. The opposition usually figured he was coming at them, but they still couldn't stop him. Willard wa.s marked for greatness his sophomore seasan and he came through. He's All-American in my book."
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 1, 1964, edition 1
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