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Daily News from New York, New York • 3

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWTS. WEDXfiSDAg. AEBtt 17, 1968 ft 'MimsSer, fflgb By FRANK MAZZA Dort rl wC-f r' exponent of love and let love, got sup-port from a minister, a rabbi, and a philosophy professor yesterdav at th second and final day of her school trial at B.m.riCol2S admit! 17 rthher h0y friend' is eharged'with vTal iff "iu laces expulsion Irom Barnard. fa.if i Vs wnours or testimony, the student-iLtS rese decision. A decision ov.rr, lfte college President may role of a college was not in loc parentis (in place of a parent), but was to provide a good curriculum and a good faculty.

Goldman called for the cas against Linda to be dropped, and that the honsino' u. revised. "The students would no run rampant, he asserted. Linda also renvivaA Lindas witnesses, all connected with the college or with Columbia University across the street, favored the elimination of school housing regulations. Associate Prof.

Sue Larson said the college "has no legal right to regulate the private lives of students. It's a mistake to expel or suspend a student for non-academic reasons," she said. How She Sees It Revealine- that cY. DOrt from nno nt tVi KJ- iuciiiLcrs o( the cnmmiHnfl iuicssor luarr Motnpreill liuoJ 4.I.- -i nie i-nitoso phy Department at Barnard end one of the five faculty member on the committor CVm i Linda LeClalr and boy friend. Peter Behr.re ITo'f Jrdsj, they wait for hearing to start at Baraardjgk' Jinda for going through an open hearing.

"A change is needed (in the regulations), for a critical now "xists," she said. eauy aressea a green knl suit and brown numns umua was near rpara oouii.nl hr Life a Short -o i ii guilty because she had not spoken out earlier against the regulations, the philosophy professor said: Uur inactivity Is responsible for the present procedures. It would be bad for the college if Linda is punished for unfair rules." The Rev. William Starr, Protestant counselor of Columbia Lmversity, described the housing ru es as "ridiculous." "Housing rules are made for the student body. If they are an impediment, they are ndicnlnue v.T.xi nines as sn read her opening statement.

Th hearing room, crowded with more than 250 Kturltrnto u. aim latULLF members, was hushed. She claimed the school had no But 'Mi ting ne Rev. Wilham Starr, Protestant counselor at Columbia, called housing rules "ridiculous." A JaV 1 not illt rviar-nlT. regulate her personal behavior.

"I'm old enough by law to live anywhere and with anyone without my parents' permission," the 20-year-old blond said. "The regulations are an infringement of our basic individual freedom," she added. JiyttlLLIAMFEDERICI Dorothy Sandra Futterman loved to tning-s. when a place stopped Deiner fun or rhallsnn-mn- i girls, she went on, offered the use of -their names if it would help to change the regulations. Starr, who has known Linda two years, said the fault lies with a system that "forces stu ijnc Yvuum leave seated at her side throughout the proceeding was Peter, 21.

He beamed several times whn jcisu x-ruiay, tin cause it exists." Starr said outside the hearing room that Linda was on trial because "she did something in public instead of privately. Linda purposely allowed herself to be caught living in violation of the school regulations in order to force a test case." In her opening statement to the committee yesterday, Linda revealed that eho nj i. dents to sacrifice integrity in order to live their lives the way they want to." Starr was followed on the stand by Rabbi A. Bruce Goldman, Jewish counselor of Columbia University rose to answer questions from the committee. A committee member asked Linda if she believed regulation for freshmen should be eliminated.

"There are so many living is dorms who want to get out and so manv fommnbra Tuhn i- 'in uujr friend, Peter Behr, a Columbia university junior, had distributed 400 nupstinnnoii-oa dents asking if they shared their nnu uiuua lor what he said was her courage and conviction, Goldman said the hearing was a "test of civil and individual rights." He said the -uiey receivea SUO affirmative returns. Som fin live dorms, I think that situation would take care of itself she declared. Nab A in Bea I for 3006 U.S. Bill A tiD from a nri'vatf rWoft found Dorothy, a 31-year-old brunette, savagely beaten, nude and unconscious on a remote Pacific Ocean beach and tried to save her life. But she died aboard a small plane that was taking ner to a hospital in Oaxaca.

Yesterday cops swarmed over the beach and village of Puerto Escondid hunting a hippie with a beard who invited Dorothy for a boat ride the day before she was found beaten. According: to Mexican authorities, Dorothy, who was 31, had run out of money and had taken a job as waitress. Three witnesses gay they heard her making a date with the hippie. The witnesses, Americans, told Investigators that they "didn't see the girl again until the following morning when she was found on the beach," Kevin Kel-leghan, special correspondent for The News in Mexico, reported. An autopsy report said she had a severe head bruise and that her skull was fractured at the base.

lesterday, as the search for her killer -went on, Dorothy's body passed through New York, where she worked as a designer, en route to Tupper Lake, N.Y., where she was born and raised. "Having Wonderful Time" Investigators in Puerto Eseon-dido, the tiny Mexican fishing village where they found Dorothy, Detectives from District. At torney Frank Hogan's office seized the four at a Broad St. rendezvous. Three of the men were charged with trying to sell the bills to the fourth.

$1.5 Million Missing The bill, detectives said, was One Of 50 With total valno $1,552,000 reported missing from the Hayden, Stone Inc. investment concern at 80 Pine St. last Sept. 13. Arrested were May Tfamin rr of 941 E.

49th his son. Stuart. 24. of 227 Rpach fSSfA 141st Belle Harbor. Queens; The late Dorothy Futterman round on Mexican beach Michael Parker, 38, of 663 Fifth and Seymour Siskind, 55, of 52-50 -70th Jackson refused to divulge information concerning ner death.

Tn9 U.S. Embassy stated only that an American girl and a rrench-Canadian man, both de- w.ueu aS -nippie types," were Gras time and she was having a wonderful time. She was going to leave soon for Mexico "I remember asking where she was going and she answered, 'Nowhere, nowhere just a place to have fun In her small apartment at 155 E. 52d St. friends were taking care of Dorothy's Siamese cat, Marmalade.

They talked of Dorothy. "She Was a ouiet t-irl. verv son. Heights, Queens. The detective said they watched as Parker handed $15,000 to the younger Kamin in exchange for the bill during the sidewalk rendezvous.

The bill, they said, was in a brown envelope that was addressed to a doctor in Zurich, Switzerland. A spokesman for Hogan said that a private detective investi ciu as material witnesses. JNo other information was available. In Tupper Lake, her father, red, made arrangements for the funeral. She is survived also by ner mother and two sisters.

The family had been on vaea-Vul Florida when news came that Dorothy had been slain, yesterday Fred Futterman Bat his living- room. She called us from New Orleans," ha It was Mardi i gating a matrimonial action in- i o-- -rf SltlVC Verv creative miA UEIlIf HU-- volvmg one of the arrested men two months aero stumbled nn evi She loved to mnk fhinira Wax Kamin and son, Stuart, at Elizabeth St. police station. ful. Dorothy wasn't one to make friend.

hastUv Kha nraa mif toi dence relating to the missing bills and informed the district attorney's office. The DA' office said that Sis- ly an outgoing nerson althoutrh kind drew an Indeterminate prison sentence in 1952 for an extortion and burglary plot in which he was involved with former city detectiva James J. Fox, three other men and a woman. was very activ.".

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