U.TI.C. Library Serials Dept. GOT 6 1953 '0 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." It H.C. WEATHER Record Heat! CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1959 VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 16 Complete UPi Wire Service Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE mm mm gj Equipment Lag Halts Pharmacy Move Plans By IIARVE HARRIS , increased this year's enrollment 20 Initiation of equipment, or rath- ' percent 'from 240 to 300. ir the lack of it, has halted Phar-1 'Tharmacy has also added three inacy School's plans to move into j numbers to the faculty which is not their new building on Columbia exempt from tight quarters. i Stieet. Tarheel Beauty Dr. M. A. Chambers, assistant to D. an K. A. Brecht, explained tlie y;uation this way: "The equipment is to be the best, and we've had to iu!er it from a'.l over the country. Sure of it simply hasn't arrived, iisd of course the new building is of liMle use icmplete until the facilities are "You see." Dr. Chambers said, "pharmacy school has to do its ex panding in the freshman year. The curriculum is so specialized that we ctn't add to our student enrollment as can other schools. Besides, the law requires that a pharmacy ma jor spend three years in residence in order to obtain a degree." "The construction period was fig u.eJ for about 4.10 days. Since it Urtii in May l!)5S this means tha ve should have been able to occupy the budding the first of this August Coeds Wanted! Good-looking coeds wanted! Nancy Combes, editor of this i year s Carolina quarterly, urges The date of occupancy has been' ,, . . .... .., . till iutM. wmu nun iiitry quciiii iu r set several times since. Right row the tentative dates are Nov. 15 Ihc. 15." When completed, the new building vili have "from two to tiiree times the space now afforded by Howell IL11" There will be about 69.000 q ft.; much more than it has now. arpear at the Quarterly staff meet- j ing Wednesday night at 7 in Roland j i Parker Lounge. j I l I Miss Combes also requests all I j Quarterly editors and staff mem- j I Lers to make a special point of at-1 I tending this vital meeting. All stu-! One consequence of the delay in j dents who are interested in joining j moving is the resulted cramping J the staff, particularly those who ; in Howell. Dr. Howell went on to , couldn't make the first meeting. 1 e-piain that the school had ere also urged to come. jt- i - J 0 Caravan Weekend Set Carolina Caravan weekend, scheduled for the UNC-Maryland game Oct. 17, will be sponsored by Student Government, Pres.. Charlie Gray announced yesterday. Due to a lack of interest in pre vious years, the University refused to sponsor the weekend again. Therefore the Stuednt Government has assumed sponsorship, Gray ex plained. A special train will be chartered for the trip (to leave from Raleigh Friday afternoon, Oct. 16, and ar rive in Washintgon 52 hours later) if student interest exceeds 300. If less than 300 signify interest in the trip, a special car of a re gularly scheduled train will be re served. Train expense will be $12.28, round trip per person. Students interested in joining the caravan are to call (214G3) or come by the Student Government Office any afternoon this week from 1 to 5 and not later than 6 p.m. Friday. Gray particularly urged fraterni ties, dorms or clubs to contact him about renting pecial cars for their organizations. A $5 deposit is required of all per sons. Game tickets may be purchased in Woollen Gym. Hotel accommodations will be ar ranged individually upon arrival in Washington. Duke Symposium US-Soviet A three day spmposium on "The U.S.-Soviet Conflict" will be held today through Thursday at Duke University. Principal speakers for the event, which is open to all interested parties, include Dr. Merle Fainsod of Harvard University, Dr. Frede rick L. Schuman of Williams Col lege, and Mr. Thomas P. Whitney of the Associated Press. Dr. Fainsod is currently direc tor of Harvard's Russian Research Center and the author of How Russia Is Ruled, a leading text book. Dr. Schuman also has done ex tensive writing in the foreign poli cy field and represents a more lib eral attitude towards Soviet - U. S. relations. Whitney is one of the AP's top Russian correspondents and covered Premier Khrushchev's recent tour. The three-day schedule includes: TODAY OCT. 6 Seminar: "The Conflict in Ideo logy" Panel: Professor Merle Fainsod, Harvard University; Professor Fig ht Di Begins; scussed F. L. Schuman, Williams Col lege; Professor Glenn Negley, Duke University; Professor John H. Hailowell, Duks Uni versity. Place. Union Ballroom Time: 3:15 p.m. Address: "Soviet Change Since Stalin: Its Impact on the Unit ed States." Speaker: Professor Fainscd Place: Page Auditorium Time: 8:1 5 Speaker: Mr. Whitney Questioning Panel: Professor John S. Curtiss, two under graduate students Place: Union Ballroom Time: 3:15 p.m. Address: "T h e Khrushchev Visit" Speaker: Mr; Whitney Place: Page Auditorium Time: 8:15 p.m. WEDNESDAY, OCT 7 Seminar: "The Conflict: Direc tions cf Development" Panel: Professor Fainsod, Pro fessor Schuman, Mr. Thcmas P. Whitney, AP Correspondent Place: East Duke Building Time: 3:15 p.m. Address: "The Cold War: A Problem of Power" Speaker: Professor Schuman Place: Women's College Audi torium Time: 8:15 p tn. THURSDAY, OCT. 3 Seminar: "The Economic Race for World Supremacy" 1 7th Annual Cake Race Today At Fetzer Field The 17th annual "run for the ckes" gets underway today at 4 15 p.m. on Fetzer Field when 20- ?5 hopfuls take the field. The Cake Race, sponsored by the iMramural Department, was re v ved last year. As many as 100 tumpttitors had vied for the cakes in the past, when the event was i hi down the middle of Franklin Sireit. This year's 12 mile classic has been in the making for weeks. There will be an open and a novice c.v ision, and five cakes will be .warded to the top men in each di vision The course begins on Fetzer field tritk, arounJ Navy Field, between the new dorms, to the Bell Tower, tn the sidewalk to the Institute of Government, around the building, fitter Fetzer Field, one lap around ai.d across the finish line. This course is changed, with about three Wnths of a mile being lopped off in the prcoess. All contestants in both divisions will start at the same time, but colored jerseys will distinguish the oj.en division from the novices. Most of the entrants are by now proven competitors, as each has had to run the course at least twice previous to acceptance as an en trancte. But members of the track iiitu ii uss-cuunn y letuns are uui permitted entrance, so the race will be on an amateur basis. SECOND TAR HEEL BEAUTY Cornelia Snider, a junior transfer from Woman's College, has been selected as the subject for the second in a series of photoes showing Tar Heel beauties on campus. Miss Snider, who hails from Dentcn, is majoring in Ger manic languages. Radio Series Auditions UNC Employees Offered Group Blue Cross Plan University of North Carolina em ployees who are not already Blue Cross members will be offered the opportunity to enroll in the Uni versity's group plan with the Hos pital Care Association of Durham on Thursday. Oct. 8. University em ployees may enroll by seeing John Chnpman. Hospital Care represen tative, at the YMCA from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Auditions for actors for a radio drama series will be held Thursday afternoon and night from 4 to 6 p m. and from 7:30 to 9 p m. in Studio A of Swain Hall. Elmer Oettinger, executive pro ducer of the half-hour series pro duced by the UNC Communication Center and the Radio, TV and Mo tion Pictures Department, an nounces that actors are drawn from UNC and townspeople. The first production, scheduled for October 22 and 23, will be the fourth in a series of 13 programs on American Ideas in the 20th Cen tury dealing with the important fa cets of democracy. This is fi nanced through a grant from the National Association of Educational Broadcasters, and tapes of the pro gram will be played nationally by ill stations, which are members of the Association. Scripts for these presentations are by prominent American au thors, newspapermen and playwrights. Modern Russia & The Myth By IRV IIOC1IKA.N PART I " "We will bury you Khrushchev has said to America, making his position very clear; but what do the Russian people think and feel?" This was the question posed and answered at the Sixth Annual World Affairs Institute this past summer by Prof. Robert A. Rupen. now with the Political Science Dept. here His recent third visit to Russia and his second to Outer Mongolia has served to confirm many of his t irlier impressions and to dispel n unfortunately distorted image held by many Americans about So viet Russia ; ideas that are handy for slogans and political campaigns but poison in the realm of foreign i elation where today more than ner before one must deal with real iti. not myths. "Young educated people in the Soviet Union are vigorous, vital, f ill of energy and hard working. Even those settling in Siberia on government assignment did not feel they were abused or resent their as vj,mi)er.t. They were eager and con fident, conscious of being pioners ind rather liking it." This is certainly a far cry from those seething masses yearning to breath free and ready to take the first opportunity at revolt kind of pre-digested spoon-fed panacea used w'len anything usettling appears on the horizon. What are the rea son for this new "esprit", this Rus sian confidence and is it entirely JliStilKM? Iii the diplomatic arena interna tional development have been spec tacularly successful for Russia. From the revolution in 1917 through successive years of consolidation and expansion of influence Mongo lia, Estonia, Lativia, Lithuania, the Kurile Islands, Southern Sakhalin, the coup in Czechoslovakia, North Korea, North Vietnam, China, Tibet the conviction has grown to where the "Russians feel they are riding the wave of the future", in the words of Prof. Rupen. He points to dramatic industrial ?nd economic developments that have resulted in a noticable in crease in the standard of living "people better dressed, more goods of every kind are available." he says "jet aircraft everywhere you look; new housing changing the face of cities over night." "Siberia was a revelation to me," he says. "New cities are springing up everywhere To find a city of over a million population in the mid dle of Siberia is a striking experi ence and this city of Novosibirsk did not even exist in 1930. It's new, well lighted, vigorous and vital, full of factories and resounding with ncise of further new construction." Illiteracy is rapidly approaching the vanishing point and the stress placed on education is remarkable. Education is reaching people at all levels regardless of financial cir cumstances. There is a wide and important scholarship program which supplies tuition, room, board etc. "Most important about this" says Prof Rupen, "U that grad uates of higher institutions in Rus sia go immediately to work in their own special field. There ii no class Register That Car! The Student Traffic Commit tee is working on a list of about 250 license numbers of cars found without registration per mits, according to Ray Jei'fer ies, assistant to the Dean of Stuednt Affairs. Jefferies reminded students that trustee regulataions re quire students to register their cars and to display the regis tration permits. Vehicles not displaying permits will be treated as unregistered, he said. Cars may be registered at 206 South building between the hours of 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 8 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturdays. The fee for the 1959-CO school year is $1 00. Gray Speaks To UP Charlie Gray, president of the sUulent body, will speak to the Uni versity Party tonight in Gerrard Hall at 7:.rW. He will welcome new members and give a glimpse of the future of UP. At this meeting, any member of the student body may join the par ty by paying $1, annual dues, and this will entitle him to representa tion at the party convention next Tuesday night. At that time, can oidak's for class officer positions will be selected. Also, tonight members may sign up for the various UP committees. The Executive Board has re viewed and approved an amend- ! nient to the UP by-laws regarding ! district nominations and will bring i it before the party meeting. J The amendment states that there j arc- a great many nominations to i Le made to the legislature this ; spring and considration should be j given to each nominee; therefore, a new system was designed. This system allows party mem bers from each legislative district to choose their own legislative can didates. This will mean that mem bers of the party from a district will know the nominees and influ ence from outside the district will be minimized. The meeting will clarify all phases of the proposed amendment. UNC Campus, Student Chosen Model For Firm's Brochure The University campus and i senior will star in a recruitment brochure to be published by J. C. Penny Co. in the early spring. The Penny public relations of fice chose to use UNC as a back ground for 20 pictures depicting a senior applying for a job with G. M. SLATE Activities at GM today include the following: Ways and Means Committee, 2-3:30 p.m., Woodhouse; Student Party, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Wood house; University Party, 4-5 p.m., Grail; Student Audit Board, 4-6 pra, Roland Parker I; Kappa Epsi lon, 4:30-6 p.m., Roland Parker II; Orientation, 4:30-6 p.m., Roland Pi-rker III; Women's Residence Council, 7-9 p.m., Grail and Traffic Council, 7:30-11 p.m., Woodhouse. the company. Bill Ball, a senior was selected as the model. Ball was photographed signing an application at the Placement Office in Gardner Hall, talking with Consolidated President Willi am C. Friday, attending class and other campus scenes including Y Court and Old Well. Sarah Doggett posed with Ball in some pictures. Ball was selected by his applica tion picture in the Placement Of fice among four others considered. Miss Doggett. who appears in a few pictures, was named by the Student Affairs Office. CU Day Termed Success By IIARVE HARRIS Lad Daniels, Consolidated Univer sity Student Council president, stood cn the grass in front of Graham Me morial Saturday afternoon and called the CU day festivities "a complete success." "Well, maybe not a complete suc cess," he smiled. Daniels is a jun ior at NC State. "But aside from the final game score things have been great." "This reception is a swell idea. The combo seems to facilitate con geniality among the three schools." Daniels drained off the last of his punch and looked around for some where to put the empty cup. ' Have to look into this," he said. "Can't have all this pretty NC grass messed up." The trash problem was toon solved by inverting a cheer leader's megaphone, but nobody seemed to mind or even notice. Junior Service League Slates Rummage Sale The Junior Service League of Chapel Hill will sponsor a rummage sale Oct. 8 and 9 at the Curb Mar ket on N. Columbia St. Profits from the sale will be distributed to char itable projects in Orange County. Those having articles to contri bute to the sale may have them ! collected by calling Mrs. Betsy ( Campbell, 71501, or Mrs. Jean Bill Withers, public relations j Hours of the sale man, coordinated trie worK nere with the office in New York. of unemployed and disgruntled in tellectuals who are the source of to much trouble in a country like Iiidia, for example.. Young edu cated people get good jobs and good salaries in the Soviet Union." Professionalism, culture with a capital C, and education are highly valued in the system and highly rewarded A college professor earns thv equivalent of $1000 per month, a star basketball player about $200 and the average factory worker about $80. A pair of shoes may cost anywhere from $50 to $80 and a suit $200 but a book 50 cents to $2. It's literally cheaper to sit down and read a book than to take a walk. Peters' famous window is wide open altfjugh to one way traffic at the present time, and Prof. Ru pen notiled the great desire of the Russian 'to travel to .Western Eu rope and tVmerica and who can't understand! why he shouldn't be al lowed to gJ. The Russian woman, feeling the effect of this new westernization is apparaled in gayer and lighter fa brics and uses more face makeup than ever, while the state machine, catering o these desires, is produc ing not only; the dire necessities but the Bourpjps accessories. It would be ironic these trinkets of "de generative? laipitalism" to prove a froce in briifging the two giants in to closer cooperation. But life injRussia, as everywhere, presents its problems and is far re moved from that perennial bowl of cherries. (Continued tomorrow) mm mm, nMmmmwmmmmmmmwmmmmmwmmmiHi mm mtmmmmmwmmmmmmnmm..wVNmv ) : i ' f - i " wv -s ... - i. X " -, ' . . . . i - - - , v ' - i -i fWf ': - v H I O - ! i !" ', V III ! nii .li, . i l,rilN'- " ' ' V S ' UNC Professor Publishes Second Book John Ehle, UNC instructor of playwriting for television and mo tion pictures, has recently publish ed his third book, KENGSTREE IS LAND (William Morrow and Com pany, $3.75), a novel centered in the Outer Banks. The novel, which was released Sept. 9, has met with favorable sales and criticism. Inglish Flet cher, in criticizing the book, wrote: "Possessive, in that it keeps you well within its grasp from the first chapter to the last. There is no let down. It keeps its pace. You do not want to put it aside until you have read the last page. You are caught up with the problems of these people. They are real and alive." Ehle is a 1949 graduate of the Uilj IvauiU, icicvisiuii anu iuuuuii Picture Department. He first start ed writing for the University in 1948 and in 1951 he began teach ing. Currently he is conducting the course in writing for radio, tele vision and motion pictures. Already he has contracted pub lication for his fourth book which is a biography of an Episcopal priest working with Puerto Ricans in New York. The book, which has not yet been titled, will be re leased in the spring. Ehle main tains that one must always work ahead. Withers said Carolina was selected because it is known nationally, and it is typical of an American uni versity. The pictures plus a story on working for Penny's will first ap pear in Penny News, a house or gan, and then in brochure form to be circulated universities over p m. p.m. re 3:30-6:30 Thursdjy, and 8 a m. to 6:30 Fridav. University Club Urges All To Send Delegates Mike Deutsch, president of the University Club, urges all presidents of dormitories, fraternities and sor- to colleges and j orities to send representatives to the nation for 1 the first meeting of the club tonight. recruitment purposes. There is a possibility that it will appear as a feature story in newspapers. Although UNC will be named with the pictures, Ball will not. They will meet at 7 p.m. in Ger rard Hall. Details concerning Home coming festivities will be discussed. Deu-sch said the meeting should be sliurt, from 15 to 20 minuts. YOUR GMAB GMAB Chronicle Enlarged i .. .- 4 ' i , I f& t.'jH t ' s k r ? 1- - " 1 tr - iL.v . - . . " . - :. L .: J A - INFIRMARY CU DAY QUEEN Crowned as CU Day Queen last Saturday night at the Grail Dance was Claire Hanner, UNC senior. Claire was chosen from a field of nine beauties, three from each of the three schools in the Consolidated University system, which includes UNC, N. C. State and Woman's College. Students in the" infirmary yester day were: Sarah Ilermick, Judith Weston, Philip Sedberry, Arvid Si ber, William Milstead, Roy Arm strong, Cutter Davis, Philip Rigdon, Robert Murray, James Morton, Kenneth Eisenberg, Jerry Fisher, Warren Williams, Robert Carter, Elmer Hylton, Robert Cook, Rich ard Gregory, Nancy Bullock, Cath erine Herbert, Hannis Latham, John Houthard, Ira Hardy, Wade Smith, Thomas Coleman, Henry Manning and George Buchanan. By BRIAN HURST Not content to rest on last year'a successes, the Calendar Commit tee of the Graham Memorial Ac tivities Board has plans for its picture this year a pese appro priate to the itrae of year. The back of the card names functional committees of GMAB. The chairmen of this committee monthly chronicle to be bigger and jare Louis Gump and Bobby Grubb. better yet. jBoth students have excellent qua- Expansien is the rule with this locations for their posts. Gump is group, and plans for 1959 60 in-j a Morehetd Scholar, member of dicate that no one's relaxing that I NROTC, Soccer team, Sigma Alpha rule jEpsilon. A junior, he is majoring pi- amn tw0 Mnopc ic th J in economics. Grubb, also a junior, larger size of the sheet. This means more room to print the events on each date and for per-j the Student Legislature, Dance sons to scribble their own private ; Committee, Phi Delta Theta, Phi memorandums. I Eta Sigma and Alpha Epsilon Larger too is the calendar girl's Delta. is a pre-med student, sports editor day's i a-vACi) i diA, in trill jjcx ui 1