TJ.B.C- Library
Serials Dept,
Box 87
68 tears of dedicated serv- I
Weather
Morning clear with pos
sible showers in ihe after
noon. Monday fair and
mild.
ice 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 LXIX, No 5
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1960
Offices in Graham Memorial
Four Pages This Issue
At First Meet
Campaign
ebafe
The campaign policies of Sen.
John Kennedy and Vice-President
Richard Nixon will be de
bated tonight at the season's
first meeting of the UNC Di-Phi
Assembly.
The debating society will dis
cuss this proposed resolution:
. . resolved by the Dialectic
and Philanthropic Society that:
We hereby go on record as fav
oring Kennedy's concept of a
'New Frontier' as opposed to
the limited government policy
advocated by Nixon."
All interested students are
invited to attend and to speak
at the meeting to be held at
8 pan. on the third floor of
New West. An informal recep
tion will follow the debate.
Mary Jean Reid, chairman of
the Ways and Means committee
will introduce the bill tonight.
The complete resolution is as
follows:
"WHEREAS: The United
States has lost much prestige
and influence in the world of
international affairs in post-war
years, and
"WHEREAS: Kennedy's 'New
Frontier' advocates a revitalized
approach to foreign policy, and
"WHEREAS: Unemployment
is high and the economy is
operating far below capacity,
and
"WHEREAS: Under the Ken
nedy program, increased gov
ernment spending will generate
increased growth in the econ
omy, and
"WHEREAS: The attitude and
role of our government toward
the farm problem, defense, the
labor problem, civil rights, edu
cation, and medical aid to -the
aged have been vacillating, and
"WHEREAS: Kennedy's
policy offers a new, imaginative,
and constructive approach to
these and other grave national
issues,
Today Deadline
For Entering
Beauty Contest
The year's round of beauty
contests begin Saturday with
the selection of the Consolidated
University queen.
This afternoon is the deadline
for entering UNC contestants
for the title. Any resident unit
on campus may enter a candi
date in the contest. Three judges
Earl Wynn of RTVMP and
Mrs. Douglas Fambrough of
Graham Memorial and one to
be announced will select the
three UNC representatives at
4-5:45 p.m. Wednesday in the
parlor of Mclver Dorm.
Dorms, fraternities and sor
orities should notify Diane
Gates at 8-9160 or Wade Har
grove at 8-9117 of their entrants.
Contestants should wear dark
cotton dresses and heels to the
judging.
The queen will be selected
from the nine contestants
three girls from each of the
schools of the University in
the judging Saturday morning
in Morehead Planetarium fac
ulty lounge.
Following several years of
txadition, this Saturday will be
Consolidated University Day.
It is the only time during each
school year that an attempt is
made to get the students of the
Consolidated University Wom
an's College, N. C. State and
UNC together for a day of fun
and excitement.
The State College Wolfpack
will face the Carolina Tar
Heels in Kenan Stadium for
the highlight of ihe day. How
ever, ihe spotlight will focus
on WC girls who will come io
Chapel Hill in 19 buses.
By
UML -S
Of Semester
Policies
"Now, We hereby go on rec-
ord as favoring Kennedy's con
cept of a 'New Frontier' as op
posed to the Limited Govern
ment Policy advocated by
Nixon."
No previous experience is
necessary for a student to
participate in the debate.
Any student may join the As
sembly by attending two meet
ings and presenting one quali
fying speech on any subject.
The speech is subject to ap
proval by the Society.
Meeting every Tuesday night
at 8 throughout the semester,
the Di-Phi Assembly is the re
sult of the merging of the two
oldest debating societies on the
campus.
TV Covers UN
"U.N. Review", a series of
twenty quarter-hour TV pro
grams, will be shown on WUNC
TV every Tuesday at noon and
again at 7:45 p.m. beginning to
day. The National Educational
Television Network will present
this weekly program of up-to-the-minute
reports from the
General Assembly andor' the
Security Council.
eady To Escape? Tickets
To. Africa Jflow Available
By LINDA BISER
Only a few days back at the Hill and some are ready
to get away from it all! They're in luck, thanks to a new
series being offered by Graham Memorial this semester.
Tickets for transport to
across Europe are on sale at
for only $1.75.
The Travel Series program.
featuring films narrated by
renowned travelers, will pro
vide lhis armchair entertain
ment in Memorial Hall.
Embarkation date will be Oct.
6 when a young explorer-anthropologist
from Columbia,
Hector Acebes, will show and
narrate his adventures encount
ered during explorations and
studies of primitive peoples in
a program titled "Africa Astir."
.The Far North will be pre
sented by Rear Admiral Don B.
MacMillan on Nov. 30. "The
Tiger Man," Sasha Siemel, world
YACK PICTURES
The following students
will have their pictures taken
for the 1961 Yackety Yack
any afternoon Tuesday
through Friday from 1 to 6
p.m. in the basement of
Graham Memorial:
Seniors
Fourth year medical stu
dents Fourth year dental students
Wearing apparel will be
dark coats, white shirts and
ties for men, and dark
sweaters for women students.
WC
n n
uQu
The buses will leave Greens
boro in two groups 11 a.m. and
noon. The buses will unload in
the Bell Tower parking lot. De
parting time for the girls will be
11:30. p.m.
Sponsored by the Consolidated
University Student Council
representatives from each school
and directed by the UNC
members of the council, CU
Day is heartily endorsed by each
school.
The council will have a
business meeting at 10 a.m.
Saturday, in Graham Memor
ial followed by a luncheon in
Coeds Feted
By Pan-Hell
Rush Parties
Stray Greeks Deliver
Bids Wednesday
Pan-Hellenic rush began this
week with numerous rounds of
parties and anticipation of de
sired sorority bids.
Sorority rushees visited four
of UNC's sorority houses yester
day and will visit three tonight
to end the first round of parties.
At the Pan-Hell Post Office
Wednesday in GM, rushees will
receive special invitations to re
turn to the sororities for parties
on Thursday and Friday eve
nings. Through the Pan-Hell Post
Office Saturday morning, rush
ees will again receive invita
tions to return for another
round of parties Sunday. Invi
tations will again be issued
Monday morning for the Mon
day evening parties. The final
round of sorority parties will be
Tuesday night after another
Pan-Hell Post Office session
Tuesday morning.
Rushees who desire to pledge
a sorority will sign bids in the
office of the Dean of Women,
and the sorority bids will be
delivered by Stray Greeks to
the chosen girls Wednesday eve
ning, Sept. 28.
Africa, the Far North and
the GM Information Desk
famous hunter and adventurer
will be here Jan 10. A nautical
explorer and world-around voy
ager, Capt. Irving Johnson will
tell about "mountain climbing
in a boat" as part of his Feb.
22 program entitled, "The Yan
kee Sails Across Europe."
Registration ticket sales
brought comments from some
who had seen similar pro
grams. They told ticket sellers
they were "really looking for
ward to it". Other comments
came from students concerned
with studies who were wary
of buying season tickets for
fear the programs would in
terfere with studying for
quizzes scheduled for the next
day. Howard Henry, bar di
rector, pointed out that the
programs wouldn't last all
evening, and that if one or
even two programs were
missed, money is slill saved
by buying the season ticket
at $1.75 rather than individual
ones at $.90.
To be certain that the Uni
versity campus has "first crack
at. it", $2.50 tickets for towns
people won't go on sale until
September 23. The tickets will
then also be made available to
Duke students.
Coeds Also Arrive Saturday
To
orae
Lenoir Hall.
The council also will be in
charge of the haftime presenta
tion of the candidates for CU
Queen. Each school will be rep
resented by three girls.
Last year's queen was Clare
Hanner of UNC.
Following the game will be a
reception for all students at
Graham Memorial until 5:30
p.m. r Bill Shipp, UNC council
chairman, said the reception
would be a mixer for students
to meet students from other
schools.
i
ruuuuu
Castro Offers Salute
To American People
By CLAIRE COX
NEW YORK (UPI) Cuba's premier Fidel Castro,
leading a parade of anti-American leaders to the United
Nations "summit meeting," flew to New York Sunday and
into the tightest peace time police security alert in the
city history.
Oil 7 Ac
The Executive Council of the
Committee on State Affairs will
meet at 3:30 p.m. today on the
second floor of the YMCA.
Expected to attend the meet
ing will be the following peo
ple: Davis B. Young, Bill Nor
ton, Bettie Ann Whitehurst,
Wayne Babb, Bob Baynes, John
Renger, Ken Friedman and Ed
Riner.
The Business Wives Club will
hold their first meeting of the
year tomorrow evening at 8
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Rudi
Marshburn, 114 King St. in Vic
tory Village.
All wives of students in the
School of Business Administra
tion have been invited to at
tend the get-acquainted session.
The UNC Chess Club will
meet at 7:30 tonight in Graham
Memorial.
Rosh Hashanah (New Year)
Services will be held at the Hil
lel House, 210 W Cameron Ave.,
at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Rabbi E.
M. Rosenzweig has announced.
Services will also be conduct
ed at 10 a.m. Thursday and Fri
day mornings as part of the
New Year observance. Regular
Friday evening service will be
held at 7:30 p.m. Friday.
All Episcopal men students
interested in serving as acolytes
for the coming year have been
requested to attend an organi
zational meeting at 4:30 p.m.
Wednesday in the large chapel
of the Chapel of the Cross
Episcopal Church.
Try outs for the GM Petite
Dramatique, "The Solid Gold
Cadillac," will be held from 3-6
p.m. today in the Roland Parker
Lounges of Graham Memorial.
Tryouts will also be held
Wednesday from 4 to 7 p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m.
INFIRMARY
Students in the Infirmary
Monday included Mariel O'Dell,
Nelda Smith, Pamela Patter
son, Carolyn Brown, James Fox,
Douglas Fox, Mike Greenday,
George O'Hanlon, Benjamin
Hobbs, Theodore Collier, Don
Whisonant, Leland Mason and
Charles Clark.
Saturday night ihe Order of
ihe Grail will sponsor a dance
in Woollen Gym from 8 io 11
o'clock. Admission will be $1
for men; girls will be admitted
free. The Grail will use ihe
money for its scholarship fund.
During the dance the CU
Queen will be crowned. Swag
Grimsley, Grail dance chair
man, said presentation of the
queen will be at 9:30 p.m.
The complete timetable for
Saturday is as follows:
' 10 a.m. CUSC business meet
ing, Graham Memorial.
Open
Thousands of policemen were
on emergency duty at Idlewild
International Airport, along
Castro's route to the city and
around the mid-town Manhattan
hotel where he was staying.
Other policemen patroled the
streets in the area, dealing with
agitators opposing the presence
of Castro and the impending ar
rival of Soviet Prernier Nikita
S. Khrushchev. A flying squad
of police sharpshooters stood
ready to rush to any emergency
area.
Pro-Castro Cuban residents
of New York and nearby
slates streamed by the thou
sands in the rain to the air
port in buses and jam-packed
automobiles to greet their
revolutionary hero, but to pre
vent any possible incident,
Castro's plane was halted at
a maintenance hangar about
two miles from ihe passenger
terminal.
About 500 of the Castro root
er flocked to an area behind, a
cyclone fence near the hangar
and yelled and screamed "wel
come Castro" as the Cuban Bris
tol Britannia turbo-jet touched
the ground.
Castro, wearing his usual mili"
tary field uniform with shirt
open at the neck, waved a cap
as he stepped from the plane,
and then stepped before micro
phones to say a few words.
"My English is ihe same as
last lime not too good," he
said. "I want to salute the
United States people. The oth
er things I have to say I will
say to the General Assembly
of ihe United Nations."
An almost solid line of police
stood guard on the two exposed
sides of the hotel, where Castro
and his party were housed in
Actors' Plan
Preview Party
Carolina Playmakers will hold
a preview party in the Play
makers Theater tonight at 7:30.
A series of slides featuring
pictures of past presentation of
the Playmakers and famous per
sonages that have appeared in
them will be shown. After the
slides, Harry Davis, chairman
of the Department of Dramatic
Arts will introduce the staff to
those present.
Immediately following the
program, refreshments will be
served in the green room in the
basement of the theater.
Day
11:30 a.m. CUSC luncheon,
Lenoir Hall.
9:30 a.m. -noon Judging of
contestants for CU Queen, More
head Planetarium faculty
lounge.
2 p.m. UNC vs. State Col
lege, Kenan Stadium.
End of game until 5:30 p.m.
Reception, Graham Memorial.
3-11 p.m. Grail Dance, Wool
len Gym.
9:30 p.m. Crowning of CU
Queen, Woollen Gym.
11:30 p.m. Departure of WC
girls.
T.V. Today
WUNC. CHANNEL 4
5:00 Solid Geometry
6:00 News
6:15 Friendly Giant
6:30 Heredity
7:00 Engineering Graphics
7:45 United Nations' Review
8:00 You, The Deaf
8:30 To Be Announced
9:00 To Be Announced
9:30 Parents & Dr. Spock
10:00 Final Edition
WRAL, CHANNEL 5
5:00 Cap'n Five
5:30 Quick Draw McGraw
6:00 Cap'n Five
6:10 Stateline
6:25 Weather
6:30 Reeve
6:45 NBC News
7:00 Lock Up
7:30 Laramie
8:30 Democratic Nat'l Committee
9:00 Thriller
10:00 Dow Hour of Mystery
11:00 Dateline
11:10 Sportline
11:15 Jack Paar
WTVD, CHANNEL 11
5:00 American Bandstand
5:30 Rocky and His Friends
6:00 Dennis the Menace
6:30 Esso Reporter
6:40 Weather
6:45 Doug Edwards & The News
7:00 Bronco
8:00 Peck's Bad Girl
8:30 Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
9:00 Tightrope
9:30 Comedy Spot
10:00 Diagnosis Unknown
11:00 Phillips 66 News
11:15 First Run Theater
"Outcasts of the City"
Ugly American Furor Topic
For Foreign Service Lecture
"The Ugly American Furor" will be discussed by Dr.
Harold B. Hoskins, director of the U.S. State Depart
ment's Foreign Service Institute, at 3 p.m. Thursday in
106 Hanes Hall.
Sponsored by the Chancel
lor's Committee on Interna
tional Students, Dr. Hoskins'
lecture will also deal with the
foreign service as a career.
The speaker, who is a Phi
Beta Kappa graduate of Prince
ton, will discuss the reactions
and implications aroused by the
book, "The Ugly American." He
will also point out the require
ments and training necessary
for work in the field of foreign
service.
2nd Swing
Started By
Dick Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) Vice
President Richard M. Nixon set
out Monday on his second major
tour of the campaign, an 11
state swing aimed primarily at
Midwestern voters.
He flew from here io the
economically hard-hit anth
racite coal country of Penn
sylvania for appearances in
Wilkes Barre and Scranton.
Nixon's plane got off at 3:45
p.m. e.d.t., putting him 30 min
utes behind schedule on the first
leg of his swing.
Before he returns to Wash
ington this weekend, he will
stop in Michigan, Indiana, Ken
tucky, Missouri, Illinois, Wis
consin, South Dakota, Kansas,
Louisiana and Mississippi.
Before he returns to Wash
ington this weekend, he will
stop in Michigan, Indiana, Ken
tucky, Missouri, Illinois, Wis
consin, South Dakota, Kansas,
Louisiana and Mississippi.
DEBATE SQUAD MEETS
The UNC Debate Squad will
meet at 7 o'clock tonight in 105
Caldwell. President Joe Roberts
has especially urged interested
freshmen to attend this organi
zational session.
A series of six tournaments
have been arranged for novice
debaters, and a full schedule of
inter-collegiate matches have
been planned.
II i , i.i .rii
"Mr. IC Hints Peace
Will Be Speech Topic
By CHARLES OHL
NEW YORK (UPI) Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrush
chev, ringed by Red Satellite leaders, arrived in the United
States at a dingy, rain-soaked pier yesterday and said he
had come to convince even the "thick-skulled" that the
world should disarm.
Within minutes after he left the Soviet ship Baltika
at mid-morning, Khrushchev.
tossed his first barb at Presi
dent Eisenhower in a statement
read before microphones set
upon the pier that was splatter
ed with rain falling through
broken skylights.
Khrushchev's welcome was
as cold as ihe drenching rain.
American Longshoremen re
fused to touch ihe Baltika.
and Russian crewmen were
forced to do the debarking
chores themselves. There was
no American of prominence
present except Cleveland In
dustrialist Cyrus Eaton, who
won the Lenin peace prize
last year.
In a statement he read in Rus
sian, Khrushchev said he was
Born of missionary parents
in Beruit, Lebanon, Dr. Hoskins
has been associated with the
State Department since 1941.
He has been a staff member of
several diplomatic legations in
the Middle East, and was a
business executive in the tex
tile industry before entering the
foreign service.
Russia Promises To Continue
Support In Congo Despite UN
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) Russia served notice Sunday
night that it will continue to supply "every kind of support
and assistance" to the Congo regardless of any action taken
by the United Nations.
A statement issued by the Soviet delegation pointed up a
showdown between the United States and the Soviet Union
over control of the chaotic Congo, now subject of an emergency
session of the General Assembly.
The assembly was called into session as the result of a
Soviet veto of a small-power resolution declaring that all
military aid supplied to the Congo must go through the United
Nations. mt ..
Peale Offers Resignation
NEW YORK (UPI) The Rev. Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
said Sunday that he had offered to resign his pulpit at Marble
Collegiate Church as a result of his "unwise" involvement in
the debate on religion in presidential politics. The offer was
refused.
Peale received a standing tribute when he appeared in his
pulpit for the first time since he and 150 other clergymen
issued a statement after a meeting in Washington questioning
whether Sen. John F. Kennedy could serve as president with
out being influenced by the Vatican in the conduct of foreign
policy.
Tex Surplus Cut
WASHINGTON (UPI) A budget study Sunday predicted
that increased spending ordered by Congress and decline in
corporation tax receipts will whittle a hoped for $4.2 billion
federal surplus to less than $500 million.
The forecast was made in a budget analysis prepared by
the council of state chambers of commerce, representing 20
state chambers.
President Eisenhower's budget originally called for spend
ing of $79.8 billion against anticipated receipts of $34 billion
leaving a surplus of $4.2 billion by the end of fiscal year 1C31
next June 30.
confident of a warmup in United
States-Russian relations. Then
he said he hoped, in the interests
of peace, that Eisenhower would
make more than a "fancy
speech" when he addresses the
United Nations General Assem
bly on Thursday.
Khrushchev will walk to the
U.N. rostrum on Friday, possi
bly to unfurl some new propaganda-loaded
disarmament pro
posal that would portray Rus
sia as a champion of peace. On
Sept. 18, 1959, Khrushchev pro
posed "general and complete"
disarmament to the assembly,
without being explicit about
controls.
Khrushchev admitted to a
shade of apprehension in say
ing he was not quite certain
of the purpose cf Eisenhower's
decision io address ihe Gen
eral Assembly ihe day before
he does.
"The United States have per
haps reappraised their attitude
toward the Assembly meetings
and have also come to the con
clusion that serious negotiations
can be undertaken in the United
Nations to reach a disarmament
agreement," he said.
Khrushchev arrived on the
scene at a time his forces in
the United Nations were under
attack at a special assembly ses
sion for meddling in the chaotic
Congo. The regular U.N. assem
bly session will begin Tuesday.
As Khrushchev stepped on an
oriental rug spread cut on ihe
(Continued on page 3)
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