Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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Conference toda3efopmaembefs will rather on Ihi V 7?kd conference tern LRSdent Co,iec Sys tem. See Tuesday's DTII for of this Weather Cloudy, warmer, possibility of rain. ,L, NORTH CARQUNaTURDAY, DECEMBER 19G4 Associated Press Wire Service mm m m Editor's Notebook With Fred Seely t5 , f un the Monday before Thanksgiving vacation began, the University Party elected John Rnnov oc - i , -w.j do us new c ri air man. On the Tuesday before Thanksgiving vacation began, the University Party elected Jim Hubbard as its new chair man. And therein lies a strange ?nd confusing tale. What happened between Mon day night and Tuesday night is a first-rate lesson in campus power politics of the kind found only within the confines of the TT wunwuiij i at Ijr. ;, It encompassed many people, many factions. After the show was over, there was a great deal of bitterness on all sides, and the Student Party gleefully jumped on the situation with full speed ahead. So what's the story? To begin with, the University Party announced it would hold an election to choose a succes sor to Jeff Adams, who had re signed the week before. Notice of the meeting was duly print ed in the DTH, and fraternities, sororities and residence halls were notified. There were two nominees: Jim Hubbard and John Roney. Hubbard, a former freshman class officer, student legislator and campaign manager for Stu dent Body VP Don Carson, was the choice of the party's execu tive committee. ' Roney, the party vice - chairman, brought along his fraternity plus an other from across the street. Roney won , in a. landslide with the fraternities' support.. The next day,. Roney resigned. l or the good of the party." As he was still the titular (Continued on Page 3) Ail But One rVR Siisnp.ois Are Released JACKSON, Miss. W) Going ahead with plans to carry its case to a federal grand jury, the Justice Department dropped charges Friday against a 20th man arrested in connection with Mississippi's civil rights slay ings. James Edward Jordan, 38, an admitted member of the mili tant White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, was freed at the government's request by a U.S. Commissioner at Biloxi. Government attorneys said evidence against Jordan and 20 other white men would be turned over to a Grand Jury just as soon as it is reconvened by Federal Dist. Judge Harold Cox. Cox was at work at his office here today, but refused 4r. talk- with newsmen. ThP release of Jordan ien ." " - . r-wppc nending against only nf 21 men arresieu j 1 ttnr,P Tinvln Barnette, ZD, oi - - .A m. V - I Cullen La. Although not present at yes- fprdav's preliminary hearing at Meridian for 19 of those ar- rested, Barnette figured promi- nently in the proceedings be fore U.S. Commissioner Esther Carter. Miss Carter stunned Justice Department lawyers by refus ing to allow an FBI agent to read a purported confession by Barnette on the grounds it was "hearsay" evidence. When they declined to offer any additional evidence, she ordered the l men released. In Oslo, Norway, where he received the Nobel Peace Prize, Dr. Martin Luther King called the action a "tragic mis carriage of justice" and said he would appeal to President John son. ir5r.it Mlled for an economic asainst all products made in the state of Mississip ni. - NTinHopn of the 21 men were rh3rtpH with conspiracy in the : j d a vines of AH- , chael Schwerner, James Chaney snd Andrew Goodman. -Tntir. Denartment attorneys arded what they said was a signed confession by Trrtto. The FBI has charged hat Rarnette was among the assigned to AU . carry out the crune Ciiimingliam And Tar Heels mash Three Game By LARRY TARLETON DTH Sports Editor It was a night for breaking records Thursday at Woollen Gym. 'Billy Cunningham personally broke two school records, most points scored, 48, and most field goals made, 21 as the Tar Heels rolled over Tulane, 111 74. Rosenbluth's former highs of 47 points and 20 field goals against Furman in 1957. In addition, the Tar Heels broke a school mark by making good on 47 field goals. The old mark was 44 against South Carolina in 1958. The team fell four points shy of the team scoring record of 115 against William and Mary in 1956 and equaled against South Carolina in 1958. Cunningham fell just three rebounds shy of his school record, but he did move into second place among all-time Carolina rebounders. Entering the game, Billy trailed Rosen bluth by 14 rebounds, and his 25 easily surpassed the career total of the 1957 Player-of-the Year. Needs 54 Now the Kid needs only 54 recoveries to top Pete Bren nan as the leading Tar Heel re- bounder. Brennan is now tops with 854 grabs. Cunningham has 801 and Rosenbluth 790. Billy could ' have scored a "hundred" Thursday night, but Coach Dean Smith elected to rest him after he had broken the school scoring record. By sitting out the last six minutes, Cunningham missed a chance at Ron Shavlik's ACC record of 55. But the crowd wanted more. We want Billy. We want Bil ly," was the cry while Billy sat on the bench. The basket which gave Billy the record was, as he describes it, "Just, an attempt to put "the ball -in the hole, break the rec ord, and get out of the game." One More Before his last basket, as sistant coach Ken Rosemond in formed him that he needed only one basket to oreaK Kosen bluth's record, so Billy grabbed defensive rebound and took he ball the length of the court, running over three opponents as he sank his 47th and 48th points. "I knew I was going to charge, but it gave me the basket, so I didn't really care," said the sensational southpaw. When asked about the crowd's chanting, Billy replied, "I was so tired I was just glad to get jut. It's a great honor to top Lennie and I hope I'm worthy of it." " . The 48 points is his college high, but he once scored 61 at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. "We won the game 144-40, and I got 61 in three quarters before they took me out. It was against Fort Hamilton, but they weren't too good." The only disappointing part of the evening for Cunningham Carol Concert i ..; r -t ? i t iviusic ior miuren, inc. a com munity organization, w$ll pre I A. U f 1 1 rf-il l seni an oiu-iasnionea inrisimas I . . . ..... .. . carol concert m nm Hall at 3 k tomorrow atternoon. The Bell Ringer s Choir of Dur- ham, the Recorder Consort, a Lroup of UNC and Duke faculty members, and Raleigh folk musi cian Betty Vaden Williams, will sing. 1 s Official Welcome Given Charlotte College By SL Student Legislature officially welcomed Charlotte College into the Consolidated University Thursday night in a resolution which passed by the body along with five other bills. Jim Little SP) defeated George Ingram (UP) for the chairman ship of the powerful judiciary committee in a purely partisan vote Of 23-20. An appropriation bill for the Student Government Honors Com mittee, introduced by John Froneberger SP) was passed after Froneberger, Hugh Blackwell (SP) and Chuck Neely (SP) de bated for nearly 45 minutes over a. $20 item in the bill. Money was also voted to the Honors Committee for, the publi cation of a booklet describing the honors program at the Uni versity. An appropriation for publication of a course evaluation booklet compiled by the Academic Affairs Committee of Student Govern ment was alloted by the body. The course evaluation booklet is a frank discussion of the courses of the university and their respective instructors in the words of the students who took them. Two bills regarding the administration of legislative reports and the status of the budget's general surplus were passed. Rosenblnth's Marks Fall was his foul shooting. The Tar Heel Ail-American hit only 6 of 15 foul shots. Time and time again he threw his hands up in disgust after missing charity tosses, and once even looked to the bench as if calling for di vine intercession. I. it- . ..: Sf 4 , WA.'.v.V.WvK'. Billy Cunningham Record Setter ' Photo by Jock Lauterer Probation Sentence Given For Cheating One student was convicted and four acquitted in cheating cases from the same course in Men's Council trials Thursday. The examination grader discov ered similarities in the papers of two students who sat next to each other possible instances of cheating. In the first case, both defend ants pleaded innocent. They sat together, but had very few simi larities in-their papers. All their answers were checked against their class notes. The council found both innocent. In the second case one student pleaded innocent while the other pleaded guilty to having copied from the first student's paper. During the trial the second stu dent changed his plea because he thought what he had done did not constitute cheating. He told the council that he ac cidentally noticed a word on his neighbor's paper as . part of the answer to the final question. The word helped his memory and he wrote the answer. It was wrong. it P m is 1 Records Laughing about his foul shooting after the game, Billy said, T wouldn't mind hitting 40 per cent from the line every night if I could score 48 points." It was a great night for the Tar Heels and their 6-6 center. 1 v - V The council found him guilty and placed him on indefinite pro bation.' The members decided that the infraction was slight and was accidental. They made the sentence indefinite so that the defendant would have to appear or a reinstatement hearing af- er one semester. The council decided he would have to reconsider the exact meaning of the Honor Code since he did not fully understand it at present. In the final case, only one of the two students charged was tried. The other will come be fore the council next week. The defendant pleaded innocent and was acquitted. The council found, evidence to indicate that cheating had taken place, but found nothing that would special ly implicate the defendant. Combo, Singers On GM Schedule The "Jammers" are featured in Graham Memorial's combo party at 8 tonight in the Rendez vous Room. Ricks, a guitarist who plays country-style blues and tradition al folk music, has . performed throughout the country with the Johnson City Three. Aaronof, a banjo player, has played extensively in Eastern coffee houses. FOOTBALL BANQUET TONIGHT Ray Elliot, the famed ex-football coach at Illinois series as guest speaker for the Carolina football banque tonight to be held in the Carolina Inn. - Elliot, a skillful tactiction as coach of the Illini, is in constant demand as an after-dinner speak er. The banquet U for members of the 1964 varsity and freshman teams. Several awards will be made 1 J Parley Starts Today The Reidsville conference cn the developing Residence Col lege System will begin today at 2:30 p.m. Nearly 50 representatives of the student body, the faculty and the administration will at tend the two-day meeting to discuss ; the RCS as well as Problems of the University. The conference, which had been suggested as early as 1932 to improve studeht-faculty-ad-ministration communication, will consist of extended discus sion periods and a plenary ses sion. ' Each discussion sroup vvi'l consist of appro irnately 10 members from all three branches of the University com munity, and each croup will evaluate the RCS as a whole "I hope the members of these three branches of the Univer sity will become aware of t3"os: areas cf University affairs in which their " inetrest overlaps." Student Body President Bob Spearman said. Spearman initiated planning for the conference and pat terned " it after the earlier Southern Pines Conference be tween fraternity, leaders and the. administration. "This conference is but an other indication of the possi bility of even greater accept ance of student self-government at all levels of the Uni versity faculty and administra tion," Student Body Vice Presi dent Don Carson said. Pair Injured In Accidents On :?T!iiirg day- Two UNC students were hurt in separate accidents Thursday ; night and were admitted to the Infirmary. Joe Freeman, a freshman from Elkin, was injured in the groin at Thursday's basketball game when his foot slipped between two steps as he climbed the bleach ers. He landed straddling one of the boards. Freeman underwent surgery Friday morning at Memorial Hospital, he was reported rest ing comfortably in satisfactory condition. He will be released in a few days, officials said. Harold Berry, a sophomore from Tryon, was bruised on the legs Thursday at 10 p.m. wben he was struck by an auto as he crossed Cameron Avenue near Dey Hall. Chapel Hill Police said Berry was struck by the auto and thrown onto the hood. No charges were filed against the driver. .V OI1I1C Have you lost a burro lately? Yep, that's right a B-U-R-R-O. , Don't laugh, because somebody lost one. Four members of Del ta Upsilon were working on the Inter-Fraternity Council's clean up project about a mile east of town Thursday afternoon. All of a sudden, a three-foot high bur ro came ambling along the road toward them. Not knowing what one is sup posed to do when encountered by a burro, they held a hasty con ference on the situation. Then, wild-west style, off they went in hot pursuit of the burro who was by now traversing hill and dale and a nearby field. Like all modern cowboys, they pursued not on horseback but in a raring MG. Back to the DU ranch they hiked with the tro phy. Unfortunately, they found they knew very little about the care and feeding of burros. Police were called to see if they had a lost an dfound burro division. The answer was no, but they did had a solution. So over walked a policeman and led the burro to a new temporary home, the Vine Veterinary Hospital. Dr. ' Vine is anxious to hear from anyone who knows the bur ro or its owner. Meanwhile the burro is being being well fed and is happily bed ded down in a stable. Former ABC Board Members Y ielcled To By ERNIE McCRARY DTII Ass't. Managing Editor Dr. Dudley D. Carroll, the "yielding to pressure .from only. Orange County ABC Board West Franklin Street business acmbor opposing establishment men." Coed Is Suspended; A cced was suspended for one semester and another was placed on two semesters probation by the Women's Council Thursday light. : ' " In the first case the student was chcrged with having plag iarized cn English I short narra tive. Slie pleaded not guilty. Her Jefense ergued that the similari ties in her narrative and that of a short story by Katherine Mans tield were due to a peculiar set of circumstances and a case of complete recall on the part of .he defendant. The council judged ' from ' the evidence presented that the pap er was plagiarized due to the fact that the sequence of events and the choice of details were the same, and tie student's paper seemed - a close paraphrase of the. Mansfield story and in many places a word-for-word copy. The council decided that if the defendant had the ability to re-. call so precisely, . that she should have also ,bcen ble to recall the fact- that this was' a Mansfield stcry' which she studied ,i last 'i The defense argued that events . in the student's .paper were bas ed upon his personal experiences on her 16th birthday The Mans field story also deals with a girl on her 16lh birthday. The defendant testified that, when she studied this story last spring, she was struck by the similarities it presented to her own birthday. The council de cided if, this linkage was made the first time, she should have recalled the Mansfield story when she wrote her narrative about her birthday and recognized the dan ger of plagiarism. In the second case, a student was charged with remaining out of :he dormitory overnight without permission. She pleaded guilty. The student testified that, af ter being at a party several hours, her blind date went to get some thing to eat. After eating they sat talking until they realized it was 1:30 a.m. The student testified that she was too scared to come back to the dormitory and thought that, r7 o e J-? r ' ! sift Z ? '7 s --' j. -rj , y DTII SECRETARY Becky Timberlake received perhaps the most unusual lest and found item of the year Thursday when Delta Upsilon fra- Dean Chair CD of a new Chapel Hill liquor store, jesterday accused the other two board members of rized Story by returning the next day, her absence would not be noticed. She did not call her dormitory hostess to report her lateness be cause she thought all phones were cut off at closing hours. After making the decision to stay out all night the couple re turned to the party. Witnesses verified this fact and that they stayed there until after 5 a.m. The defendent returned to her dormitory at 6:30 a.m. The council found her guilty and put her on probation for two full academic semesters. Mortar Shot Just Misses UN Building NEW YORK UP) A home made mortar, bedecked with a Cuban "flat, - fired a single shot ici-oss the East River Friday at United Nations, headquarters. The shell exploded alarmingly iut harmlessly in the water 100 feet short of the building. Inside at the time, in the sealed-off General Assembly Hall, Cuba's Ernesto Guevara was haranguing the United States. The blast from the river rattled windows in the 33 - story international head quarters. But the noise failed to penetrate the chamber and Guevara was not interrupted. Outside, simultaneously with the explosion, wild confusion broke out. Anti - Communist Cuban pickets surged against police lines, and a leather- jacketed woman in black, wav ing a knife and screaming hys terically in Spanish, tried to force an entrance to the build ing. Police quoted her later as saying she was bent on killing Guevara. There were no injuries of any consequence and no dam age during one of the wildest episodes since the UN moved into its East River headquar ters in 1952. narrow ge ress lire Chairman Remus Smith and member Giles Long outvoted Carroll at the Board's Monday meeting when pi .ms for a new store were approved. Carroll, former dean of the UNC Business School, said the Eastgale ABC store could handle 23 per cent more busi ness with almost no increase in overhead, and another store is "absolutely unnecessary." "The other board inembi?r:;' say a new store would ease traffic problems at - Eastgate. I say- there is no traffic prob lem. I have visited the store at different times of the day :nd have never had trouble finding a parking place. However, I think traffic and parking would be a problem at a downtown store." Booties Trad? Supporters of a downtown liquor store have said it would ut down on bootleg trade. Carroll denied that there i" a serious bootlegging problem. "illicit liquor is scarce in Orange County. Our police chief ell5 me there is very little 'white lightning' here. Most or .he bootlegging is re-sale of tax-paid whiskey bought in Eastgate. "The bootlegger buys the legal maximum at the ABU ;tore, then returns to his home where he sells it to his custom ers by the drink." Police Chief William D Jlake told the DTII that this i' m accurate representation of he problem, but added, "Most if the bootleggers exist now be ause of the distance to tin Eastgate store. It costs about $1.75 for a .axi trip to Eastgate and back. :nd It. The number of bootlegger 'ias decreased from 60 to 12 ince the legal liquor store was -stablished. We feel that i me store makes this much difference, another would hell ?ven more. Three Sites Three sites for the ABC stort have been offered the Count; Board. One is adjoining tht. rear of Fowler's Food Store or Vest Rosemary Street, an jther is between Main and tosemary near Carrboro and he other is near the Ranch louse Restaurant. AED Speaker Pre-medicine and pre-dental tudents are invited to Alpha ! EDsilon Delta, nre-medicat and pre-dental fraternity, to hear Dr. Jack Wilkerson of Stantons burg speak at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 226 MacNidcr on the in creasing demand for genera' practitioners. What! ternity reported the discovery of a burro. The coed couldn't restrain her curosity and had to check on the find herself. "He's real," she said. Photo by Jock Lautcrtr
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1964, edition 1
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