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TT ft rffP if MM 7.S" Years Of Editorial Freedom Chapel Hill, North Carolina, Tuesday, November 24, 1970 Volume 78, Number 60 Founded February 23. 1893 In Cotes Death "' ' ilium .-...wit """" "" " " u " ' " "' 1 11 ' '"-' si . -lrrA More .RSI Wendy Boulton draws the winning rattle ticket in the Carolina Opportunity Fund (COF) Duke-Carolina Football Give Away. The grand prize, a game ball from the Duke-Carolina football game, was won by Ken Hastings, a World Alpaca rugs and sweaters; slippers from South America; pewter from Norway; copper and brassware from Turkey and Greece; hukas, whips and taxi horns from Pakistan as well as reindeer skins from Scandinavia and African wood carvings. And the list goes on. These and much, much more are part of some 515,000 in stock for the Seventh Annual International Handicraft Bazaar sponsored "by the. campus YMCA. The bazaar, scheduled for Dec. 4, 5 and 6, will have all the flavor of an Old World open market, complete with a "haggle room" the last two days where buyers can dicker with sellers on the prices of items. Jackie Kain and Britt Nicholson jointly head a committee of more than 40 people who have been working on the project since early summer. Fenner Urquhart is in charge of a special section featuring Appalachian crafts, which will include pottery, woodcarving and handwoven sweaters and quilts. import Dean by Bill Pope Staff Writer David ; Blevins will be the featured speaker at a rally today organized by the students in the School of Social Work to show support for Dean C. Wilson Anderson. Blevins is a former graduate instructor at the UNC-Charlotte School of Social Work who was convicted of violating the University's disruptions policy after he refused to meet his class Oct. 15, 1969, the first Vietnam Moratorium Day. Arthur Byrd, a graduate student in the School of Social Work, and Sylvia Polgar. a faculty member, are also scheduled to speak at the 12:30 p.m. rally which will be held in the pit (if inclement weather the rally will be held in the Great Hall). The rally is being held to protest the alleged non-reappointment of Anderson to a second five-year term as dean of the School of Social Work, according to Betsy Aquila, student spokesman. Anderson was reportedly told on June 30 by Provost J. C. Morrow that he will not be recommended to a second term as dean, according to students and the "concerned" faculty of the School ot Social Work. Morrow and Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. however, maintain the University has made no decision concerning the reappointment ot Anderson. The students plan to march to South Building after the speeches to confer with University administrators. Tickets Tickets for Carolina's first basketball game, against East Tennessee Tuesday. Dec 1 are available tins week trom 8:30-4:30 at the Carmichael Auditorium t i c k e t of f i ce . Rally Set Ini Of UNC sophomore majonng in psycnoiogy. nriin ivnv Boulton are Bob Slaughter (left) and Joe Stallings, co-chairmen of COF. The contest netted over SI, 000 for COF. (Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson) SLSSlSHT "We deal directly with handicraft shops in the various countries," Miss Kain said, "and some with import houses in this country." She said all the money from the bazaar goes to support such Y activities as the. Murdoch Center and the tutorial program. "There is no middle man in our dealing," she said. "There is very little mark-up, not even 50 percent. But we do need to make: some profit because we have customs and broker fees to pay." More than three-fourths of the stock is already in storage here in Chapel Hill. Some things which have yet to arrive or which arrived later than expected have interesting little reasons behind their tardiness. B Cj) II : ! i : p.. W . , .. I , t - i i jk.l ' f w v . I J v - -. Former U.S. Senator and president of UNC Dr. Frank Porter Graham received the Toronto Exchange students at his home Monday afternoon and fielded their questions. Dr. Discuss Campus Issues Canadians Visit by Jessica Hanchar Staff' Writer The Toronto Exchange students were received by Dr. Frank Porter Graham, former Consolidated University president, at his home Monday afternoon prior to their departure Monday night. Graham spoke to the exchange students and their UNC counterparts after they had refreshments in his living room. The S4-year-old former president greeted the students in his lounging robe and fielded questions with his characteristic wit. Asked about the possible switch of responsibility for public utilities from film- ' -0 i 1 Array Of International, Regional Goods On Sale "We almost lost the copper and brassware from Turkey in the middle of the summer," Miss Kain said. "It was being shipped on a Turkish freighter which sank off the coast of Greece. Our shipment was one of the only things saved." Another order beads from Haiti was impounded by U.S. Customs for chemical analysis and have yet to be received. The bazaar committee starts with an inventory from the previous year's bazaar and begins to build the next year's stock from there. Last year's stock is sold at a reduced rate, Miss Kain said. "We buy our stock of rugs two years at a time." This year's bazaar will include a dulcimer maker from ADDalachia makine i . - Graham is honorary co-chairman of the Toronto Exchange program. (Staff Photo by Cliff Kolovson) University hands to Chapel Hill officials. Graham answered. "Well. Em an ex-president in residence and I like living here with my sister rather than in a rest home, so I try not to interfere." Turning to a more serious mood, he said chances for world peace "look dark now." He expressed hope, however, that the younger generation would include all nations as members of the Lrnited Nations and prevent great powers, including the United States, from using the UN for power politics. Graham advocated following Martin Luther Kings's philosophy of non-violence to promote world peace. Graham was asked with which U.S. President he was most impressed. He by Rod Waldorf Managing Editor (Editor's note: DTH staffers Evans Witt, Bill Pope and Harry Smith compiled the information for the following story.) The pair are being held in Orange County Jail in Hillsborough along with Ronnie Broadwell, 28, who was arrested and charged with murder shortly after the brawl which occurred during an all-night marathon dance at the Union. The three are being held without bond. Another member of the all-white "'Storm Troopers," Bryan A King, 26, of Durham, was arrested in Durham Sunday and charged with assault in connection with the incident which resulted in the instruments and weaver with a loom set up in the bazaar area weaving. There will also be clay-throwers there making pottery. The Appalachian craftsmen will come from Tennessee and Kentucky as well as North Carolina. . The bazaar, to be held in the Y Building, Y Court and nearby Gerrard Hall, will feature music, poetry reading and other entertainment. A Children's Room will feature dolls from all over the world in the native dress of their countries. Miss Kain said the bazaar committee is now recruiting salesmen from the student body and invited anyone interested to see her at the Y. Graham replied. ''Roosevelt, because he recognized the poor people's need for money in order to survive and kept the money in circulation. One student asked him abou4 his experience in the U.S. Marines. Graham quipped. "In the Revolutionary War. Washington crossed the Delaware: in the Civil War General Lee crossed the Potomac: in World War I. 1 crossed them both." Asked about Don McCauIey's part in the win over Duke Saturday. Graham replied. "He's incredible, and so was Paul Miller with that great fake of his." As the exchange indents bid him good-bye. Graham said in a strong voice. "Tell Toronto hello!" (Dill death of Cates, a black Chapel Hill resident. The DTH has learned the preliminary hearing for the four whites will be held Wednesday in Orange County Court in Hillsborough. Cates died of a stab wound in the right cemerol artery, according to N.C. medical examiner Dr. Page Hudson. N.C. Memorial Hospital reported that Grady Burnett, 19, of CarTboro, was admitted to the hospital due to injuries received from the brawl. He was released from the hospital Monday. Ray Brooks, 17, of Chapel Hill, was treated and released early Saturday morning. Three students were also treated and released from the student infirmary for injuries received in action related to the brawl, though not directly concering the fight between motorcycle gang or the blacks. Edward G. Anderson, Morrison dormitory, Charles Pitts, James Dormitory, and Harold Dean Bishop, Granville West, were released shorlty after entering the infirmary for treatment. Campus Security Chief Arthur Beaumont said Monday his department has turned the case over to the Chapel Hill police Department. He said this is normal procedure. He said the campus police have not yet completed their report but only "four or five" Storm Troopers were involved in the incident, rather than the ten reported by the DTH Sunday. Beaumont said the number of blacks involved could not be determined. He continued to say the Chapel Hill "police transported Cates to Memorial Hospital where he died about 3 a.m. The Durham Ambulance Company, which maintains an ambulance in Chapel Hill, said its vehicle was answering another call when notified of the stabbing. It took the vehicle 14 minutes to arrive on the scene, according to ambulance spokesmen. Police reports said the clash began about 2 a.m. outside the Union, where an all-night dance was being sponsored by the Union and the Afro-American Affairs Committee. A heated verbal exchange between a black and a Storm Trooper apparently sparked the fight. The two left the dance and scuffled outside the Union. A group of blacks surrounded the Storm Trooper, according to witnesses, and Cates was subsquently stabbed. ft GSGG Beport Besolmftloe by Keith Carter Staff Writer The Graduate Student Coordinating Committee (GSCC) unanimously approved a resolution last week which asks Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson to nullify the section of the report issued by the Committee on Judicial Reform which applies to graduate students. The resolution, introduced by Paul Holt, president of the Craige Graduate Center, requests that no action be taken concerning graduate and professional students until the GSCC completes its constitution and elects its officers at the beginning of the spring semester. The Judicial Reform report, issued this fall after 18 months of study by a committee, outlines new regulations for the conduct of student courts and the student judicial system. The resolution asks that the portion of the report dealing with graduate students "be nullified in as far as they apply" to graduate and professional students. GSCC Chairman Jerry Harder met Friday afternoon with Student Body Attorney General John McDowell, who served as chairman of the Judicial Reform committee. "McDowell said the proposal would be taken under consideration at the next meeting of the Judicial Reform Committee," Harder said. "He indicated that any action on the GSCC resolution would have to be taken by the committee as a w hole." Several more Storm troopers rushed outside the Union and a melee ensued in which two Storm Troopers were chased around the pit and allegedly beaten by blacks. The fight, which lasted approximately five minutes, broke up when Strom Troopers ran to their motorcycles and left the scf ne. James Moore, a black sophomore from Trenton, N.C, said he was an eyewitness to the fight. Moore said the three Storm Troopers involved in the scuffle and four bheks. "The police seemed to be more interested in keeping anymore people from fighting than breaking it up," said Moore. He did not fault the police, however, saying "everything happened so fast." Moore did say he thought the police delayed taking Cates to the hospital without reason. "There are a lot of questions which I think the police ought to have to answer," Moore emphasized Harold Bishop, a UNC sophomore who was slightly injured during the fight, was inside the Union during the disturbance. "People were yelling and screaming after he got stabbed," Bishop related. "Several were crying.. .there was mass confusion. "There seemed to be no control over the crowds," he explained. "The police were on the outside. "All I could see was people running back and forth, and the body of the stabbed youth ...there were several fights," Bishop continued. Bishop claimed a black youth hit him. The black youth was carrying two knives, according to Bishop. Charles Pitts, a UNC sophomore who was also injured, said he was kicked in the ribs by an "angry" black. Pitts said there were "sporadic fights between Storm Troopers and blacks. 'Then all hell broke loose," he explained. 'There was mass confusion. The blacks were panicked, enraged, shocked. Police did not try to break it up, that is the main thing that got me.. .the police just appeared to be more or less congregating in a group and appeared relaxed... they did not draw their guns." He said the brawl lasted about 10 minutes but claimed the ambulance took more than half an hour to reach the scene. The murder was the first on campus since the 1965 slaying of a UNC coed in the Coker Arboretum. That case Is still unsolved. Approves In explaining the resolution, Holt said, "The committee which drew up the report did not have any graduate or professional student representatives, and we have found none who spoke to the committee to give his opinions." Holt said thatgraduate students were especially ups?t with the proposed composition of the court. The report recommends that the court consist of the Dean of Student Affairs (serving as chairman), a faculty member from the Committee on Student Conduct, a faculty member from the department in which the defendant is enrolled, and two graduate students appointed by the Student Body President. "We feel that it is unfair to have only two graduate students on the five-member court," Holt said. 'There are no administration or faculty members on comparable proposed undergraduate courts." "We are just asking the administration to wait until we have formed our organization to see how to set up the graduate court," he said. The committee report must be approved in a referendum of the student body before it can be put into effect. This is the final edition of The Daily Tar Heel until Tuesday, Dec. I. The staff of the DTH wishes all students a Happy Thanksgiv ing.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 24, 1970, edition 1
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