U.tt.C. Library Ssrials Dspt, QCT5 1959 Cox 870 WEATHER Considerable cloudiness and rather cool with some rain prob ably developing In west and south Portion. Low, 60s; high, low 80s. , H.C. 67 years of dedicated service to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, whose motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 14 Complete UF Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE 4 11 Beauty Contest, Dance Highlight CU Events Here General activities for today, hon-itudent section as in previous oring the Consolidated University, 'years. Tickets will be honored only have been announced by Student 'at the listed gate, but seat ex changes between students can be worked out by the students them selves after admittance to the game. Council Chairman Erwin Fuller. Consolidated University Student Council members from the three school? will meet in the Library Assembly Room at 10 a m. iweivc to eighteen busloads l j consolidated University system women from Woman's College will j w ill be saluted at half-time by the arrive in the Bell Tower parkins Marching Tar Heels with the play- lot between 1 and 1:20 p m. Coun cil mpmbers will welcome the visiters ing of "Hi Neighbor VC women then will be sera-j naded with "Let Me Call You Chairman Fuller urges Carolina Sweetheart" after which an animat- tudnts lo be "friendly, yet gen-1 ed steam shovel will salute Statt tlemanly, to the female visitors." (college to the tune of "Whistle The WC students will sit in thejwhjjp you Work." west endzone and not in the UNC Candidates for CU Queen will be presented as the band forms a crown and renders "A Pretty Girl is Like a Melody." N'C State's band also will per form at halftime and will co-operate with the Marching Tar Hels in pre-game activities. Following the game, a "get-ac-qua'.ntcl" reception, sponsored by the CUSC. will be held on the lawn in front of GM (not at Woollen Gym as listed on posters) from 4:30 to 6 p.m. for the combined student bodies. UNC and WC women will serve free refreshments to all. accom panied by the music of a combo provided by GMAB's House Com mittee of which Stewart Priddy is chairman. In the event of rain, the recep tion will be held in the Tin Can. Students may dance to the music of Bobby Haas and "The Embers" at the Grail Dance in Woollen Gym The UNC Placement Service will tonight from 8 to 11 p.m. The CU Speaker - - vv:" x . i 1 hi 1 9 Beauties Set For Tough Day In CU Contest Today will be a busy day for the nine beauties competing for the title of "Miss CU." The contestants, three from each of the three schools of the Consoli dated University system, are Kathy Fulenwider, Claire Hanner and San dy Trotman. all of UNC; Johnnie Ralentine, Margaret Carter and Becky Jackson, Woman's College students: and Frances Goodwin. The other two members of the c!uda Weck and Linda w N c 1-1 A A 1 ' State coeds. The girls will meet with the judges at 10 a.m. in the Grail Room, and they will lunch together at the Pines restaurant. Introduced at game half-time, they will be saluted with "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody" as the band forms a crown. The candidates will be presented in a figure formation at the Grail Dance in Woollen Gym at 9:30 p,m. Lad Daniels, NCS student and pres ident of CUSC, will crown the Queen and present her with a bouquet of roses. n'slsf UNC Seeking Seas Against Undefeated Sf a Win 1 oday teGridders Scholar i r 1 4 at- Sponsor a career meeting for sen iors and graduate students Tues day, at 7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall. Director J, M. Galloway will ex plain how hU office helps students find jobs and how they can make best use of the placement service. All students who plan to seek em p'oyment after graduation or mili tary service are invited to attend this meeting. Andy Robertson, ' above execu tive vice-president of Crawford and Company, will be the guest speak er. His many years of active par ticipation in the field of college recruiting make him well qualified to discuss problems facing job seek-eis. Queen will be presented at 9:30. Admittance is $1 for all men. Women will be admitted free. This is a coat-and-tie afair. Mrs. Wiggins Housemother At Smith Dorm Mrs. Gertrude Wiggins has been appointed housemother of Smith dormitroy. replacing the late Mrs. Sedalia Gold. A native of Anderson, S. C, and a graduate of Converse College Mrs. Wiggins has served for many years as the field representative for Wesleyan College. Although her appointment is ex pected to be temporary, Mrs. Wig gins states that she is "delighted to be here again." 'She has been connected with the University Ex tension Division for the past sev eral summers. I , s 1 V . Selections Committee Names Dean M. W. Lee Dean Maurice W. Lee of the UNC 6chool of Business Administration has been notified of his appointment to the selections committee for the distinguished Brookings Research Professorships by Robert D. Cal Xins, Brookings Institute president. The program is financed by the Ford Foundation. Planetarium Begins New Season Today "Stars of Autumn," the first de monstration of the 1959-60 program schedule, will open at the More head Planetarium this morning at 11. It will be presented also at a special post-football game matinee at 5 p.m. and again at 8:30 p.m. With the opening of the new de monstration, the Morehead Plane tarium will resume its regular schedule of presentations at 8:30 o'clock every evening and matinees on Saturdays at 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. ami Sundays at 3 and 4 p.m. Spe cial programs for school children with reservations will be given on Wednesdays through Fridays at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Steel Negotiators Hold Special Parley Today PITTSBURGH. W Steel Negoti ators agreed Friday to hold an un usual Saturday morning session teday in their efforts to end the 80-day old nationwide steel strike. The decision to hammer away again today starting at 10 a.m. closely followed a pessimistic statement by United Steelworkers President Dav id J. McDonald that "I am not hopeful" for an early settlement in the costly dispute. In a joint statement read by R. Conrad Cooper, chief industry nego tiator, the negotiators said, "We are exerting every- possible effort to resolve our problems through collective bargaining." OUTING CLUB The Outing Club will hold its regular meeting Monday night in room 301-B Woolen Gym at 7:30. Thai Elloitt (above) UNC pre-med student from Whiteville, will begin studies on a scholarship at the Goet tingen University in Munich Nov. 1. Elliott left for Germany in June and studied in Rothenburg ob der Tauber and Kochel Universities during the summer. Through these st'idies he learned to speak and write German well enough to un derstand the lectures he will be attending at Goettingn. He was a delegate at the United States Collegiate Council of the United Nations for the Internation al Student Movement of the United Nations, Aug. 24-29. He traveled ip Germany and Switzerland during the summer and spent a few weeks with a German family While in Munich, Elliot will stay at the Fridtjaf-Nansen-Haus, a dormi tory for foreign students. Carolina Alumnus Gets Illinois U Position Dr. John Joel Moss, an alumnus of UNC, has been appointed re search professor at Southern Illi nois University. Dr. Moss obtained his Ph.D from this university in 1954, serving as research fellow and assistant from 1949 to 1953 lie win uc icdtuiug a acuuiicii class in the department of Home and Family Living. He will spend tha rest of the time in research. After-Games Rules Outlined October 3, 1959 Students of the University of North Carolina: With the traditional football game between North Carolina and North Carolina State only a few hours away, we would like to outline to you a list of agree ments reached by the two institutions. These agreements were reached because of the clean rivalry that has de veloped between the two schools in the past and the desire to maintain this wholesome atmosphere in the future. The agreements are as follows: 1. The student body of the school that sustains the defeat will remain in the stands at the conclusion of the game, and the students of the victorious school will be permitted to converge upon the goalpost and remove it if they so desire. 2. No opposition to this activity Will be rendered by the police. 3. Police action will occur only if the student bodi es of the two schools clash seriously. We strongly urge you to adhere to these agreements, believing that if they are carried out they will greatly promote the type of sportsmanship and spirit that should exist between the student bodies of our respective schools. We are sure your actions this afternoon will reflect much credit on the team and the University. Sincerely, Charlie Gray Eddie Knox Pres. Student Body Pres. Student Body UNC N. C. State CU Championship Goes To Wi nner Of Battle By ELLIOTT COOPER The Beaten and the Unbeaten meet in Kenan Stadium this afternoon at 2 o'clock to decide the Consolidated Uni versity football championship for 1959. Rocking and rolling from back-to-banzk defeats admiiiist ered by Clemson and Notre Dame, Carolina will be out to achieve its first win of the season at the expense of arch rival N. C. State. In addition to bringing them their first victory, a win for the Tar Heels would also bring the present Wolfpack winning streak against Carolina to an end after three ! and second stringers. I Officially the only Carolina play- J er that does not have a chance of starting is halfback Milam Wall who suffered a groin injury last Satur day will have to sit this one out. Reports circulated about the ac tual Carolina lineup seem to come years. Last Carolina Win In 1955 Not since wav back in 1955 have the Heels come out with the lone ! to the conclusion that only three pnH nf thA srm-P whPn tw th i Payers who began against the Irish Wolfpack. Since that time the team from Raleigh has prevailed 26-6, 7-0, ar.d 21-14. Although the series rec ord stands at a lopsided 34-8-6 mar gin in favor of Carolina, that fact alone has not made the State wins any easier to take. While the Tar Heels have been losing their opening pair, Coach E.irle Edwards' charges have put away one victory to their credit, a 15-13 decision over VPI. State had an open date last Saturday so it will enter today's play with a 1-0 record. As a result of Carolina's perfor mance against the Irish there has been a great deal of conjecture j Balonick at center. will be on the field for the starting whistle this time. Co-captains Wade Smith and Jack Cummings are the only sure starters that Hickey has. Reynolds At 268 There is no secret about the Wolf pack starting lineup, however, and it's going to be a pretty big one. With 268 pound tackle Dick Rey nolds supplying most of the weight, the State line will average 219. Dick Drexler and George Vo'ly mar will be the starting ends. Alon? vith Reynolds the interior line will feature Kelly Minyard at the other tackle. Frank Morocco and Alex Gilleeskie at the guards and Paul about the possibility of a shakeup j in the Tar Heels' starting lineup for this afternoon's game. Coach Jim Hickey, however, has said that he is not. going to announce any line up before gametime. Quite Different Most observers, however, believe that there will be little similarity between the team that opened the Notre Dame game and the eleven which will start today. Most likely, Sophomore sensation Roman Ga briel will direct the Pack attack from his quarterback position. Half backs Ron Pcdwika and Clauda Gbson and fullback Arnuld Nelson round out the backfield. Like the Tar Heels, State has an alternate second unit which sees a lot of action during the game. This squad, nicknamed the Sock 'em team, lacks the first string's weight ard experience but looked feature a combination of what last week would have been called first 2 Die In Ecuador Rioting the Tar Heel team which does get- j very good in the VPI contest. Ron ting the starting assignment will i Wejcicki is slated to run this unit. Against Virginia Tech the Wolf pack ran primarily from the double winged T and avoided the single 'ving and straight T but Edwards has promised to jazz this offense up a little more for Carolina. Red China Ignores Nikita s Plea To Stop Rocking Boat By J. M. ROBERTS Associated Prfs News Analyst Nikita Khrushchev got a more cbjective Rearing in the anti com munist United States than he is receiving in the caDital of Com munist China. Premier Chou Ea-Lai has praised Khrushchev for his peace efforts on the one hand, while on the other the whole Red propaganda program for the regime's 10th anniversary has been on the ag 2ressivc side. Thp United States, which Khrush chpv is attempting to mollify, for his own reasons, has been u.idcr broad -scale attack throughout the ceremonies. The Reds keep on promising to shoot p"ople who get in their way, as against Khrushchev's plea that nobody do any boat-rocking right now. The line taken by the Reds is carefully designed for its appeal to the Chinese people, since it is .r old Chinese theme used by but M directly connected with Com munism. This is the announced determination to take territory on the Chinese periphery which they have always claimed. This is particularly pointed now st Formosa. Khrushchev must have been actively aware, however, as he watched the parade of military equipment which the Reds hsve built for themselves, over end above the aid they have received from Russia, that Chinese ex pansionist claims involve Russia, too. Mongolia was the first country outside Soviet borders to be made a part of the Communist sphere. That was many years ago. when the idea of Communist world con quest was first being manifested. But Mongolia has always been on the Chinese list of claims, too. The clash of Chinese and Russian interests there has long been in the background of Sino-Russian relations. More important, however, is the general appearance of conflict in current theory whether to present a soft front as Khrush chev now seeks to do in the cold war, or to act tough as Peiping is doing not only toward the Unit ed States, but toward India and in some respects toward all Asia. Khrushchev had already at tempted without success before going to Peiping. to call a halt on Chinese armed forces butting around on the Indian border. The Peiping regime has been having trouble with its economic program, there has been a shake up in its military, and its efforts to regiment the people into com munes has created much resent ment. Its beating of foreign whip ping boys may then be primarily for domestic consumption. Chou might remind Khrush chev, if he wished, of the times when the Kremlin has used that tactic. Regardless of Chou's personal politeness, however, it appears on the surface that Krushchev supersalesmanship hasn't worked jn Peiping. -1 5 Grad Students Win Political Science Grants Five graduate students have been awarded the Falk Fellowships for instruction in the Political Science Department. Davil Kovenock, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin; Louis Bowman, UNC graduate and Lau ton Bennet, a graduate of the Uni versity of Oregon, received the $2, 000 fellowships. Fellowships of $1,500 were awarded to Richard Sutton, a graduate of Tulane, and Norman Lustig, a grad uate of the University of Florida. The Maurice and Laura Falk Foundation of Pittsburgh, Penn., gave the' Political Science Depart ment a grant of $55,000 for the three year program, of which this is the final year. The graduates, under the fellow ship program, instruct in the Poli tical Science lab courses. The de partment is one of the few in the nation which is experimenting with lab instruction. GUAYAQUIL, ECUADOR j Two persons were killed and four injured in riots touched off by row dies trying to strip scantily clad drum majorettes in Ecuador's larg est city Thursday night. A Navy shore patrol unit came to the defense of parading teen agers who were being manhandled by hoodlums making lewd remarks. The Navy was ountnumbered and some of the high steppers, wear ing revealing slit skirts and fancy white boots, were nearly undressed before police and troops quelled the outbreak. Armed soldiers fought the mob 2,i hours, stepping in after Nation al and Civil Police had been virtu ally routed. A store owner reportedly shot and killed two looters among the crowds that used the occasion to break into shops. Witnesses said police and soldiers did not fire into the mob, although some shots were fired into the air. G.M. SLATE Today's activities scheduled in Graham Memorial include: C. U. S. C, 10-12 a.m., Woodhouse. C.U.S.C., 10-12:30 a.m., Grail. Free Juke Box Dance, 8-12 p.m., Ren dezvous Room. A police patrol car was over turned and gasoline soaked rags were tossed on it, but they did not burst into flame. Two of the injured were policemen. None of the parad ing girls suffered any serious in jury, except to dignity. The disturbance was considered an indication of Guayaquil's dissatis faction with the government. Some contend the government, though most taxes are collected in the banana-rich coastal regions around Guayaquil, gives preference in al Icting tax money to Quito, the capi tal. The government also is blamed for not solving the plight of Guay aquil's unemployed, who took ad vantage of every opportunity to transform parades and public meet ings into riots so they can loot. Guayaquil was the scene of riot ing four months ago, sparked by a student demonstration, that left many dead and injured. , The parading girls were students in the National College of Guaya quil, the equivalent of a U. S. high school. The march was staged as a rehearsal for the role the school planned to take in a Rotary club benefit tomorrow in the national stadium. School authorities came under fire for allowing the girls to parade without taking security precautions. Indian Official, Touring U. S., Visits Campus The Hon. Jaipal Singh, a leading figure in the Indian Parliament, ar rived in Chapel Hill yesterday for a four-day visit which will inclule an inspection of the campus and a talk before the Faculty Commit tee on International Studies at a luncheon Monday. Singh, who h making a nation wide tour as a part of the Leader Exchange program sponsored by the U. S. Dept. of States, is quite a sportsman and has been looking forward with great anticipation to seeing today's football game with N. C. State, it is reported. Student Legislature Meeting Set For Thursday In New East The Student Legislature will hold its first regular session of the school year at 7:30 p.m., Thursday in the Phi Hall of New East. It is especially important that those legislators who have moved from their residential districts con tact the speaker of the legislature prior to this first session. These legislators will be allowed to hold their seats for two regular sessions, Graham Dorm Elects Hennessee President Dennis Hennessey, a senior, has been elected president of Graham Dormitory. Other new officers are Gurney Hood, freshman, vice-president; Yates Williamson, freshman, secretary; Buddy Walters, fresh man, secretary; Buddy WT alters, freshman, treasurer and Richard Leslie, sophomore, intra-mural manager. but their resignations should te an nounced as soon a possible. Any students who are interested in being appointed to fill legislative vacancies should contact either Dewey Sheffield, chairman of the Student Party, or Hank Patterson, chairman of the University Party. A bill to clarify the status ot The Carolina Handbook, which was tabled last spring, is slated to come up for consideration. A bill to com plete consideration of the constitu tion of the Forensic Council will be introduced for consideration at the next session. Due to sorority and fraternity rush the legislature has been un cb!e to meet before Thursday's ses sion. David Grigg, speaker of Leg islature, says it is especially im portant that all legislators and oth ers concerned with pending legis lation be present in order that this legislative year get off to a smooth but rapid start. Tic-Tac-Toe The world's largest tic-tae-toe game is scheduled for halftime Saturday in Kenan Stadium. Charlie Graham, head cheer leader, and State's head cheer leader will play a tic - tac - to game using the card section as the playing board. Cardboard President Larry Withrow said this is a new card stunt idea and expressed his hopes that students in this sec tion will cooperate in working the cards according to special instructions. Also slated for the card sec tion Saturday are three stunts honoring the Consolidated Uni versity. There will be a State script, a WC script and the UNC monogram. Another first for the Cardboard will be the different presentation of the monogram. A total of 10 stunts will be given at halftime. NEA Chapter Slates Meet Here Tuesday The first meeting of the Frank Porter Graham chapter of the stu dent chapter of National Education Association will be Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the curriculum lab of Pea body Hall. Phebe Emmons will speak on "The Teachers' Responsibility to Professional Growth." Yack pictures will be taken on this occasion. Those interested in joining the NEA should come to this meeting, a spokesman said.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view