f I I 'i f 1; i I A TJ.H.C. Library Serials Sept Box 870 On Top IDuiIke Game In iCJ sir 2 Volume LXIX No. O Cjf CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28," 1961 Four Pages This Issue TT7 Tfaet Season iiag 1 i J L-vi r-7 r7 ! ! 7 "7 v - S 7 -. $ 1 i OS- 3 J 1 FORWARD JIM HUDOCK sends ihe ball toward its mark from the right hand side of the goal, a spot he, found fruitful against ihe Duke Blue Devils. Hudock sparked ihe Tar Heels with an 18 point effort in ihe 69-66 victory thai gave U.N.C. ihe A.C.C. regular season championship. 77 Mil I v ' T f i ' " , , f 1 4 71 ? f i jUj . , dStt COACH FRANK McGUIRE talks things over with Ihe referees after a technical foul had been awarded against Carolina when Dick Kepley protested a referee's decision, this was one cf two technicals called against ihe Tar Heels Saturday. 7? Y-yZX''"" 3 ' V s - 'f v 7r,: ; 7 "A h '1 .fei: 1 t " 4" ACTION UNDER THE BOARDS finds Jim Hudock and Doug Moe battling Duke's Carroll Youngkin for a rebound.. The Tar Heels found rebounds hard to buy in Saturday's contest, but Moe's defensive covering of Howard Hurt made, up for any deficiencies in Jhai area. SIP .For residency; Pat 41 erBon Is - Vice Presidential CHioice .(V.VAV.V.V. UN Cracks Down Action In Conso LEOPOLD VILLE, The Congo The officer, unarmed, was (UPI) The United Nations command Monday ordered off duty troops to carry arms and proclaimed a curfew for- its civilian employes as protection from marauding Congolese soldiers who beat four Cana dians and raped a white- U.N. secretary at machine gun point. The U.S. Embassy fearful for the safety of American civilians in Leopoldville, . warned them to avoid Congolese troop lo cations. The U.N. command . accused Congolese soldiers of "bestial behavior." A week-long wave of lootings and pillage by Congolese soldi ers in the interior and increased restlessness in uongo army camps around Leopoldville caused worry at U.N. command headquarters. ' Civilian employes were told to be in the city by 6 p.m. and indoors by 10 p.m. As morale and discipline broJc down amort a tho Conttty soldiers wtiot&re the main- sup port of Maj. Gen. Joseph Mo butu and pro-Western . resident Joseph Kasavubu, reports from the bush said pro-Lumumba troops from the leftist Stanley ville regime still were advan cing toward Leopoldville. Last reports put the troops at Kikwit, 248 miles from Leo poldville. - A wave of anti-United Na tions feeling swept the capital city as word spread of the ad vancing enemy forces. Sunday night, the unidentified white secretary was driving with a Ghana army officer out side Leopoldville when two Congolese soldiers armed with machineguns stopped them. held at gunpoint. The girl was dragged into the bush and raped by the two Congolese.' Both then were freed, but the Congolese took their car. The girl was hospitalized suffering from severe ' shock. Four Canadian soldiers en route to a ration dump Monday morning were stopped by 15 armed Congolese at a road block. tTf 1 'q 1 "if " if '"wr 4. A -i-. A v v - 47, S' A; x ? '"winiiw' M" I J ' 7 ff Thompson Given 2nd Endorsement Bill Harriss and Hank Patterson were nominated last night by the Student Party for President and Vice-President of the Student Government. The party also nominated Mary Townsend and endors Bd Pete Thompson for the offices of secretary and treasurer. Candidates for the majority BOB SEVIER BILL HARRIS UNC98 USSR Group Wins At Assent hly UNC's sophomore - studded Russian delegation took top honors at the United Nations Model Assembly, concluded Sat turay at Duke University. Dieter Mahncke, a South African native currently study- i riff t Carol Ina,, was selected president of next year's as sembly to complete Carolinas sweep of awards. Fred Anderson (chairman), Walter Dellinger, Henry Mayer, Jim Reston and Carroll Raver were members of the USSR group which received the "Best Delegation Award" on the basis of its "accurate representation of Soviet attitudes, methods and voting records." Twenty-nine schools, includ ing West Point, Annapolis, Air Force Academy, Boston U., Duke, Sweetbriar and Hollins, participated in the four-day program of meetings, lectures and debates. . UNC sent three delegations to the event, representing the Union of South Africa, which was also regarded highly by as sembly observers, and Panama, in addition to the Soviet Union. Mahncke's efforts as chairman of the South African group dtew. tliclespreacl attention from the Assembly, and were instru mental in his election. Fred Anderson, who chaired the win ning USSR aggregation, was runner-up to Mahncke and was named to the Continuations Committee. The Soviet delegation, whose members rocked several com mittee meetings with attacks on Western imperialism, UN action in the Congo and Dag Ham- marskjold, held a "diplomatic reception in the spirit of inter national cooperation and good will" for the neutralist nations on Thursday evening. Punch and appropriate Red Star cookies were served. Kemp Salutes Victory With 'Beat9 Elephant The mystery of the ponderous pachyderm perching precar iously on a ledge above Kemp's Record Shop has finally been solved. It seems that Kemp Nye, a determined Democrat, warned his next door -neighbor, lawyer John T. Manning, a resolute Republican, that a Kennedy victory would be apt cause for decorating the front of his es tablishment with the "Beat" Elephant. . Kennedy winning, the deed was done. Apparently the beast made its debut one day when a friend stopped by obviously in a hurry and asked Kemp if he could hide the metal monster. It seems it had been stolen somewhere along the way and the heat was on for its return. Kemp, having a Democrat's aversion to elephants, agreed knowing that his day would of the open legislative positions were nominated. Chairman Grimsley Swag Grimsley was unani mously elected as SP chairman, upon Harriss's resignation, and David Price was approved as platform chairman. This is the second SP Con vention within a week. Last Monday night the SP met and nominated candidates for senior class offices, head cheerleader, C A A, and WAA. Candidates receiving endorse ments for legislative positions were Mary Henderson for Dorm Women 1; Pat Ellis, Henrietta Brown, and Marsha McFarland for Dorm Women 2. George Rosenthal, Buddy come. w e Must Resist Increase In Costs' President Friday Tells Trustees BY JIM CLOTFELTER RALEIGH President William Friday yesterday told a full meeting of the Consolidated University Board , of Trustees here that he continued to oppose higher student costs, particularly the $25 yearly tuition hike for North Carolinians. "We have reached the sea and must resist any further increase in student costs," said Friday. The CU head officer also stated that he would put par ticular emphasis on the Health Affairs capital improvements requests when the CU has its hearing before the legislative Joint Appropriations Committee Wednesday afternoon. Friday said that he would ask the Appropriations Com mittee for "flexibility in allocating" money raised by the tuition increases at the three CU schools. The gathering of the high and mighty of North Carolina education in the Hall of the House of Representatives in cluded Gov. Terry Sanford, chairman of the Board; CU officers; UNC Chancellor William Aycock and officials of State College and Woman's College; and various legislators, professional and business men. At the beginning of the meeting President Friday express ed his regrets over the death of the late Vice-President William D. Carmichael Jr. and said that at present he had no recom mendations for his successor. , ' The Board passed a resolution consolidating academic registration with car registration. In the future any student who fails to register his automobile when he registers is sub ject to a $5 late registration fee. Introduced by Chancellor Aycock, this resolution only applies to Carolina. Also, any student who receives five park ing tickets within a year may lose the right to have a car on campus. President Friday then began his budget presentation. He recalled to the Board members that the Advisory Budget Com mission recommendations given two weeks ago fell short of CU requests in all major areas, although he expressed appreci ation to the Commission for what they did recommend. Friday mentioned without comment that the Commission had recommended no money for new programs and little for new personnel. He told the Board that he would request the Appropria tions Committee, which must make the final budget recom mendations to the General Assembly, to give the CU officers flexibility in the allocation of the two million dollars to be raised by higher tuition. Out-of-state students, by the Budget Commission's recom mendations, will have to pay $600 per year in tuition (as op posed to the present $500), where North Carolinians will have to pay $175 (as opposed to the present $150). Friday wants all full tuition scholarships now held by North Carolinians to be raised $25 per year to make up for the tuition hike. Student costs for in-staters will go up from $35 to $85 per year if the Budget Commission's recommendations are carried out, Friday estimated. He said CU student costs were already "near the top, if not the highest" of any of the 16 Southern land-grant schools. "Costs may reach the point where qualified students will be discouraged from even applying for admission," Friday pointed out. . In the capital improvements field Friday said that he would put particular emphasis on the air-conditioning, of parts of UNC's Memorial Hospital and other UNC buildings (to help prepare the way for an increased summer school attendance). Supplies and equipment at the hospital and the UNC library will-be other, points he will touch on in his requests to the Appropriations Committee. Friday made no mention of whether he will ask more for higher faculty salaries than the Budget Commission recom mended (which was $3,223,000 as opposed to the requested $3,632,000). Friday concluded his presentation, "What we ask, and all we ask, is what is needful and necessary for the University to continue to fulfill its obligation to the state." The report was accepted by the Board unanimously. Gov. Sanford, who presided over the meeting, is scheduled to make a special budget address to the legislature next Mon day, in which he will ask for greatly increased education spending. , During Friday's entire budget talk he sat quietly behind his mammoth high desk, his chin cupped in the palm of his hand. When Friday was through and the other business had been concluded, he rose to make a few remarks to the Board. Among these remarks was, "The Consolidated University is the beginning point for all progress in North Carolina education." INTERVIEWS The Bi-Parlisan Selections Board will interview candi dates for Men's Honor Coun cil and the Student Council from 3-5:30 p.m. Wednesday through Friday in ihe GM TV Lounge Persons inter ested in being interviewed should sign up for an ap pointment in the Lounge. The Bi-Partisan Selections Board for Women's Honor Council candidates will con duct interview today through Thursday, and Monday (March 6) in the Council Room (GM 215) from 4:15 5:45 p.m. Sign up for ap pointments on the door of the Council Room. Broom, and Larry Ledford for Dorm Men 1; Wilson Ward, Bill Wichard, Dick Ackers, and J. Stultz for Dorm Men 2. Harris will vie for the top campus post against UP can didate Bob Sevier. Patters cn enters the second slot raco against Tony Harrington, who copped the UP nomination alon with Sevier at the UP conven tion held February 7. David Rubbin, Bruce Welch, Norman Graham, and L y n Turner for Dorm Men 3; Arth ur Hayes, Malcom Kilpatrick, and Phil Deaton for Dorm Men 4. John Randal and Jimmy Weeks for Dorm Men 5; Dwight Wheeless, Rufus Edmestin, Lar ry McDevitt, Evans Hemsith, and David Henry for Dorm Men 6. More Legislators Carl Bumgarner, for Town Men 1; Mitchell JLeglar, llarve Harris, Tommy Stack, Dave V ? Peltz for Town Men 3; Hichard Dunn," Arthur Merril, Mike Lavv ler, and John Brent for Town Men 4. Pete Thompson is a double endorsed candidate. He was nominated by acclamation at the SP convention. Wheeless was appointed as legislature co-ordinator of the SP campaign. A motion was made in each case of the president, vice-president, and secretary of the stu dent government nominations that the SP secretary cast one vote in their favor. Each mo tion was approved. y f X i World News In Brief By United Press International L J. P. Kennedy Fidel Ccs'rs NEW STORM THREATENS SOUTH A new storm born in Texas raced across the southern plains Monday and threatened fresh weather onslaughts for the South's disaster-stricken floodlands and snow-laden Indiana. President Kennedy ordered federal aid for Mississippi in the wake of floods which have made 10,000 homeless in the state. He declared parts of Mississippi a disaster area, ordered the Office of Civilian Defense Mobilization to provide federal rehabilitation funds, and telegraphed Gov. Ross Barnett. ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT MADE ON GUEVAR 1 HAVANA A former Castro army officer Monday shot and killed one man and wounded another in an unsuccessful at tempt to assassinate economic czar Ernesto Che Guevara. The attacker, identified as a former army lieutenant, was himself wounded and captured in a spectacular running gun battle with Guevara bodyguards. The assailant said he wanted to kill Guevara "because ho is a Communist." Guevara is generally regarded as Moscow's laison man with the Cuban government. EDUCATION BILL GOES TO CONGRESS WASHINGTON President Kennedy Monday sent Con gress legislation to carry out the largest and most controversial single portion of his education program a $2.3 billion plan to help states build schools and pay teachers. He submitted the bill to the lawmakers with a prediction that approval would "help lift our schools to a new level to excellence." 1 1 it i 1 : If $

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