Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 3, 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
.Library and tiSaSi Stor Pe eoiional on page 2. Thought An apple a day can give yon diarrhea. 1) 1) Sajggg CHAPEinmirNORTHCAgO Associated Press WirHT ' THEFT LYING CASE wmmmsssmmfmsmmmmm ' ; " : : I I? M Tv IT " n n ttv -n rv Junior's B y Faculty Review Board By PETE WALES . TVTII a . A Trvr Mxitwi A UNC junior, accused of ly ing and stealing, had his sen tence changed from two semes ters suspension to indefinite sus pension in an appeal case be fore the Faculty Review Board luesday. This was the second appeal for the defendant. 'Indefinite suspension usually lasts for one full academic semes ter, although it may last for two at the discretion of the Men's Council. Board Chairman Gordon Cleveland, a political sHPnrv professor, had no statement on reasons for the change in sen tence. The student was convicted of a series of pettv thefts from snack bar where he was employ ed ana of lying before the Men council m a case heard in two 'parts, Oct. 22 and 27. He was sentenced to two semesters sus pension. He appealed the case to thp faculty Review Board which dis tu' 1'iuceuurai errors in the first hearing. The defend ant had been charged with lying when he changed his story mid way through the proceedings and had not been given 72 hours notice of the new charge. The case was remanded to the other half of the Men's Council who retired it Nov. 24. The same verdict and sentence were returned. The second appeal was based on the severity of the sentence. The defendant had been tried first case who were , accused of the same charges. He maintained then and later that he had not been respon sible for the theft of as large amounts of goods as had the other two. In the first case: the defendant was charged with being "involv ed in" the theft of about $2,000 worth of goods. The figure came from an inventory shortage re corded shortly after he quit. Fart or nis ursc appeal was based on the implication in the ; initial charge that he was a part of a larger theft that he felt no responsibility for. Only one person had been implicated in the entire theft at that point. 'T figured that if I was the only other one who had admitted it, they might just split that $2,000 right down the middle," he said. He claimed that the total of his thefts over a period of time had not been more than about $25. In both of the Men's Coun cil trials this figure was disre garded because of the impossibili ty of establishing an accurate estimate. The defendant continued to maintain the difference between , taking articles for himself and i giving them away to friend.s This difference was not noted in any of the three trials. Both the council and the board regarded bo!h actions as stealing. He told the Board Tuesday that the figure of $2,000 on the initial charge had been part of his inducement to lie. "I was scared." he said, l lied because of the seriousness of the charge." He admitted, however that he told 'the council and the At 'torney General's Staff tnat he had never given or taken any thing at all. Further evidence showed he had been counseled strongly by the Dean of Men that c his best defense would be to tell the truth. The council chairman testi Tulane Tickets On Sale Today Basketball tickets for the Tu lane game at Woollen Gym Dec. 10 will be distributed to students and staff whose names begin with the letters N through Z today and tomorrow. , . On Saturday the remaining tick ets will be distributed to stu dents and staff on first-come, first-served basis. Because of limited space m Woollen Gym, this system is used. Students whose last names be gin with N through Z have top ;ritv nn the Tulane tickets, students from A to M will have priority on the tickets for the next home game. Tickets for the Kentucky game t the Charlotte. Coliseum on Monday, night are on sale to stu dents for $1. Sentence fied that the sentence would have been considerably differ ent had the defendant told the truth from the start. He said that the most severe sentence he would have received for the stealing charge alone wouM have been one semester sus pension. The defendant also claimed I that he was partly tempted, to lie because of the character and previous council record of his accuser. He maintained that parts of the accusations had been false. His accuser was the student first convicted in the whole case involving "the inventory short San ford f To Sum Up Years As Governor Governor Terry Sanford will review accomplishments of his administration Tuesday when he speaks to UNC students at 7:45 p.m. in Carroll Hall. His address, sponsored by the UNC Young Democrats Club, is on "North Carolina, 1961-64: A Summing Up." It will be open to the public. It was a little more than four years ago that Sanford outlined to the YDC a 32-point platform of what he planned to do for the state in return for his election as governor. 4K; V .1 .-5ft'.w-5Ji GOV. SANFORD Bill Whlchard, UNC YDC pres ident, said that the club and the governor felt that it would be appropriate for him to return here, as he enters the last weeks of his administration, for the purpose of going over what plans he has been able to carry out. He is expected to discuss his programs in public education, special education for exception al and retarded children, higher education, the arts, poverty, and industrial development. As a UNC student, Sanford was active in student govern ment and the YDC. Whichard urged students to at tend. AFROTC BALL "Airmen of Note," the U. S. Air Force dance orchestra, will play at the AFROTC Military Ball Saturday at. 8 p.m. in the Naval Armory. The orchestra has ap peared in over 300 cities in 25 countries and is acclaimed in "Downbeat" as "one of the best bands jazz enthusiasts can hear today." "Airmen of Note" . was the orchestra in Universal Inter national's "Glenn Miller Story." More recently it has appeared at the Brussels World Fair and the International Music Festival. fr.-.WhW. W.W.Wa'.V. .V.-AV.VSW.V.iAVkW.VA.W.V.'VWNW.'..V.V..V.-.V.V,l.". - --v--v--;-3'- .-- Out Go Ringo's Tonsils LONDON (AP) A surgeon went in Wednesday and snipped out two bits of lymphoid tissue from Ringo Starr's anterior and pos terior pillars of the fauces. Hours later all you could get from Covent Garden 2332, a special number set up for inquiries about the condition of the Beatles drum mer, was a busy signal. However, the people who took Ringo's tonsils out said all was well, and that the 24-year-old stick man would recover to utter many another yeah, yeah, yeah. They started taking out Ringo's tonsils at 8 a.m. and the job was over and done with in an hour and a half. People lucky enough to get through to Covent Garden 2332 heard the recorded voice of Anne Collingham, a secretarial employee of the Beatles management, assuring them that the long-nosed, gravel-voiced drummer was thriving. Te Beatles management said Ringo, taking no chances, would languish in University College Hospital for the next 10 days. After the recent American tour of the Beatles a couple of entrepreneurs bought pillow coses the boys had used and sold same for a buck a fragment. Ringo said this would not happen to his tonsils. He told newsmen he would have them cremated. Altered age. The defendant had originally changed his plea when three other witnesses were brought in to testify that they had received goods from him. Indefinite suspension usually lasts one full academic semester afr the end of the semester in which the student is first sus pended. Reinstatement is grant ed by the Men's Council upon formal application and, in some instances, a hearing. Other members of the Re view Board were Dr. Earle Wallace, political science pro fessor, and Dr. William J. Koch, professor of botany. Interviews Begin Today For Junior Committee Posts The Junior Class will hold committee interviews starting to day from 3-5 p.m. in the Rendez vous Room of Graham Memorial, it was announced yesterday by Class President Sonny Pepper. There are vacancies in the Pub licity, Social, Finance and Exe cutive Committees, Pepper said. In -addition,-, the class will or-T ganize a Projects Committee, which will sponsor speakers both on and off campus. Interviews wil continue through next week, with meeting room and times to be announced in the Daily Tar Heel. DECORATING PARTY Graham Memorial's annual all campus Christmas decorating party will be held Sunday at 2:30 p.m. Entertainment and refresh ments are highlights of this fes tive event. Students are invited. ''Explosive9 Poet Alan Dugan Speaks Tonight In Peabody "Extraordinary force and bril liant unexpectedness." This is how the New York Re view of Books described the Pu litzer Prize Winning poet Alan Dugan. Dugan, who will give a read ing tonight at 7:30 in Peabody Hall has been referred to as the "Ingmar Bergman of the so-called young er poets." Charles Wright of the English Dugan Department, who will introduce Dugan for the North Carolina Poetry Circuit tonight, said, "There is almost nothing in his poetry you can call 'Poetic diction. comes to r iVlcLJlosky iLPenies rmrl 1 Carolina I -rr , Max Morath will bring his ragtime tunes back to UNC Wednesday and this time he'll have company. Since his March concert, Morath has associated with three other musicians to form the Original Ray Quartet. The concert is slated for 8 p.nv in Memorial Hall. Admission will be free to students and the pub he. The heyday of ragtime was over when Morath was born in 1928. However he soaked up the "Maple Leaf Rag" from his mother, a silent movie piana" player, and carried on from there. Other members of the quartet joined him last summer and the group opened in New York's Vil lage Vanguard. When Morath decided to or ganize the quartet : he was facr ed with the problem of where to look for rag musicians. "Would they be jazz musi cians? Would they be folk musi cians? Jazz musicians can usual ly read music, but they . don't sing. Folk musicians can sing but most of them can't read." The men he finally selected were from neither category. Jim Taylor, who plucks the tenor banjo, was schooled in a variety of string instruments in cluding the lute. Felix; Pappalardi, a cornetist and percussionist, strums the guitarron, a huge guitar develop-' ed by the wandering Mariachi bands of Mexico to provide a mobile bass. The only man in the group whose background is almost con temporary is Barry Kornfeld whose interests stem from folk music of the nineteen-twenties and thirties. He plays guitar, five string banjo and harmonica with the quartet. - For two years he worked as guitar accompanist to Rev. Gary Davis, a blind gospel and blues singer. His interest in classic rag was whetted by his work during the past two years with jug bands. CIIAPIN RETURNS F. Stuart Chapin, UNC profes sor of city and regional planning, has returned from presiding over a conference on land develop ment and transportation in Wash ington, D. C. The meeting was attended by 25 university, trans portation and planning officials engaged in city planning studies. "There is no window dressing," Wright said. "His poetry is clean cut and straightforward. "One of the risks he runs is to use a lot of topical references to current things such as Mus zak, television, Madison Avenue, and to apply them to perennial themes." , Wright says that readers are sometimes shocked by some of the references that are used in Dugan poetry. "Less liberal readers consider it crude to use slang phrases like 'cold stoned in lyric poetry form," he said. "But with Dugan it fits and he can make it work. He makes it even decorous to the poem." "I'm very pleased that Dugan is coming to the Carolina Poetry Circuit. He is an exciting and ex plosive poet," Wright said. Dugan received the 1962 Na tional Book Award and the Rome Fellowship of the American Acad emy of Arts and Letters for 1962 63. His poems have been publish ed in the "Saturday Review," "New Yorker," and "Accent." He has written two books, "Poem" and "Poems 2." Imported Gift Sale Y" Court goes international today, tomorrow and Saturday with the sale of gifts from all over the world. Austria, the Philippines, Eng-. land, and Africa are just a few of the regions from which import ed items are coming for the In ternational Gift Bazaar and Cof fee House. Sponsored by the Finance Committee, the sale is a fund-raising program for YM YWCA community srvice pro jects. Prices range from $1 to $3 on items such as African wood carv ings and Irish pottery. II "Tf NJ" I II 1 W II f It I ! U Jill 39UUU IVICM. JO II - i jj A i : : 'r &lHr; i fcj ::J " " """I'-na,. ' J f , LOOKING IT OVER is George T. Kiley, Super intendent for the REA Construction Company which is building the big one, Morrison residence California Students Riot : For Camptis :6Free"lSpe BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) Led by a defiant campus rebel, sev eral hundred demonstrators in vaded the University of Cali fornia's Sproul Hall Wednesday. Their ; ; leader declared they would remain until disciplinary action was dropped against four self-styled Free Speech leaders. Mario Savio, the rebel leader, was joined by folksinger Joan Baez in leading the march by demonstrators into Sproul Hall after they talked and sang for nearly an hour to a rally crowd of 3,000 to 4,000 outside the build ing. Sproul Hall is. the Berkeley campus administrative center. Savio, 21, New York East Side Manhattan - born philosophy junior, told the crowd: "We're not going to break this up until we get what we want." CamDUs Police made no ettort to stop the demonstrators from entering the building. A police spokesman said no immediate action was planned. He noted, however, that the build ing normallv is closed at 5 p.m. Savio, who was arrested last March as a Sheraton-Palace Ho tel sit-in demonstrator for more Negro jobs, made clear that the THREE FILMS The Department of Radio, Tele vision and Motion Pictures will sponsor three Film Board docu mentary productions at 7:30 p.m. Monday in 1. Swain. Included on the program are "Mirror of the Past," an account of the Tryon Palace at New Bern; "The Ayes in session; and "We're Not Have It," the N. C. legislature Alone," a production by students at Bennett College. Politics Sneaky I By ERNIE McCRARY DTH Asst. Managing Editor Student politics in Iran can be a pretty sneaky affair. Because of government oppo sition, life can be rather tough for politically minded students. Franz Bahreini knows both stu dents and university faculty members who have gone to jail because of political activities. She and four men, all students of Tehran University or National University of Iran, visited the UNC campus earlier this week. They came to the United States two weeks ao at the invitation demonstration's major demand is" the withdrawal of disciplinary action against four leaders of the Free Speech Movement (FSM). Savio and the three others were notified this week that they would De summoned before the Faculty Committee on Student Conduct for violation of University regu lations. The three others are Arthur State SL Interviews Start Today Final interviews for State Stu dent Legislature are being held today in Roland Parker 3 from 3 to 5 p.m. The selections committee will round out the UNC delegation of 14 delegates and seven alternates after interviews end. Those not chosen for the official delegation will be invited to attend SSL as observers. All students, male and female, from freshman to graduate school, are invited to apply. Selection will be made on the basis of speaking ability and knowledge of current issues, particularly on the state level. This year's sessions of SSL will be in the old state house in Ra leigh, Feb. 18-20. Schools from alf over the state will attend. The UNC delegation will be meet next week to discuss what bill it should present at SSL. of the American government, and will return home in four "Iranian students are intense ly interested in politics," - M i s s Bahreini said, "because they are concerned about the way the government is run. They are anxious to have a better life and more freedom to do what they , want" UNC's student government sys tem especially interested tne visiting students. "In Iran we cannot have stu- dent we political organizations, so want to learn all we can halL The 10-story structure will hold 1,042 stu dents and hopefully will be ready by next fall. Photo by Jock Lauterer Goldberg and his sister,' Jackie" Goldberg, and Brian" Turner. All participated in the Oct. 1-2 sit-in demonstration in . Sproul Hall during which demonstrators occupied a police car through the night and used it as a speaking rostrum. Other demands outlined by Sa vio in the new demonstration in cluded: An end to regulations "which needlessly restrict students or their organizations in the exer cise of on - campus political rights." No further disciplinary action be taken until the administration reaches a settlement with the Free Speech Movement. The University's Board of Re gents last Nov. 19 declared this policy for campus political ac tivity: "Certain campus facilities, carefully selected and properly regulated, may be used by stu dents and staff for planning, im plementing, or raising funds or recruiting participants for law ful off campus action, not for unlawful off -campus action." The Regents, in another reso lution, reaffirmed their policy that all students and student or ganizations "obey the tews of the state and community." Savio and his supporters last year recruited students for the series of San Francisco demon strations demanding more jobs for Negroes. Savio, a campus representative of the Student Non-Violent Co ordinating Committee, spent the summer in Mississippi helping in the drive to register Negroes for n about your groups. But since our students are so concerned about politics, perhaps SO per cent of them take part in unofficial or ganizations which are not ap proved by the government. "We do not even have an of ficial university newspaper be cause we do not want one if we cannot say everything we want to, so there is an 'unofficial' pa per," Miss Bahreini said. "It is not uncommon for stu dents to be arrested for their activities. Some are imprisoned for a long time a year or more. I know a medical student who Bobby Baker Takes Stand, Also 'Fifth' WASHINGTON (AP) Former Ambassador Matthew H. McClos key denied Wednesday that he ever took part in an undercover deal to kick back $35,000 from one of his government contracts to help finance the 1960 Kcnncdv- Johnson campaign. The 71-year-old retired Phila delphia contractor and Demo cratic fund-raiser testified before the Senate Rules Committee after Bobby Baker refused to answer any questions about political nav- offs, party girls, or ether capital capers. Referring to testimony vestcr- day by insurance agent Don B. Reynolds, who said he acted as bag man" m the deal and told of . a breakfast meeting at which it purportedly was set up, Mc Closkey said: "That is not correct. Such a conversation never took place at no time, ever. I never heard of it." McCloskev said he never at tended any meeting with Rey nolds and Baker, as Reynolds described. McCloskey also said he doubted he ever received a letter from Reynolds starting: "Dear Matt:" "I'd only met the fellow once or twice," McCloskey said. A copy of a letter from Rey nolds billing McCloskey for a performance bond on the con tract was placed in evidence Tuesday. . Reynolds testified that another guest at the breakfast meeting in the Mayflower Hotel was for mer President Harry S. Truman. He said Truman was not present when the alleged political kick back plan was discussed, how ever. McCloskey said he knew noth ing about any such meeting at tended by Truman. Baker, the dapper ex-page boy from Pickens, S. C, invoked the Fifth Amendment when asked about Reynolds' statement that Baker masterminded the ar rangements for the alleged pay off. To this and 45 other questions. some touchy and some apparent ly innocuous. Baker cited the iContinued on Pace 3) SL Session Ends Today A bill to provide funds for a joint student-faculty-administra tion conference is the only mea sure officially passed out of com mittee for consideration by Stu dent Legislature Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in New East. The joint conference, proposed earlier this year by Student Body President Bob Spearman, will seek to promote understanding between the three groups in areas of mutual concern. Another bill appropriating funds for residence college pilot projects may be considered by the body pending approval by mem bers of the Finance Committee. Thursday's meeting will be the last of the current legislative session, and all legislation which has not been acted upon by Stu dent Legislature after Thursday will have to be re-introduced next year. iiran was arrested and could not finish his education. "The. situation is not good, but we can only wait for the future and hope for the best. We have enjoyed our stay at UNC so much," she said. "This has been our first chance to really meet American students. We came here from Boston after visiting Harvard and M.I.T., but we were not able to talk to many students there." The group left Chapel Hill yes terday morning for Knoxvil'e, Tenn. ....
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 3, 1964, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75