Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / May 19, 1966, edition 1 / Page 1
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j ! i i , , Attention Persons interested ia inter viewing for the position of bus iness manager for the Sum mer Tar Heel should apply this afternoon at 3:30 at the Pub Board office, second floor GM. No previous experience nec essary. Last Issue Tomorrow Ik 1 Volume 74, Number 165 Rioting Feared In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (AP) A there's going to be trouble. tense watchfulness pervaded south Los Angeles today in trr; wake of two violent epi sodes kindled, police said, by Negro resentment of a white officer's killing of a young Ne gro father. Small bands of roving Ne gro youths attacked two white newsmen and partially looted a liquor store last night after the breakup of a large demon stration protesting alleged po lice brutality in the May 7 shooting of Leonard Deadwyl er, 25. The newsmen were Karl Fle ming, 33, Los Angeles, bur eau manager for Newsweek Magazine, reported in good condition after being beaten in to unconsciousness with rocks turu -uy-t umuers, ana iews- week reporter David Moberg, 22, who suffered minor face cuts and bruises. Police from 77th St. Divis ion, reinforced by 30 officers called up earlier in the day moved quickly into the area devastated by race rioting last August and dispersed crowds in about three hours. A few loud reports were heard. Police first called them gunshots but later said they could have been firecrackers. Several false fire alarms were turned in. Routine police patrols were resumed at 1:45 A.M.. Metropolitan division rein forcements remained on quick call pending the outcome of tomorrow's inquest into Dead wyler's death. The reinforcements were called up, said Sgt. Larkin Bernard, because "for the last week we've been feeling the tension building undoubted ly connected with the Dead wyler death." The Rev. H. H. Brookins, a Negro and head of Los An geles United Civil Rights Council, agreed that Deadwy ler's death had stirred deep resentment in the Negro com munity. "In a tense atmosphere like you have here," said Brookins, "a death like that of Leonard Deadwyler is almost exactly the worst kind of thing that could have happened. You couldn't ask for a more in flamatory set of circumstan ces. "All the ingredients are here to blow open all the pent up frustration and anger. The community is just simply mad and it's going to continue to build. I felt it last night. There was a much anger and outright unreason as last Au gust. "Unless something drama tic happens at the Deadwyl er inquest to give Negroes the feeling justice will be done, Senior Invitations Seniors who ordered invi tations at the regular sales may pick up their invitations at second floor, Y-C o u r t on Thursday and Friday. The invitations are in bags in alphebetical order, & yel low receipts should be left in the box provided. Seniors who placed late orders on Wednesday May, 18. may pick those invita tions up on Monday. May 23. at second floor Y-Court, instead of on Friday, May 20. as previously announc ed. ikS:''r -. v ..TT ' "v It --."-, . ss?- WHVT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT? campus this nd with "Go Modern" written on the side. Air Reserve this little car has been cruising (maybe that word leaves something to be desired) around The Negroes expect the ver- dict to be justifiable homicide They're prejudging it. I heard several of them at the pro test ask if anyone ever heard of a white policeman getting charged for killing a Negro, and nobody had. If the inquest comes out negative to what the Negroes want, then I'm afraid we've had it." Deadwyler was stopped by a traffic officer, Jerold M. Bo va, as he was speeding his pregant wife, Barbara, 25, to a hospital. Bova said he was reaching for Deadwyler's ignition keys when the car began to move again, causing the gun he held in one hand to discharge ac cidentally, fatally wounding Deadwyler. ! SDS Rally To Protest Draft System Students for a Democratic Society will sponsor a rally to morrow in Y Court at noon to protest against what they feel are "inequities" of the draft system. A booth will be set up and two faculty members will speak. A "Make Love, Not War" jug Band will precede the rally. Dr. William Flemming of the political science department will address the rally on "The Viet Nam War" in a general talk, and Dr. William W. Shea of the philosophy department will speak on "Active Dissent and Moral Justification of Civ il Disobedience." Copies of the SDS test which asks questions about the Viet Nam War will also be avail able. Elliot Kramer, an SDS mem ber, said that Gary Waller and Chuck Schunior will be on hand to debate with students and answer questions. A flyer which attacks the Viet Nam war will be avail able. The flyer, a "call for an examination of conscience," is printed by the national SDS organization. It charges that the test being administered by the selective service (designed to weed out poor students for the draft) is actually a "friendly tug-of-war" between the military and the business community. "Big business and the mili tary have decided to be fair to each other about sharing us (students). Some of us are not so bright, or perhaps have been lazy scholars. Business men don't need them," the fly er states, "They can go be soldiers." Then the SDS asks, "What about all those guys whose par ents didn't have enough mon ey to send them to college . . . When your brothers are over there dying trying to do some thing you think needs to be done, why are you back here at home trying to pass a test in order to stay out of it?" The SDS test is being given as a protest to the draft test being given this month and during the summer. Answer sheets will be provided with the 18-question exam. . i - ---- - - McNamara Asks 2-Year Service For Americans MONTREAL, (AP) U. S. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNmara proposed yes terday that every young per son in the United States be asked to give two years of ser vice to his country, either in the military, Peace Corps or some other voluntary work. McNamara said this would help remove what he called the inequity in the present Se lective Service System. Associates in Washington de clined to say whether this was an official administration proposal and said they were uninformed on the suggestion. The secretary of defense spoke at a luncheon of the American Society of Newspa per Editors, attended by about 500 U. S. and Canadian edi tors. Earlier the society heard Sen. Abraham Ribicoff D -Conn., call for the establish ment of federal safety stan dards for automobiles. McNamara mentioned t he conflict in Viet Nam only in a brief reference but he spoke at length on the question of U. S. security and its relation ship to security in developing countries. He suggested a flexible ap proach toward Red China in an effort to bridge the gap now isolating Peking from most of the rest of the world Breaching the isolation of the Chinese Communists "reduc es the danger of potentially catastrophic misunderstand ings and increases the incen tive on both sides to resolve disputes by reason rather than by force," he observed. "There are many ways in which we can build bridges to ward nations who would cut themselves off from meaning ful contacts with us," he said "We can do so with properly balanced trade relations, dip lomatic contacts, and in some cases even by exchanges of military observers." McNamara said the idea of government service for all young people had been criti cized as inappropriate "while we are engaged in a shoot ing war." "But I believe precisely the opposite is the case, he de clared. "It is more appropri ate now than ever, for it would underscrore what our whole purpose is in Viet Nam UNCLE Game Continues Amidst Death And Horror A boy in Craige residence hall got a telephone call late Tuesday night and left his room for five minutes. When he returned a large bomb ex ploded in the corner of his room, but he escaped injury because his killer placed the bomb in the wrong corner. A coed sat in the smoking room of the Ubrary and a stranger walked up, pulled out a bow and arrow, attempted to shoot her, and missed. These are only two of the countless abortive episodes in yesterday's killed marathon of the one-day U.N.C.L.E. club, sponsored by The Daily Tar Heel. Killers roamed the campus poisoning ketchup, zeroing in past week drumming op Naval recruits. DTH Photo By Jerry Lambert 7 iT. .sr--rJL-r CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1966 ; - y.yj V-?3 y,.'r'JT -- -. fCi ' f 1,1,1,1-, ii. - 7f X " "fv vja-l f : : " Vr 4P fcT. r -"TvvNaE i 1 i'r I I & -i-- AH, THOSE DELIGHTFUL MOMENTS we leave behind when we go off for the summer like trying to find a parking space. We've decided that situations like this one behind Ehringhaus are UNC institutions ... ah, those delightful in stitutions. DTH Photo by Ernest Robl with high powered rifles, shoot ing point blank with German lugers, and causing telephones to explode in victim's ears. The University of North Car olina League nf Executioners got off to an early start. The first killing came more than 24 hours ago when an uniden tified intruder broke into a room in Craige and emptied his blank pistol into the first unlucky victim. Judges for the contest, which closes at noon today, will ac cept written reports of killings until 3 p.m. today. Reports must be written by victims and turned in to the DTH offices. They must be under 100 words and contain the time and meth od of the kill. Categories in the contest in clude: First Kill. Most Bizzare Kill. Most Discreet Kill. Most Professional Kill. Most Elusive Victim. Neatest Kill. First, second, and third prizes will be awarded in the Bizzare" category. Most important, victims Eat 'em Up Slurpin' th3 juice and spittin' the seeds will be th3 ord?rs of the day Thurs day wh3n tha Carolina Women's Council and the Panhellenic Council jointly present their annual water melon feast for all UNC women. This year's "banquet" will be held from 3:30 to 5:30 in th-i backyard of Mclver Rrsidence Hall. Entertainment will b2 pro vided by a folk singing group made up of Jim and Dava McFadden of Asbe boro and Bill Riggen of Raleigh. must report their own death. Reports will not be accepted from hunters, unless the vic tim has killed the hunter. This is legal. No innocent bystanders may be killed. For those who have not picked up their envelopes in Graham Memorial at the information desk, they will be available until noon today when the contest closes. No one will be eligible for prizes until a report is turn ed in. Prizes will be announced in tomorrow's DTH, at the same time winners are chosen. Sitterson Posts Faculty Changes, New Promotions A number of UNC faculty members have been promoted to new positions. The promotions are an nounced by Chancellor J. Car lyle Sitterson and were ap proved by the Board of Trus tees executive committee and President William C. Friday. Named as professors were Stephen B. Baxter, history; C. Ritchie Bell, botany; Joel J. Carter, music; James P. Coil man, chemistry; Philipp P. Fehl, art; Ernest L. Folk III, law; William J. Hall, statis tics; Richard G. Hiskey, chem istry; Eazter B. Kokas, med icine; Dorothea C. Leigh ton, medicine; William A. Mc Knight, romance languages; Robert M. Miller, history; Hal bert B. Robinson, psychology; Joseph St. Jean Jr., geology; Andrew M. Scott, political sci ence; Richard L. Simpson, In stitute for Research in Social Sciences; George V. Taylor, history; and Neal H. Tracy, education. New associate professors an nounced .include Joseph An- Professor Predicts .Ban Trial Doubtful By DAVID ROTH MAS DTH Staff Writer There probably won't be any speaker ban trial, Prof. William Van Al style of the Duke Law School said yesterday. He said a hearing would be held at which attorneys for the plaintiffs and defendants will con front each other, but most likely no trial would take place. Van Alstyne is helping pre pare a brief against the State and the University, involved in the suite because of their en forcement of the speaker ban. Last summer, he testified in the Britt hearings on the ban. In a final, Van Alstyne said, persons other than the lawyers would participate. "The point of a trial is large ly to get the facts straight," he explained, saying he thought the two sides could agree on the facts in a pre trial hearing to be held May 27 in Greensboro. In Raleigh, State Attorney General Wade Bruton refused to say whether a trial would be needed. "I have no com ment at this time," he declared. Gemini Flight Rescheduled After Failure For May 31 CAPE KENNEDY, FLA., (AP) The space agency to day officially rescheduled hard - luck Gemini 9 for May 31 and ordered crews on the launch pad to hustle around the clock to accomplish the quick two - week recycle. Disappointed astronauts Tho mas P. Stafford and Eugene A. Cernan who hoped to be orbiting the globe today and carrying out a spectacular space walk by Cernan in stead flew a T38 jet from Cape Kennedy to NASA's manned spacecraft center in Houston, Tex;, to study a changed flight plan, said. Dr. George E. Mueller, NA SA Associate Administrator for manned Space Flight, said the May 31 date "is based on a very tight work schedule." Instead of spending last night in space. Air Force Lt. Concert Cancelled Phi Mu Alpha regretfully announces that the Raul Spivak Concert which was scheduled for today has been cancelled until next fall due to technical cata strophies. Tickets that have been purchased may be redeemed from any member of the Phi Mu Al pha Sinfonia Fraternity, 201 Hill Hall, or may be held for next fall. derle, history; M. K. Berkut, medicine; Erwin L. Brown, classics; James R. Butler, ge ology; Sang-il Choi, physics; William J. DeSua, romance languages; Joseph M. Flora, English; Irvine R. Hagadorn, zoology; Hardwick W. Harsh man, education; John M. Headley, history; Jan Her mans, medicine; Donald C. Jicha. chemistry; James D. Johnson, public health; Jo seph R. Jones, romance lan guages. Also. Mary T. Lane, educa tion; Richard E. Lonsdale, geography; Cecil R. Lupton, dentistry; Hubert M. Martin Jr., classics; John D. Martz III, political science, J. Frank McCormick, botany; Elizabeth McMahon, zoology; William A. McQueen, English; Royce W. Murray, chemistry; Virginia M. Nelson, public health; Hu bert C. Patterson, medicine; Kenneth L. Penegar, law; Dana E. A. Quade, public health; Mark L. Reed III, En glish; Also, Daniel Ross Reedy, ro "Most of what happened has not been disputed," Van Al styne said. "There ought to be no dispute over what took place." He said that what will be de- bated in the hearings is the speaker ban s constitutionality. There will be a combination of written and oral argu- ments on this subject, the law professor said Concerning another phase of the dispute, Van Alstvne stated he couldn't predict when the UNC American Association of University Professors and the Chapel Hill American Civil Liberties Union will file a "friend of the court" brief supporting the plaintiffs. He said it might be a month before the brief was filed. The plaintiffs of the sui t, filed March 31, are Communist Herbert Aptheker, Frank Wil kinson (head of a group seek ing abolition of the House Un Ameican Activities Commit- tee) and 12 UNC students. They ask that the U. S. Dis trict Court for the Middle Dis trict of North Carolina declare the ban unconstitutional and prevent, by injunction, the de fendants from enforcing the Dan- complaint was prepared by The measure, known as "The the Raleigh law firm of Joy gag law," was offered by the ner and Howison and the At defendants as a reason for torney General's staff. Col. Stafford and Navy Cmdr. Cernan ate an Italian dinner and went to a private party. A motion picture film re leased today from an Air Force tracking station at Mel bourne Beach, Fla., showed the wayward Atlas in its final throes. The Atlas - Agena combin ation is shown turning its nose toward earth. Then the boost er engines cut off and, se onds later, fell away, as in- tended. The Atlas continued flving a steady path for an- Bayside To Play The Bayside Singers, who serve up folk songs a la Peter, Paul and Mary, will appear in the lounge of Graham Memor ial at 8 p.. tonight. The group is composed of Dave McFadden, Sammy How ell, Buck Malcom and Miss Terry Forrest. McFadden, of Hickory, and Howell, of Ellerbe, and Mal com, of Winston-Salem, are Carolina students. Miss For rest is a senior at Orange High School in Hillsborough. They've developed a style that one reviewer called "soft, mellow and sophisticated," saying it "could keep the aud ience all night." mance languages. John M. Schnorrenberg, art; Jabbar K. Sherwani, public health; Rich ard A. Smyth, philosophy; Alan Ernest Stiven, zoology; Weldon Thornton, English; Hendrik Van Dam, physics; Frederick W. V o g 1 e r, ro mance languages; Peter F. Walker, history; Earle Wal- lace, political science and graduate school; Eugene R. vvaison, extension Division; They accepted. Donald D. Weir, medicine; j since then the Bayside Sing Joel R. Williamson, history; j ers have worked up a repe Fred C. Thomson, English, j 0ire 0f songs four of Named as assistant profes- s which were written bv How sors were Allan Ashman, Insti- i eil which are reminiscent tute of Government; William 0f Peter. Paul and Marv al- A. Campbell, Institute of Gov ernment; Martin E n g e r t, mathematics; Douglas R. Gill, Institute of Government; Hil lel J. Gitelman, medicine; Edward J. Kaiser, city and regional planning; R. Edmond Phay, Institute of Govern ment; James R. Pick, medi- cine; Rupert T. Pickens, ro- mance languages; Roger F. Spencer, medicine; Richard B. Terry, zoology. Founded February 23. 1893 preventing Aptheker and Wil kinson from speaking on the UNC campus. The defendants Chancel lor J, Carlyle Sitterson, Uni versity President William Fri- dav and the University Trus- tees filed their arwer to plaintiffs' complaint at the. last momentt hoping the semester would end and the suit would considered i,,..- mana- The 12 student plaintiffs are former Student Body President Paul Dickson, former Carolina Forum Chairman George Nich olson, Student Body President Bob Powell, former YWCA President Eunice Milton and Di-Phi President John Green backer. Also, Carolina Political Un ion Chairman Eric Van Loon, former DTH Editor Ernie Mc Crary, Gary Waller and S t u Matthrews of the Students for Democratic Society steering committee, student John Mc Sween and student Henry Pat terson. The plaintiffs' attorney is McNeil Smith of Greensboro. The State and the Univer sity's answer to the plaintiffs other three minutes, the Air Force said, when its Agena second stage separated. Both stages fell into the ocean about 180 miles southeast of the launch pad. Officials said the Atlas be- can having problems 39 miles above the earth and 61 miles downrange. Air Force officials said one of the three engines at the base of the Atlas swiveled wildly to one side and sent me Auast - Agena tumming out of control. Singers Tonight Burl Ives, the grand old man of professional folk singing, called the Singers "very pro fessional, very talented, very artistic. One of the best I've heard in a long time." Ives' praise came after the group had been together for only two weeks. Dave McFadden, number one scholastically in the soph omore class he has a 4.0 after three semesters and president of Phi Kappa Sig ma's spring pledge class, was introduced to Miss Forrest by a dorm neighbor wlio beard him strumming his guitar one af ternoon. A friend of McFadden's was rooming in another dorm with Sammy Howell, a music ma jor who was director of folk music programs at Wingate Junior College before transfer ring. The three formed themselves into the Bayside Singers and soon added bass player Buck Malcom, a junior music ma jor. The group attended a Peter, Paul and Mary concert at Ra leigh in February and after the show chatted with the trio, whom Miss Forrest had known for two years. Then, the Bayside Singers were invited to give a private performance before Peter, j paui and Mary in Charlotte. bums. They aren't to big on protest songs. "Folk protests are a reflec tion of the times and the sit uation." Howell said. "We don't dislike them. They just aren't right for us at the rao- rnenL' ; "We're concerned with the musical and emotional aspects of folk music rather than the t protest aspect," be said. IP!
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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May 19, 1966, edition 1
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