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Wednesday, October 20, 1965 Page 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEL the police. He replied "I never suggested any motive." He denied making statements to police on the night of his ar rest. Rinaldi told the court the of ficers must be wrong because "I know I'm right." He made the statement after being ask ed about statements he made to police officers Howard Pen dergraf and James Merrill of Chapel Hill and a State Bu reau of Investigation agent F. G. Satterfield Jr. Satterfield testified last week that police might think Rinal di killed his wife for three reasons: Financial difficulties, money, or another woman. Rinaldi admitted during the lengthy cross - examination that he had visited a psychia trist 14 or 15 times in 1962. Rinaldi testified he and his new bride came to live in Chapel Hill in September 1963 after being married in July that year in Waterbury. His wife worked only three days in Chapel Hill and quit her job. She returned to Waterbury Sept. 9. "I'll ask you if you didn't have quite an argument and that's the reason she went back?" the solicitor inquired. "Certainly not," Rinaldi re plied. Alfred Foushee, a Negro waiter, testified last week that Rinaldi tried to hire him a dozen times or more to kill Mrs. Rinaldi in 1963. He told the court: "Each time I said no." Questioned about this, Rinal di said, "I never asked Alfred Foushee any such ting." "I'll ask you if you didn't try to sell everything your wife owned?" the solicitor de clared. "I did not," Rinaldi answer ed. During the lengthy cross- few? - ii. :PU-' r ! FOOTBALL AFTERMATH This was the scene In Ken an Stadium yesterday as workmen went about cleaning up the last remains of the UNC-M lryland grid battle. Seemingly endless lines of soft drink cups, interspersed by occasional bottles stretched off into the distance, wait ing to be gathered up and hauled away. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl. JEROME NEEDS A HOME. A monkey with cage and training equipment. Reason able price. 942-3365. TRAILER FOR SALE OR rent: 1952 model 8 x 30 Rob ins with electric rcnge. Fully furnished. Sale $575, rent $50.00 per month. Telephone 929-2605 after 5:00 p.m. WANTED: 0X2 OR TWO males to share comfortable, well furnished two bedroom apartment neir campus. Air conditiored. All utilities for $115 - mo. Cll evenings 942 3690. 1' FOR SALE: '61 METROPULi tan. Good condition, has given many miles of dependable service. $40C. All offers con sidered. Call 929-5279. FOR SALE: '65 TEMPEST 2 dr ht, 3 months old, 7,000 miles, radio, heater, straight drive. Owner leaving country. Call 967-1028. October 31st is the day of Halloween when all the witches can be seen at the PARTY SHOP picking out their Hal loween needs. DECORATiOHS-FAVORS Rinaldi Testifies ( Continued from Page 1) examination, Rinaldi said the shirt he wore on the shopping trip with Sipp bore some blood stains. He said his wife had a nose bleed the night before. He said he was not aware the stains were on the shirt at the time. Cooper asked him if he didn't tell Chapel Hill Police Capt. Roy Durham when the officer came to the Rinaldi apartment on Christmas Eve that "Someone has killed and robbed my wife." Rinaldi denied this. The defense succeeded in introducing a letter found on the coffee table in the Rinaldi apartment that had been writ ten by Lucille Rinaldi. The letter was addressed to Kevin Kerrane, who had room ed with Rinaldi. In the letter, she said her husband had gone on a shopping trip "to tell Santa what a nice girl I have been." Later in the let ter was the sentence, "This Christmas is all we hoped it would be." Solicitor Thomas B. Cooper Jr. probed into Rinaldi's back ground closely during his lengthy cross examination. Ri naldi attended Taft Prep School in Connecticutt and was graduated from George town University where he ma jored in English. A former employe of the Central Intelligence Agency, Rinaldi was asked by the so licitor if he wasn't "kicked out" of the CIA. "I certainly was not," he replied. "I'll ask you if they didn't fire you because of a picture that appeared in a Waterbury newspaper that identified you as a CIA agent," Cooper ask ed. Rinaldi again replied, "No," adding "I say I was not fired." SMALL USE fc Of some quarter million speces of higher plants, only a hundred are used by man." WRITE TO ENGLAND if you would like a neat heraldic shield bearing the arms or badge of your university or college. These 7" x 6" wall plaques cost no more than $9.00 each ppd. Dignified, life-long souvenirs, from top British craftsmen and most flattering of personal gifts. Each plaque you desire is immac ulately emblazoned for you by hand for interior decor. Send check direct to England with your instructions. Wholesale enquiries welcomed York Insignia Limited YORK, ENGLAND Questioned about his mili tary service, Rinaldi said he served three years in the Army at Ft. Knox, Ky., and Ft. Benning, Ga. During that time he attended but failed to complete an officers candidate school. "Isn't it true your fellow of ficers rated you as unaccep able?" "I have no idea of that," Rinaldi replied. Cooper then asked him, "You didn't flunk out of OCS because of grades?" Rinaldi answered that he did not. "You were taught in the Army how to kill?" Cooper asked. Defense attorneys strongly objected to this question and Judge George M. Fountain sustained the objection. Rinaldi said he first went to Carolina in 1956 as a gradu ate student. The following year he began teaching at the Uni versity of Missouri, but quit because "I had a disagree ment with my superior in pol icy making. An unfriendly sit uation developed." Hoover Hints Communists Behind Demonstrations WASHINGTON (AP) J. Edgar Hoover hinted yester day that a communist youth group is pulling the strings in recent nationwide demonstra tions against U. S. policy in Viet Nam. Leaders of the W. E. B. Du bois Club of America, the FBI director said, "Were prominent among communists who attended a special youth leadership school sponsored by the party last June to pre pare for a stepped - up cam paign of recruitment and agi tation among youth. "Already this fall, there are signs that these training ses sions have begun to bear fruit in the form of defiant pro test against law and authori ty," he said. Hoover described the Dubois clubs as "an illegitimate spawn conceived by the Com munist Party and nurtured by a trusted band of youthful ad herents to the cause of world Marxism." The clubs, Hoover said, are "standing in the forefront of the communist campaign to confuse the minds, distort the thinking and win the support of our young people . . ." Hoover, in a speech pre VNC To Hold Debates, 40 Schools Invited Some of the nation's top col legiate debaters will be here tomorrow through Saturday for the Tar Heel Invitational Debate Tournament. Participants from 40 schools will engage in eight rounds of debate on the topic "Re j solved: That law enforcement j agencies should be given j greater freedom in the inves ; ligation and prosecution of j crime." i Bob Powell, president of the 1 host UNC Debate Team, said yesterday debaters will come from a wide crosssection of colleges and universities from Wayne State University and the University of Illinois over to Brooklyn College and West Point down to the Uni versity of Alabama and Em ory University. Debating will begin at 9 a.m. Friday in Gerrard Hall. All sessions will be open to the public. Participants, including last year's top three teams in the nation, were selected from more than 150 schools. AN ACTUAL PERFORMANCE! Through breathtaking new techniques in film making and highest fidelity sound. TECHNICOLOR WARNER BROS. TODAY & THURSDAY 3:00 & 5:00 P.M. Artlttfc Director and Conductor, Herbtrt von Karajan IiS j Production Designed and Directed by Franco Zeffirelli LLJ ADMISSION Afternoon Night $1.25 $2.00 A w TWELVE MORRISON RESIDENTS Art II A TERP: That was last weekend's toll 1b Schroeder Swamp. The 13 grave markers ap Klansman Faces Congress WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional investigators sought to show yesterday that Ku Klux Klan Grand Dragon Robert M. Shelton finagled the Klan's bank account by using disguised signatures on its checks. pared for the Supreme Coun cil of 33rd Degree Masons for the Southern Jurisdiction, did not specifically link the Dubois clubs to the recent rash of anti-draft and anti-Viet Nam. demonstrations that have erupted across the nation. But these have been . paramount among the gatherings in the period to which he referred as "this fall." The 70-year-old Hoover himself a Mason for 45 years also chose the masonic for um to renew his criticism of some of the nation's courts. "The jousting in legal mum bo - jumbo resorted to by too many of our judges makes a farce of our judicial sys tem," he said. "Tragically, the atmosphere of many of our courtrooms is still polluted by some jurors who deliberately close their minds to the evidence before them. "Too many of our judges seek out technicalities rather than guilt or innocence. A trial should truly represent an enlightened search for truth so that deception, surprise, technicalities and delay will be obliterated." "This should be one of the tournaments in the South this year. It will be a great oppor tunity for the student body to witness collegiate debating at its best," Powell said. He also said tinlekeepers are needed for every round. Students interested in partici pating in as well as hearing the debates may sign up for these positions at the GM In formation Desk. Merit Finalisd The National Merit Scholar ship Committee of the Stu dent Government has invited 321 National Merit semifinal ists in the state to visit the campus Nov. 68. The group will be guests of student Government during the three day period. They will attend the UNC Clemson football game, a ban quet, tours of the campus and convocations with faculty and student leaders, according to committee chairman Wyatt McCallie. i:is FROM ' ' A- --- -. ' Jf peared mysterioasly Saturday morning la the soggy area behind the new Morrison dorm. DTH Photo By Ernest RoU. The House Committee on Un - American Activities, opening long-awaited hearings on the Klan, called a govern ment handwriting expert who also worked on documents in the trial of Alger Hiss. The expert, Philip Schmitz, testified that signatures of James J. Hendrix on Klan checks actually were written by Shelton's wife, Betty L. Shelton. He said another signature of T. M. Montgomery on a Klan check actually was the writ ing of Mrs. Carol Long, al leged to be a secretary em ployed by the group at its Tuscaloosa, Ala., headquart ers. Shelton, his wife and Mrs. Long pleaded the Fifth Amendment in refusing to an swer all questions. They also invoked the First, Fourth and 14th Amendments in a long ritual which they repeated af ter each question. Shelton, a slender 36-year old in a conservative grey suit and flashing a diamond n i : j: i ring on his left hand, refused to answer 73 times. He seemed calm and self-possessed as he did so and as he refused to produce Klan documents sub poenaed by the committee. As the hearing opened this morning, committee investiga tors said they had located 381 Klan units in a 10-month search, but were hampered by the terror they said the Klan inspires in many parts of the South. "These people fear harass ment, threatening letters, tele phone calls, cross burnings on their property, beatings, bombings, and, yes, even death," said Donald T. Appell chief committee investigator. The big House caucus room was crowded with spectators, newsmen, and photographers. Extra policemen were station ed in the room and outside. A plainclothes!" n f 't the audience in the enter aisle watching for any dis turbance, but there was none. The morning session was devoted to an elaborate pre- bemauon ay committee Staff- ers of the history of the Klan since it was founded after the Civil War, its long record of violence, and its spread in the South and a few northern states in the past two years. Maps of each southern state were flashed on a arge screen, with dots representing the various Klaverns or local Klan clubs. At the end the in vestigators told newsmen that of the 381 Klaverns they found, 260 are affiliated with Shel ton's United Klans, and others belong to a dozen splinter groups. There was a murmur of laughter in the room when Ap pell flashed the mystic titles DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Sesame 5. Domestic pets 9. Plant tendrils 10. Correct 12. Think 13. Biblical mount DOWN 1. Walked through the tulips 2. Canal 3. Sea eagle 4. Fib 5. Cowardly 6. Leave out 7. Italian port-city 8. Trap 9. Golf or race can precede it 11. Loud noises 15. Mother of Irish gods 1 14. Western. Indian 15. Transfer: Law 16. Recto: abbr. 17. Pineapple 19. Roman, money 20. Student gToups I 23. Decree 24. Daggers i 28. Tattler j 30. "Stowe" ! character ! 33. Beams j 34. Article j 35. Imposed, j as taxes 37. Candle, nut 1 tree j 38. Husks of gTains f 39. Small herring j 41. Put out ! 42. Mountain J ridge 43. WWII ; Greek j under- i ! - - ; ; Klan officials use in their Klaverns, such as Exalted Cy clops (president, Klaliff (vice president), Klokard (lectur er), Kludd (Chaplain), Klig- rapp (secretary), Klabee, (treasurer), Kladd (conduc tor), Klarogo (inner guard), and Klexter (outer guard). With Shelton refusing to an swer any questions, commit tee staffers read into the rec ord evidence that he is presi dent, or Grand Dragon, or Imperial Wizard, of the United Klans of America, the largest oi tne Klan groups. They said this group oper ates out of Tuscaloosa, Ala., and uses the name Alabama rescue service for its bank ac count. After a series of unanswer ed questions about signatures on Alabama rescue service checks and on bank signature cards, uie committee wheeled up its big gun handwriting expert scnmitz He testified he was trained in his profession by the FBI. i a . . ana since men nas worked for the Veterans Administration. Schmitz said he has testified as an expert in many trials besides the famous Hiss case Hiss, a former State Depart ment aide, was convicted of lying when he denied passing secrets to a Russian spy ring Using a slide projector with samples of the handwriting in volved, Schmitz gave a detail ed lecture on similarities he said proved the check signa tures where written by the two women. Committee chairman Edwin E. Willis. D-La.. told Sheltnn in the case of the subpoenaed documents that invoking of the Fifth Amendment was not a proper grounds for refusal to produce them. He warned Shelton his refusal could lead to a contempt of congress ci tation. Shelton had his response citing the First, Fourth, Fifth and 14th Amendments written out and he read it off each time. He finally was per- through this ritual each time. suaaea Dy wims not to go but to the ritP th rrnnnrf0 previously stated, tsut soon Shelton reverted to the long form. Z 1 A l -a-k Move Cars Better move your car from the parking lot near the Cobb tennis court if it's parked there. A crew will be installing lighting fixtures to permit nighttime tennis games, and Chief Beaumont said yester day the autos would interfere with the work, which begins early Thursday morning. 17. Early Britisher 18. Con cerns . 21. Diatonic note 22. Perches 25. Sun god 26. Oregon river 27. Where to find Bass, Moss, Cot ton, etc. 29. Youth 30. German, river 31. Liveliness Yciterdi r'l Aniwr 32. Benefit 36. King At ahualpa 37. Elder son of Zeus 39. Droop 40. For n Pi p'ilofeDt j i's : - :: -jmt 2S ' 54 26 27 77 77 28 29 lL jm?L 5 iw MA 111-1 Yrm Around TODAY Amateur Radio Club at ":30 in Caldwell Y. The Religions Interfaith Coun cil will meet at 5 p.m. up stairs in Lenoir Hall. The treasurers of all SG com mittees and the Budget committee meet at 7-8:30 p.m. in Roland Parker II and III in GM. State Affairs Committee will meet in Woodhouse at 4:30 p.m. Project assignments will be made. Attendance is mandatory. The Tar Heel Invitational De bate Tournament needs stu dents to keep time for cham pionship intercollegiate de bates Thursday - Saturday. Sign up at GM Information desk or call 933-2155. There will be a compulsory meeting of all the nominees for class officers in Gerrard Hall at 7 p.m. Residence Hall Ad Hoc com mittee will meet with Dean Long and Brit Gorden in Ro land Parker III at 4 p.m. Student Audit Board will meet promptly at 5 p.m. in the lobby of GM. Please wear a coat and tie as the Yack Photo will be taken. Stray Greeks will have a sup per meeting at Brady's at 6:30 p.m. All students interested in working with the mentally retarded children at Murdoch Campus Briefs UNC students are wanted to work with mentally retarded patients in John Umstead Hos pital at Butner, N. C. Robert E. Boone, chairman of the Umstead Committee of the YM-YWCA, said yester day that students are needed to work mornings or after noons Monday through Friday and on weekends on programs of case aid, recreation, occu pational therapy, and educa tion. Selection will be based on the volunteer's friendliness, dependability, and desire to work, he said. An organizational meeting will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. in Gerrard Hall for all interested persons. Michigan Congressman Paul H. Todd Jr. will review the history of the federal govern ment's role in population poli cy at a seminar here this month. The two-day seminar will be held by the University Popula tion Program Oct. 27-29. The major concern of the meeting will be discussion of a general population policy for the United States. The League of Women Vot ers will hold an orientation meeting tomorrow morning at 10 a.m. - at the home of Mrs. John Schwab, 1030 Highland Woods. League policies and the coming year's program will be discussed. The featured speaker will be Mrs. Donald L.t. .11 'I.' HII 11 J All-State hairstyling champion Mrs. Georgia Rogers takes position with Aesthetic Hair styling. Her model is Miss Peach Pearce, current Miss Gastonia and first runner-up in the Miss North Carolina Contest. - ALL-STATE AESTHETIC HAIRSTYLIST SALON of Chapel Hill is proud to announce the addition of 1964 All-State Hairstylist Champion, Mrs. Georgia Rogers, to their already outstanding staff. Mrs. Rogers was also North Carolina State Champion in 1961. With her in the picture above are Miss Peach Pearce, a contestant in the Homecoming Queen Contest which will begin tonight, and several of Mrs. Rogers' many trophies. Carolina Center are invited to meet-; with the Murdoch Commit-, tee members in front of the Y at 2 p.m. Wednesday. There will be a meeting of the Communications committee of SG at 5 p.m. in ROiand Park II on the second floor of GM. AH members are urged to attend as this will be an organizational meet ing For information contact Hurley Thompson at 929 5475. Elections Board meeting at 3 p.m. in the Grail Room. Wear a coat and tie. The International Relations committee of the YWCA will meet at 5 p.m. upstairs in VIGAH, Program Develop ment only at 7 p.m. in the Grail Room of GM. Treasurers of all SG commit tees will meet in Roland Parker II and III from 7 8:30 p.m. A debate of the Philanthropic Society "Should the U. S. Oppose a Unilateral declara tion of Freedom by South ern Rodesia?" at 7:30 p.m.. in Phi Hall, fourth floor of New East. Also the inauger al ceremony of Press. G. Wright Doyle. Ways and Means Committee at 3:30 p.m. in Roland Park er II. This is a regular meet ing and Yack pictures will be taken. Hayman, past LWV president and former state chairman of the Development of Human Kesources commiiiec. Dr. Amnon uapoport oi me UNC Psychology Department has won first prize of $1,000 in the Creative Talent Awards program. The program is sponsored by the American Institute for Research in the Behavioral Sciences. Dr. Rapoport won' for his dissertation entitled "Comparison of Four Models for Word - Frequency Distri butions from Normal and Aphasic Speakers." There were 70 other candidates nom inated for the award. Interviews for positions on the UNCCH delegation to this year's State Student Legisla ture will continue today through Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. in Roland Parker Lounge I of Graham Memorial. , SSL, which will meet in; February, is a mock state leg islature with representatives from nearly all North Caro lina colleges and universities. Resolutions and bills con cerning student welfare and state needs are introduced and voted on by the body. All interested students are invited to apply. N. C. FIRST The first school of forestry in the United States was es tablished at Biltmore, N. C, in 1898 by a German forester, C. H. Schenck. CHAMPION - ground 44. Exclamation TICKETS NOW ON SALE AT OUR BOX OFFICE
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 20, 1965, edition 1
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