SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21,
PACE TWO
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
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Fair Week
Opened Up
In State
The b:ggest news in the state
last week was the opening of the
89ih N. C. State Fair in R?.leigh.
The theme of this year's fair
was , "Dairying on Parade."
There were 15 dairy exhibits to
emphasize the importance of the
dairy 'and its industry to the life
and economy of the Stats.
On The National Scene,
Issues Are Getting Solid
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SOUTH BUILDING
. . . Friday's in the front office note
It will be "President" William C. Friday from now
on.
Kridav, who was named acting president last March i. is
virtually certain to be unanimously accepted as president
-vr-- next Friday. At that time the full Board
i,-'T Vx 1 of Trustees will meet to consider his noni-
inniion, served up by the board's executive
committee last week.
Friday is 30 years old. His nomination
was re(eiel with enthusiasm by other
members of the Consolidated .University
stall, the governor asid students.
It will be the first time since June. i)5.-
i GRAY that the University has had a full-dress
president. It was then that Gordon Gray;
kit the presidency to become assistant sec
letaryjol defense lor international securi
ty al fajrs a Pentagon job. !' 5
University Provost J .N Harris Purks was
named acting president until March 1,
when fie eft to fJeToine iiead of the State
lkardf of Higher Ixlif. :ui.)ii.
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FRIDAY
; The tin' ' problem wasn't solved last
wec!. r.::. I indications were it wouldn't be for quite some
; ti;;i",
rihe student government Traffic Commission, an ap
Minted group, met with the Town Board of Aldermen and
the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants' Assn. to talk over
the problem, which centers around a town law against park
ing more than two hours on one block of S. Columbia St.,
across the street from Big Fraternity Court.
Those at the closed meeting reported "no decision"
had been replied on the traffic situation. Chairman Wil-
burn Davis of the student group ,aid participants just wanted
to exchange "personal views."
Hard driing Tar Heels broke their four game losing
streak yesterday in a game which saw them playing heads-up
ball for lour full quarters.
Brightly painted tars spotted the parking lots as the
spirited Maryland students arrived for their caravan week
end. The traveling terp found Chapel Hill skies gray, and
as the game ended a sympathetic drizzle started falling.
'
A Carolina senior was killed early last Monday morning
when the err in which he was a passenger collided with a
truck driven by a woman.
Robert Fllerbe Jr. of Rockingham died on his way
to Memorial Hospital. Two students riding with him were
reported doing well on last report from the University
infiimary.
The Carolina Forum, which brings speakers of world,
national and local importance to the campus every year,
announced its slate for the present academic year. Speakers
visiting the campus wiH include:
Vice President Richard Nixon, Senators H. P. Cain,
Paul Douglas and Strom Thurmond: Vice President Walter
Reuther, and Chairman V. K. Krishna Mention of the In
dian delegation to the United, Nations.
The Carolina Playmakers started up their dramatic
season last week with "Anastasia." Rusti Rothrock and Mar
ion Fitz-Simmons led the cast, which was directed by Dr.
Samuel Selden.
ailp ar ?eel
The official student publication of the Publications Board of the
University of North Carolina, where it is published daily except Mon
day and examination and vacation periods and summer terms. Entered
as second class matter in the post office at Chapel Hill, N. C, under
the act of March 8, 1870. Subscription rates: Mailed. $4 a year, $2.50
per semester; delivered, $6 a year, $3.50 a semester.
Editor FRED POWLEDGE
Managing Editor CHARLIE JOHNSON
, News Editor RAY LINKER
Business Manager J 1 - BILL BOB PEEL
THE DAILY TAR HEEL WEEK IN REVIEW
Editor :. ; Charlie sloan
Staff Writers u GEORGE PFINGST and INGRID CLAY
In Greensboro, attorneys for
10 Negroes who were refused
golf privileges on a "private"
course filed suit in Federal Mid
dle District Court, challenging
the city's right to 'side-step in
tegration by leasing public lands.
The suit asks for an immed
iate injunction "forever restrain
ing" the City of Greensboro from
denying Negroes "the use and
enjoyment of any golf course or
park established or operated or
maintained by the City of Greens-.
boro on account of race or color."
This is the first suit aimed at
tearing down North Carolina
race laws in connection with the
U. S. Supreme Court's .ruling
against forced segregation of
public parks.
Harold V. Langlois went to
Raleigh last week and identified
the figure of Confederate hero
Henry Lawson- White in Capitol
Square as the one he posed for
back in 1911. The Yankee ex
policeman from Roxbury, Mass.,
worked as a model for John Wil
son, who sculptured the statue
of Silent Sam here at he University.!
At a Klu Klux Klan meeting
in Shannon -Friday the news
papers responsible for sending
Klan leaders into prison or ob
scurity several years ago were
labeled "smear sheets."
The chief speaker described
the Klan as "a patriotic non
violent organization which wel
comed investigation."
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IKE, DICK, ESTES & ADLAI
. . . jj.st 16 dvis left
1
Adlai Stevenson and President
Dwight Eisenhower appear to
have agreed on two things and
they are opposed on both of
them.
They have agreed that the
draft and the H-Bomb make good
campaign issues.
Yesterday,s with 17 campaign
ing days left before the Nov.-6
national election, the two candi
dates were still battling the two
issues out. . . . . ; ;
Stevenson,' who let his H-bomb
fall early last week in a major
address,! wants to put a ban on
testing of such weapons.; He also
would attempt to stop the draft
in the not-too-distant future. .
The President, reflecting on
both Stevenson's proposals, re
plied: "The road to surrender is
paved with good intentions." The
choice between Republican and
Democratic in the election, said
Eisenhower, is "one between hard
sense and experience versus pie-in-th-sky
promises and wishful
thinking."
.
Singer Elvis Presley was let
off by a Memphis, Tenn., judge
with a lecture
after he took, a
poke at a ser
vice station
operator who ;
sought to have
Vt h e Pelvis",
moved . from
the premises.
Presley, who
was signing autographs for teen
aged admirers, was quoted as
saying:
"I'll take ridicule and slander,
but when a guy hits me, that's
INTERPRETING THE NEWS
too much." The operator alleged- 4
ly slapped Presley on the back
of the head after asking him to p t
leave. t .
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PRESLEY
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Russia and Japan last wesk
signed a treaty ending an 11
year state of war between the
two courtries. The pact, signed
in the Kremlin, ended almost a
year and one half of negotiations.
Japane2 Premier Ichiro Hato
yama top negotiator, Agricul
ture Minister . Tchiro Kono, said
the final agreement involved con
cessions on both sides. He did
not disclose whether Russia had
handed back the disputed islands
of Habomai and Shikotan, off
north Hokkaido.
The Council of Europe Gen
eral Affairs Committee reported
a solution to the Suez Canal dis
pute v is possible if the United
Nations establishes a special
court to rule on international
agreement operations.
The council also reported a
satisfactory solution would be
possible if an international body
would be set up within the terms
of the 1883 Suez Convention to
permit effective international
control of the canal, if backed
by such a court.
.
, Iraqi troops were reported; not:
, plannirr? to enter Jordan after
all. A Jordanian government
.spokesman, after two days of dis-
1
Dr. Mohammed Abdel Moniem El-Zawahry
.on his desk Nasser, Egyptian Flag
DR. ZAVAHRY
Egyptian Student O n UN Grant
Likes Nasser And Un ited States
Woody Sears
Dr. Mohammed Abdel Moniem. El-Zawahry comes
to the Carolina campus from Cairo, Egypt
Dr. Zawahry H here to do post-graduate work
in the field of public health on a scholarship pro
vided by the International Co-operation Administra
tion which is a branch of the United Nation's World
Health Organization.
At present, Dr. Zawahry is working for the
Egyptian-American Joint Committee on Public
as
cussion in Amman, Jordan's cap- Health., He is one of pight Egyptian M.D.'s who are
r i : j i a 1 1 4. . ..... 3
iiai,( aiu lxiv iroops woum iiul
enter Jordan; now but would re
main ready on the border for im-'
mediate aid in the event of an
attack on Israel.
Adlai, The Draft, The Bomb:
It's Time For A Clearing-Up
studying in this program. -Also in the same pro
gram are eight engineers and ten other specialists
in some phase of public health work.
Wrhen he returns to Egypt, Dr. Zawahry will
work for the Egyptian Ministry of Public Health as
an instructor at the High Institute of Public Health
which is located Alexandria University.
Dr. Zawahry is one of the many Egyptians who
are dedicating themselves to the improvement of
living conditions and standards ' in -: their home
country.
Joseph C. Harsch
In The Christian
Science Monitor
WASHINGTON Adlai E. Stev
enson is not the only person who
thinks that the danger of cum
ulative radiation from atomic
weapons tests is so great that we
should be doing everything pos
sible to find an early basis for
an end to these tests. Many lead
ing physicists in this and other
countries agree with him.
. The same is true about the
manpower draft. An end to it
has long been discussed among
nonpolitical military experts as
an eventual, logical by-product of
changes in the technique of wea
pons and war.
A nonpolitical case can be
made for the Stevenson views on
both of these subjects. Yet the
Stevenson position on these two
matters failed to catch on as a
vital political issue in the cam
paign prior to his "Chicago speech.
REASON
There is a reason why this was
the case. In one respect Steven
son was trying to do with the
atomic tests and the draft pre
cisely what t)wight D, Eisenhower
did four years ago with the Ko
rean war.
In both cases a political candi
date for high office held out to
the public the hope of achieving
something which most peopfe
would, other things being equal,
like to see happen.
But in 1952 an end to the Ko
rean war was only one step away
from achievement. The ground
work, the preparations, the nego
tiations, even the ultimate form
of the truce had all been worked
out. The truce was, in fact, al
ready in existence. All that was
required was the final formaliza
tion of the document.
NOT TRUE
The same is not true today
of the draft. It will be ended
someday. But several difficult
steps must be taken before that
day comes. And the same steps, !
relating to the future of the cold
war, are involved in the question
of atomic testing.
The question now is whether
there can be an end to atomic
tests and the draft before there
is something more nearly pp- "
proaching a true settlement "of
the cold war than yet exists.
Months, perhaps even years,
of negotiation lie ahead before
there , is a settlement. The im
mediate steps ahead are unifica
tion of Germany, a settlement
between the United States and
Communist China, and stability
in the Middle East.
NOW
Stevenson proposed that the
end of thermonuclear testing be
negotiated now as a preliminary'
to resolving the issues of the cold ,
war. He hopes this will speed the :
remainder of the negotiating
process. '
The President has made it
plain that he does not think
such a step can come logically
at the present time, and that it
must be negotiated as an organic
part of the process of reducing
the cold war. Thus the issue is
better joined now.
It is, I think, because the issue
had not become clear that most
people were pajing little atten
tion to it.
Now, having put his proposal
in its best light, Stevenson will
be asked to go furtherIndeed,
he could, I venture to think, stirJ
the most lively public interest if
he felt free to explain How he
would handle the great and dif
ficult steps which must be related
to the suspension of tests if such h? continued
a move is to De iruiuui and not
wasted.
These steps, however, are mat
ters whiqh both Republicans and
Democrats so far have preferred
not to discuss in this campaign
for the practical reason that the
winner will have to cope with
them immediately after the elec-
"The people of ' Egxpt look up to the United
States," said Dr. Zawahry. "We see the United
States as a leader in independence and freedom,"
This is because Egypt is a colony as the United
States was at one time, and Egypt has basically the
same problems as were overcome by the U. S. "They
look to the United States for help, but it does not
alwa3's come," he -observed.
The biggest fault that Dr. Zawahry, in his role
of new-comer, finds with the American people is
tion. Perhaps they now can be that they don't have enough interest in other peo
discussed with benefit to all. . pies and their problems. '"The Americans have
everything . . . they feel safe and secure .
though they don't need anyone else."
. "But. it dosn't work that way," he said, "because
they need us and we need them."
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' 'Dr. Zawhry iaid that the U. S. doesn't live ut
to its publicity in a lot of instances. He said that
over half, the world is made up of colonies and
that they. look toward the U. S. for help in emanci
pating themselves. They recognize the complete
freedom of America as an ideal way of life and
they would all like to model themselves after our
example.
"Nasser," he said, "doesn't like Russia, but he
has been pushed to seek Russian aid when he could
n't get it from any other source. Nasser is working
for a free Egypt."
But on the other side of the ledger, Dr. Zawahry
said that he was very much impressed by the
friendliness of the American people, saying that
it exceeded by far his expectations.
"I think almost all of the boys have come down
to talk to me and to try to understand me. And it
has been so helpful to me in understanding them."
he said, speaking of his dorm-mates in Connor. "It
is self-evident that they want to learn about other
people and the way they live."
"The students here seem to be very sincere,
and they want to learn," he said of the Carolina
students.
"I like your country and your people," he said,
"and I think there is a great future for our two
countries. Our peoples think very much alike."
People like Dr. Zawahry add a great deal to
the cosmopolitan atmosphere of the campus. It is
he and others like him who are doing a big job
of creating international understanding, the foun
dation of a better future.
Pogo
By Walt Kelly
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