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FEB 5 lego U.TI.C. Library Serial3 Dept. WEATHER I'arlly cloudy and colder today. High in lower 40s. ,lnereasing li.udiiif ss ;md lilllc change in temperature I Imisdjv. 67 years of dedicated service to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers. hoe motto states, "freedom of expression Is the backbone of an academic community. VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 85 Complete IS) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1960 Ofjices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE 22 UNC Students Pay Visit To University Of Toronto lnldltt(t o n tfio3 no Box p v ,Nv Q - i i r i f f 3 i i I .s- viii ii t i ii ii i. ail -s.i f j via i 3 l I J I II M r 71 i J I mim&? t fell v J I sy y y pi n 1 S Itv JIWV ton M'lllM.lM; C. moduli student-; played hos .l.in 2 M l'H Student (iovcrnmcn le id. rs who paid a visit to ;hc I'ni ffi: : ron.nto. Kctiirmm; the Canadians' Nov fnihcr isil. tin- Carolina students spent lour days round trip travel ing by lr;nn. A set en-hour lay ocr in New i.rk bo(h ways al lowed them time lo lour tin- city ti oin tin N.-w Vo. k sloc k e- mm- lo (i; ci iiw it It Village. Tr.ias,.i'r..:io.j expenses were c cic.i Dv i'.c-.. dc.it Charlie tiriiy": d mi 1 1.. n.;. v liu;d ami .,( a ..u :;. ,',( , urn ed iiy an a.'o'iynu.u alumni g.i.up. I 'j"!' i . v . r arrir a!, tin UC st; icn!s ve;c h. ii,. 'led .it a ste.ik lam in ..a !i ILnsy (i II. a per, 1!M. I . .i I. i.i.i ,i n! v u e p. c- id. IK o (i,.i,ii (Mi l.lc ,i!.d K.Iii.mT fit. 11 pare, l-'i id.iy at c. iu ni lh.y pariiti p.iiol in a M-iiriiar on C.ik.di.in Aaii'.kan ie!.i,ioi,s ui.li William .dcVauiit , niriiiiici- o! the his.oiv l.u ul y . li.nocr ill II.. i t House, (he d. luxe student uui ii, was followed Itv lurilie- d.seussiidi ol I he seminal topic. (..II Km Ion gave a party lli.it night, lo p.m. -2 a.m. (It is ciiMoma.y lo lie-in parlies there at u later hour than usual a! American uu.v ersiiies. ) Saturday mon.ing was ?.peat on a lann r.var Toronto sL-ddm..;, ski;ng and tobogganing. A free aitcrnoon gave Carolina students an oppor tuni;y to visit wi.h their individual hosts. Since the Univeisi.y of Tor onto is primarily a coiiiiniiUT col lege, the ;iH's!.. .stayed in piivatt homes. They dined at a lYenih cafe. La Maison Dare before seeing (he National Hue key League game le tMeen Toronto and New York. Toronto won 3-2. A party, 10 p.m.. 3 a.m., at DeieU Hayes' house concluded the evening's activities. Part of the ealei taiument included u live piece conilm uhich pro vided intriiii!! music u.th oil diums of various sivs. Al'.er seiicrs at ITjaity College ' t'h.ipe! JA .ho .s.u.leais had hrcuk fa.st al Iii.uiy College. The alier itoon v.. leotl to a concert pre-M-nied by the roroi.to Symphony Orchestra followed by dinner at the di.hiciit Canadian homes. The last even; of ;hc nip was a Ian-wed p. illy uixen by Dean A. J. K.up. 'I lie stu.;eids who made the trip, in ad.l.li.n to Kay Jelleiies. were .Sophie M.11I..1, Nancy Awbiey. Sandy Irotoi.in. Judy Albernolti, Nancy H.imt, Anic Kaker. Anne Towers. C.vn hia (irant. lame (rt e.iiield. Ana ii imer. Ka liy Falenw i-l. r, Anno i'eny. Cnjil.e (ray. David 'iiiK-i. Davis You i. .Kin Crow -oer, (iordon S.reel. Hill Cuiich lield. ILiiik I'aHerson, KrAi.n Fuller, dim Scott. Wade Smith and David Parker. I I Committee To Meet The Carol in i Symposuiiu pro graii cnm-niU;c will meet (his alteiuooii at I. Phi Hall. New Fast. M "I have certainly realized that anjone can become mentally 1 sliirhed." This statement was made by a UNC coed who was one cf several students who made weekly trips to Dix Hill last semester. I.a-t night a seminar in mental health got underway here in connection with the 'Y' Dix Hill service project. Both" the project ami the seminar are open to all students. A seminar will be held ca-h Tuesday evening at 7 in too upstairs dining room of Lenoir Hall. The organisational meeting last night consisted in part of a discussion of trips made to Dix Hill last semester and ton siferaion ef the book "Light Beyond Shadows," by the Rev Fred West. The combination project-seminar has at least two goals in mind: "some contribution to the therapeutic atmosphere of the mental hospital in Raleigh, and some opportunity for those in volved to gain a deeper insight into their own self-image." The two programs are under the direction of Deene D. Clark, Danforth Sem inary Intern. The following are some of the statements made hy students who went to Dix Hill lo do volunteer work in the wards last M-niester: " ' " tense of revulsion against these 'insane, miam'fmmmrmmammtfi'tmifmv'iwtm . v ....... .... I - mil,,' .. - .--Jpfl ; :z. ,: - If - ( A W ?- 4!ffL i r j , - f i L-if L.-'" I : I . " '"' 1 '" I- Bill IT t l-'-.-.---- v- .. ROYAL CANADIAN WELCOME Peter Brawley, University of Toronto student, lifts UNC student Cynthia Grant high off the ground in one of the weekend's typical displays of friendliness. (Photo by Jacques Roberge) Holiday Set For SanforcPs Expected Bid For Top Pest FAYETTKVLLE. '.. Faye'.te ville anJ Cumberland County make ii a holiday Thursday for Terry San ford's announcement that lie is run i.n for gjvernar. The t '-year-old lawyer will make his formal entry in the race while the city and county cele brates "Terry Sanlord Day." The announcement will make of ficial what has been obvious for many months that Sanford is cam paigning lor the Democratic nom ination lor governor in the May primary. It also will climax a state wide tour which Sanford has con- Last Lecture Series Tpeech Slated Monday Dr. George V. Taylor, associate professor ol history, will deliver the second talk in the Last Lecture Se . ics. Monday. 1! p.m. in Memorial Mall. "IN. lections on Uncertainty" w.l. be the subject of Dr. Taylor's ice tiii e, which will contain the th.aig.its the speaker would like no s. to leave with American eol-le-p students il he knew this were to be his last lecture. D. Taylor, who is the coordinator of the Freshman Honor.s Program, joined the UNC lacully in l!)52. He ieceiveJ his B. A. from Uutyers University in 1!I41, and his M. A. and Ph 1). from the University oi Wisconsin in 1:M!) and I'JaO. Ibis unique lecture series was originated at Ohio State Univer si y. and Carolina is currently (he only .school in the nation conduct ing the series, which is sponsored by student government. ental Illness Can ducted since January. John D. Larkius Jr. of Trenton, lawyer and state Democratic na tional committeeman, already is in the running. He was the first candidate to announce. Others memioned as possibilities, but as yet uncommitted, are State treasurer Edwin Gill, Raleigh law yer I. Beverly Lake, and state Sen. O. Arthur Kirkman of High Point. SaSnford served as a state sen ator in 1U53. lie moved into politi cal prominence when he managed the successful U. S. Senate cam paign for the late W. Kerr Scott in 1)."4. The Fayetteville High School band will provide a musical back ground for the Sanford program Thursday around noon. Streets will be decorated with bunting and loudspeakers will be set up to carry the proceedings. Sanford served as a state sen form at the historic Market House in downtown Fayetteville. I. H. O'Hanlon. who served with SanforJ in the 1!)."): legislature, will be mas ter oi ceremonies for the program. Among the visitors expected from over the state will be Mrs. V. Kce (Miss Mary) Scott of Haw River, widow ol the lormer gov ernor and U. S. Senator. Dining the afternoon, Sanford will be guest of honor at an "open house" event at the Lions civic center. YMCA CABINET TO MEET The first cabinet meeting of the YMCA for this semester will be Thursday, 4:30 p.m. in the Y build ing. Bob Noble, who spent last year in Germany on Campus chest funds, will present a 20 minute program on "The Sew Threat of Germany " Cabinet members are urged to be present. craiy' people came to me. I found at times I avoided contact with them. I wondered if these men understood anything we were trying to do. I was a little angry when they didn't thank me profusely when I did something for them." But, as Clark points out, "the reaction gradually changes, for this same student later said, "The first time we went to Dix Hill. I was a little uneasy about how I should act, how the patients would act, and how they would react to me. On our first visit, an elderly woman came up and grabbed my arm. I really was sur prised and unsure about what to do. If the same thing had hap pened a few weeks later, I would have hardly given ft a second thought. "As each week passed I became more and more at ease and more sure of just what my reactions should be. I think that the fact that the woman was in a mental institution gave me a different attitude than I would have had if I had met her in a friend's home or in a general hospital." On the trips to Dix Hill students get to know individual pa tients, go to dances with them, play cards and just chat. A coed said her "whole attitude toward the mentally disturbed has chang ed. I now think of them as being just the same type people I know outside. They no longer seem a separate branch of the hu man race or a select group of people. I have certainly realized that anyone can become mentally disturbed." Cuban Student Lead To Visit UNC Campus By MAS A NISIHIIARA Fifteen Cuban student leaders are coming here Thusrday from the Uni versity oi Havana to attend the Cu ban S udenl Leader Seminar. It will lie held for four weeks on campus. The seminar is sponsored by the UNC Institute of Latin American Studies and by the School of Phil osophy, University of Havana, in cooperation with (he State Depart ment. The president and the vice-president of the university student body are included. Nine participants are women students, including a TV actress and a kindergarten teacher. The seminar is designed to give the Cuban students special aca demic opportunities that may prove valuable to them on their return home and to give them a realistic picture of life in the United States. They will study so ciology and anthropology especial ly. Special lectures wiil be given on several aspects of American life in cooperation with the Insti tute for Research in Social Sci ence here. During their four-week stay here at Chapel Hill, they also will have opportunities to attend extra-curricular activities, such as talks with the student government, to partici pate in a mock United Nations As sembly, to attend basketball games, and to attend the Duke Ellington dance performance and a Count Basie concert. They are also sched uled to stay overnight at homes in Mount Airy. The University was chosen for I' FOREIGN VISITORS Tunisian officials participating in the For eign Leaders Program of the International Exchange Service are shown as they talk with University Chancellor William B. Aycock. From left to right are Aycock, Mahmoud Messadi, secretary of state for national education; M'Hamed Essaafi, secretary of the Tunisian Embassy, Washington, D. C; and Charles Micaud, professor of in- nice ers the seminar because of its repu tation in sociology and anthropol ogy and of the work of the Insti tute of Latin American Studies. According to Dr. Federico Gil, di rector of the institute, who is in charge of the Program, the Univer sity has been vitally interested in Latin America for almost 50 years, with thL; interest culminating in the Summer-Winter School of the liHO's. Dr. Oil, a specialist in . Latin American governments, said, "Such a project has significance for the relations between the peo ples and governments of the Unit ed States and Latin America, for in many ways they exert influ ence upon the formulation of far reaching policies." The seminar will continue through March 4, when the Cubans leave Chapel Hill to spend another two weeks touring the United States in cluding a storpver at Puerto Rico on their way home. The Cuban visitors will stay at the Joseph palmer Knapp Building, and most of the classes will have Engli.sh-Spani.sh translation. G. M. SLATE Activities scheduled today in Gra ham Memorial are the following: Pan He, 5-6 p.m..- Grail; Chess Club, 7-11 p.m., Roland Parker 1 & III: and International Student Board, 4-6 p.m. Woodhouse. y s A Anyone, Another coed said ". . . it was so difficult to realize that one who is not the most vivacious talker, the outstanding social worker, not an expert in psychology or the practice of Christianity but a raw, inhibited college student could be of real help hew ex tremely discouraging is the fact that I. you. all of us. have not done enough. We could have done so much more." Following is the schedule of seminar subjects and speakers: 9 The Reverend Fred West cf Raleigh, former patient at Dix Hill Mental Hospital. An evening's consideration Feb. of mental illness from Dr. Walter A. Sikes. Feb. 16 Dorothea Dix Hospital. mental hospitals with which laymen can be turbed in and out of hospitals. Chaplain William Steiniger, Chaplain at Dix Hospital. Feb. 23 .The relation of religious life to mental health. 1 Study group in the area of Approach: why is silence March threatening? Why do I have difficulty relating to some people? Why do I reject the way some people approach me? How may I overcome some of these difficulties? March 8 Dr. J. Earl Summers, psychiatrist at North Carolina Me morial Hospital. Approach. March 15 Study group considering anxiety: what is the nature of rami Book Trading Post To Begin Feb. 3 In Y The Alpha Phi Omega Book Trad.ng Post will be operated again this year in Y Building, 9 a.m.-4:.'0 p.m. Feb. 3 through 8. It wiil be closed Saturday after noon and Sunday. Students who wish to sell their used texts should bring them by, price them and the APO brothers will try to seli them. Alter the trading post closes, students will pick up the cash for their books, or the unsold books, according to APO trading post chairman Clai borne Cordie. "The aim of the trading post is to offer students a chance to buy and sell used texts at a reason able price, eliminating the middle man profit and the inconvenience of individual transactions," Cor die said. "In the past few years, more and more students have patronized the trading post, an annual serv ice project of APO. We hope this is a sign of its effectiveness and usefulness to the students." Physician Expects Flu Bug To Hit Chapel Hill University physician E. McG. Hedgpeth will "be surprised" if Chapel Hill is not hit by the current flu epedemic. Presently 10 to 15 students are in the infirmary with flu. Normally, the doctor said, "there is a sharp increase in respiratory after vacation periods. ykkSsiiMs ss i ,f l i ft . , 4sf- ternational affairs at the University of Virginia. Micaud served as interpreter for the tour. The Tunisian officials spent two days in North Carolina, dividing their time between Duke University, UNC and State College in Raleigh. The exchange service is conducted by the U. S. State Department. Students the patient's point of view. Psychiatrist and Superintendent, The nature and objectives a consideration of the ways of in of assistance to the mentally dis Will Oppose Jordon In May 28 Primary BULLETIN RALEIGH P) Melvin Cording has withdrawn from the Senate race, saying that in view of re cent developments (Hewleifs can didacy), he "believes that in the interest of the party, his with drawal would best serve the par ty. He adds that to continue in the campaign, a second primary might result "at great expense to the state." By IIAKVE HARRIS and BERNTE GIUSELIN Before a handful of assistants and reporters Addison Hewlett quietly announced his candidacy for the U. 3. Senate yesterday at the Sir Wal ter Raleigh hotel, subject to the May 28 primary. In the 10 minute session Hewlett paried with questions pertaining to financial backing, his platform, and the choosing of a campaign man ager. Hewlett remained non-com-mital on all questions with prom ises to outline his platform and to name a manager later in the cam paign. Indicating that he w ould campaign extensively throughout the state, Hewlett said, "I'm gonna scrap it for everything I'm worth." In a statement read to news men yesterday, Hewlett stated "We shall move on the simple precept upon which we were raised, that the people of North Carolina elect their Senator, and no others are vested with this power." Hewlett will be opposed by the rssss& if- iMti anxiety? What is the difference between anxiety and fear? What is the difference between natural and path ological anxiety? How may anxiety be relieved? 22 Dr. Harley Shands, psychiatrist at North Carolina Me morial Hospitel. Anxiety. 29 Study group considering acceptance: why is self-acceptance difficult? What relation does self-acceptance have with the ability to accept others? What is the difference between self-love and selfishness? What is the religious attitude toward acceptance? 5 The Keverend Carr, Durham pasU.r active in counseling. Acceptance. 12 Dr. Bernard Glueck, psychiatrist at North Carolina Me morial Hospital. The healthy and therapeutic manner in which people can relate to cne another. 26 Panel discussion of "The Authentic Life" with The Reverand Vance Earron, Presbyterian Church. Chapel Hill; Dr. Eugene Hargrove, Psychiatrist and Commission er, of Mental Health for North Carolina; the Reverend Charles Jones, Community Church, Chapel Hill; Professor Maurice Natanson. Philosophy Dept., U.N.C. 10 Review of Project March March April April April May May 17 Final Meeting "-is present junior senator, B. Everett Jordan from Saxapahaw. Jordan .vai appointed two years ago by Gov. Luther Hodges to fill the seat made vacant by the death of W. Kerr Scott. Melvin Cording, mayor of Wal lace, has also announced his can didacy for the senate seat. Hewlett, a Wilmington attorney, has been speaker of the State House of Representatives for the past year. His name was mentioned earlier in connecaan wkh the gu bernatorial campaign, but on Jan. -I, HeAiett formally wihdrew all inLentLns of taking part in the gov ernors' race because of lack of f.unds. The legislator told newsmen yes terday that he understood that "it takes less than half as much money o wage a senatorial campaign as ic d.es a gubernatorial race." '"My support, both voting and fi nancial, will have to come from the people," Hewlett stated. He has saiu before that his will be a "poor man s campaign." He added that he will not accept contributions .rom source.-! who "aIH want to call the shijts." In respon.-e to questions, Hewlett said lha. he had made up his mind to run on Saturday, af.er talking to friend and supporteis. AIcut a dozen members of a Yc'u.iice.s lor Hw.eLt organiza tion wete present at the news con ference. rih - group was part of a sta e wide organization formed last week wih Dewey Sheffield and Robert Pace as co-chairmen. Headquaiters of the Vdunteers is iccated in Chapel Hill. Their pur pose is to promote the candidacy subserjutnt election of Hewlett to -h- senate, the chairmen said. Sheffield is currently a senior at UNC. He is active in campus politics ind is president of the Wilson Coun ty Young Democratic Club. Pace, a resident of Morrisville, s a gradua'e of the University and is also a member of the state YDC. 1 v r iscovet
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 3, 1960, edition 1
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