U.TI.C. Library
Serials Dept.
02 8?0
Weather
On the Inside
The grand old man hes
retired, see edits, page 2.
Intern program proves in
teresting, see paga 3.
w a y c j, iwx i i
Miami Hurricanes expect
ed to be a breeze.
Volume LXIX, No. 14
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1960
Offices in Graham Memorial
Four Pages This Issue
enos
come
onverr
UNC
Wei
New
C
Campus
Angry Soviet Premier Interrupts
Macmillan In Address At UN
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) A table-thumping
finger-pointing Nikita Khrushchev broke into British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan's United Nations address and
shouted furiously in Russian until Macmillan had to cease
speaking.
The silver-haired, suave Macmillan paused, as the as
sembly president gavelled loudly for order. Then the prime
minister resumed speaking after remarking that Khrushchev
needed a translator.
Macmillan outlined a "non-political" disarmament pro
gram, defended West Germany against Soviet attacks, threw
his support behind U.N. Secretary General Dam Hammar
skjold, and dismissed Red propaganda as "reactionary and
backward looking."
President's Mother-ln-Law Dies
DENVER (UPI) Mrs. Elivera Doud, mother-in-law of
President Eisenhower, died in her sleep during the night at
her Denver home. She was 82.
The saddened President, in Chicago to make two speeches,
was to fly here today to join his wife and other members of
the family at private funeral services for Mrs. Doud.
Brigitte Fails In Suicide Try
NICE, France (UPI) Brigitte Bardot, French sex kitten
who has been beset with constant quarrels with her actor
husband, tried to commit suicide Wednesday night with an
overdose of barbiturates. She rallied sufficiently Thursday at
a Nice hospital to be pronounced out of danger.
Americans Urged To Leave Cuba
WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States has urged the
wives and children of American civilians to leave Cuba be
cause of continuing police harassment and Fidel Castro's anti
U.S. policies, it was disclosed Thursday.
YACK PICTURES
Today is ihe last day thai
freshmen may have Iheir pic
tures taken gratis for the
198 1 Yackeiy Yack. They
will be taken in the basement
of Graham Memorial be
tween 1-6 p.m. Nursing stu
dents may also come at this
time.
Special pictures will be
taken for senior nurses on
Saturday, October 1 at 10:00
a.m. These students are to
wear uniforms.
Men are to wear dark
coats, white shirts and ties.
Women are to wear black
sweaters.
Extension: Seniors, fourth
year med and denial stu
dents, and law students may
have their pictures taken to
morrow for the last time for
a fee of $1.00.
INFIRMARY
Infirmary hours nave been
listed as 9-11:30 a.m. and 2-5
p.m. Students in the Infirmary
yesterday included: Martha
Kendrick, Harriet Laurum,
Barbara Philbeck, Lillian Bost,
George Kellerman, James King,
Frank Blackforth, James Mas
ters, Edmund Knott, Linda
Kollaham, Louis Karmal, Wal
ter Early, Itnon Sullivan, Rob
ert Bolien, Charles Bolick, Ed
mund Hamrick, Keith Ham,
John Lee, Alton Loftis, Thomas
Wellons, James Broder, Daniel
Hurley, Joseph McChristian.
Primitive
u sic Is
Talk Topic
Under the auspices of the
Music Department, Dr. Bruno
Nettl, distinguished ethnomusi
cologist, will address the first
fall meeting of the American
Musicological Society in the
Choral Room at Hill Hall Tues
day at 8 p.m.
The public is invited to his
lecture which will be a discus
sion of "Polyphony in Primi
time Music."
r :::::. i
i U J y Si is ' ' , ' s h Ki- u. ,K,yrf. ,Mt
- t 1 1 If cf" ' ox' -' ' ' -n & U lj vi i ,
f V J" i-' .' r-' i s ' f JtJ !
x - " ,:-' i - r'r " 1
""V ' ' ' ' X x
y i " " a i
- ) f . M ,
i y I j
- - r i
l i
l
YOUNG DEMOCRATS congratulate this young dent; Carol Lynn Garris, graduate student; and Ralph
coed's choice and crown her with a "Kennedy-For-Presi- Potter, YDC membership chairman,
dent" hat. They are, 1. to r., Bob Huffman, YDC presi-
Show Opens Tomorrow
oreiieao bo feature mape
Artist
Ackland Show
Features Urban
Development
The 15th anniversary exhibi
tion of the Department of City
and Regional Planning is on
display at the Ackland Art
Center here through November
13th.
"Urban Development" is the
title of the exhibition which has
been prepared under direction
of Prof. John A. Parker, chair
man of the City and Regional
Planning department.
For the month of October the Morehead Planetarium will
feature the works of three prominent artists in both the North
and South Galleries. . ;
Oil paintings by Clyde Allen will be presented in ihe North
Gallery. Mr. Allen, an "adopted Chapel Hillian." is a profes
sional engineer who has turned his talents to ihe fine arts.
Formerly an engineer he studied painting under the foremost
artists of New England in landscape portraiture and marines. He
is a graduate of the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connec
ticut. Since moving to Chapel Hill his painting lime has been
divided between commercial art and the fine arts. Several
university publications carry his fine pen and ink sketches.
Mr. Allen says he prefers to paint things, "tangible things
just as they look."
The works of Jaquelin Jenkins and Irene Reichert, done in1 end sometime during the month of November,
various mediums, will be presented in the South Gallery.
Miss Jenkins studied in Paris from 1952-1953 at ihe Sor
bonne and ihe Louvre, in Paris, and she is a member of Alli
ance Francaise. She studied in Key West, Florida under Karl
Agrical.
Miss Reichert has an A.B. in Fine Arts and is a member of
Phi Beta Kappa.
She has studied in Europe at the University of Innsbruck
and the University of Vienna, and has studied under Charles
Leclaire.
Both artists have exhibited in various cities throughout ihe
South, including ihe Chapel Hill Art Gallery.
Both are also members of ihe Associated Artists of North
Carolina, Miss Reichert being an exhibiting member.
The combined shows are expected to begin this weekend and
Busy
With
Diwes;
M
r 5. ,
Mass TV Watch
Of Miami Game
Set In Graham
Hickey's eleven left yester
day for sunny Miami, carrying
with them sunny prospects for
a win over the Hurricanes.
Back on ihe Hill, things
not so sunny. The dreary
weather complemented ihe
gloom of ihe students who
wanted io see ihe Florida
game.
But Tar Heels can still see the
game and enjoy a dance after
ward at home.
Co-sponsored by ihe Inter
dormitory Council and Caro
lina Women's Council, a mass
waich will be held in front of
TV sets in Graham Memorial's
Main Lounge tonight at 8.
After the game the Nick
Kearns-Les Sutorious combo
will provide music for listening
and dancing in front of GM,
9:30-12 midnight. In case of
rain the dance will be moved
inside to the Rendezvous Room.
There is no admission for
game or dance. Students are
urged io come with or with
out dales.
As IDC President Swag
Grimsley says, "Come early,
stay late."
Heavy Homework
Bad' Comments
Chiang Kai-Shek
TAIPEI (UPI) President
Chiang Kai-shek told a group of
school teachers here Wednesday
that heavy homework is "injur
ious to the physical and mental
health" of grammar and high
school students.
Chiang cited reports that sev
eral young students have died
from "exhaustion.
Col. Su Wei-tseng, whose 13-
year-old son died early this
month of ailments attributed to
overwork, said he would give
up smoking to raise money for
memorial scholarships.
Vote For Pogo?
Dazed
S
fudenf Showere
d
With
i eke ps.
Buttons
How does one go about show
ing the world where his poli
tical loyalties lie? Pamphlets,
stickers, and buttons, the most
obvious ways, are available to
any interested person.
The problem, however, is
obtaining ihe ones which
properly show your political
state of mind.
Try visiting the Chapel Hill
party headquarters.
"Well son, what hours can
you work?" the peppery little
woman behind the mammoth
"Kennedy for President" sign
says to you.
You siuiier something like,
"I just came io get a buiion."
She doesn't seem to have
heard you. "Sign up right over
here."
You moan that you're carry
ing a heavy work lead.
She insists that the Young
Democrats Club is just the place
for you.
You cry out ihai your poverty-stricken
family sent you
io college io get an education,
not io play politics.
She sneers and with a mar
tyred zesture noints to a table
filled' with buttons and stickers.
You abscond with every sticky
piece you can carry.
You go down the stairs and
continue walking on Franklin
Street until you come io a
grubby little television service
shop.
You cram your Kennedy
Johnson propaganda down into
your shirt and enter the shop,
which suddenly reveals itself as
the Gavin-Nixon headquarters.
Staring you in ihe face is
a hero-like portrait of Dwighi
Eisenhower. To his right is a
buiion-bedecked woman.
"Well son, what hours can you
work?" ...
That evening you return to
your room and break all the
dormitory rules by plastering
your ill-begotten signs and
stickers on the wall under
under the picture of Norman
Thomas, seven-time presidential
loser.
- v sGM 213
Where To Go, When?
Ask Warner Bass
Telling the campus where to go and when is the pri
mary function of the GMAB Calendar Committee.
Selecting the coed beauty who adorns the monthly
message is also the job of this group, headed by Warner
Bass.
In the past few years the group has greatly expanded its
services, so that this year the monthly calendar will be a rea
sonably complete account of campus
extra-curricular activities.
Members of the committee gather
material for the calendar, help prepare
the announcements for publication and
attend to the other mechanics, includ
ing distribution, of publishing the date
sheet.
People interested in assisting with
this segment of Graham Memorial
work will have an opportunity to join
the committee during "GM Sign-Up
Days," scheduled for October 10 and 11.
Chairman Bass is a sophomore from Nashville. Tenn. A
Morehead Scholar and a veteran of the Freshman Honors Pro
gram, he is a member of the Honor Council, the Budget Com
mittee and Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity.
CT.W.WAWiViVVWp.'?'JlWA1Vl
I ' ' 1 1
if l
JuKvft. 1 - mini, iii
Pasteur, Big Business Top
Weekend's Free Flick List
Two "compelling" motion pic
tures, one an award-winning
dramatization of the life of the
great French scientists Louis
Pasteur and the other a tense
story of big business, will high
light this weekend's Free Flick
program.
Tonight's film is "The Story
of Louis Pasteur."
Paul Muni, called one of
ihe screen's great actors, po'
irays Pasteur, whose failh
and knowledge overcame ihe
antagonism and opposition of
ihe reactionary and ignorant
medical world of his lime
Muni's performance won him
acclaim and Hollywood's high
est recognition of achievement,
the Academy Award.
"The Power and ihe Prize,"
a powerful dramatic study of
ihe conflict which develops
when one company maneuv
ers to take over another one,
will be shown tomorrow
night.
It stars Robert Taylor, Sir
Cedric Hardwicke, Burl Ives,
and Charles Coburn.
Both films will be shown at
7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in Carroll
Hall.
UNC Alumni
Miami Guests
Metropolitan Miami will be
host to some 350 UNC alumni at
a dinner tonight on the eve of
the Carolina vs. Miami football
game.
The alumni gathering will be
held at the Dupont Plaza Hotel
in Miami.
Chancellor William B. Ay
cock, director of Athletics C.
P. Erickson, and Alumni Sec
retary J. M. Saunders are
among those who will meJ
with ihe Miami alumni.
Branch Paxton, formerly of
Brevard, is president of the
Miami group, and Harry H.
Horton Jr., formerly of Winston
Salem, is secretary.
The regular supper meeting
of the Carolina Christian Fel
lowship will be held at 6 p.m.
tonight upstairs in Lenoir Hall.
The speaker will be Rev. Rob
ert Henderson whose topic is
"Pseudo - innocence Among
Christians."
UMC May Have
Mock Election
Political organizations on
campus are busy these pre
election days with membership
drives, meetings, and campaigns.
YRC's President. Neil Maih
ison and Vice-President, Al
Butler, announced Thursday
that David Morion, State Ex
ecutive Young Republican
Chairman, will speak at the
first meeting of the YRC on
October 5, at 8 p.m. in the
Law School court room.
This Saturday the State
Executive YRC, including dele
gates from Duke University,
Woman's College, North Caro
lina State, U.N.C. and other
schools and counties will meet
at 2 p.m. in Graham Memorial.
The purpose of this meeting is
to elect a college council chair
man and make plans for the
coming year.
Among other plans of the
YRC is ihe caravan io hear
the Republican presidential
c a n d id a t e, Vice-President
Richard Nixon in Charlotte
Monday.
Tentative plans are being
made by the clubs to sponsor
a Mock Election on campus in
November.
Norman Smith, chairman of
Students - for - Kennedy move
ment, said that this organiza
tion's work will be co-ordinated
with the YDC. Students in
this movement will distribute
literature, Kennedy hats, and
buttons.
Group discussions will con
tinue at the Baptist Student
Union supper study meeting at
5:45 tonight at the BSU Center
at 151 E. Rosemary St.
The five discussion groups
plan a series on programs on
the following topics: "Protest
ant, Catholic, Jew;" "What Can
I Believe?"; "Faith, Sex, and
Love;" "Christianity and Pol
itics;" and "Contemporary Lit
erature and Drama."
Today is the deadline for sub
mitting application blanks for
the Toronto exchange trip.
Blanks may be picked up at
GM Information desk and, Y-Court.
YMCA S
n
s is o p
isaDy-
Agency He
re
In response to the increasing
demand from faculty wives and
married students the YWCA
has organized a baby-sitting
agency which will operate
through the "Y" office.
This service will be limited
to faculty and married student
families only.
All girls interested in earn
ing extra pocket money are
urged to come by the "Y" of
fice and sign up.
The families interested in
finding baby sitters through this
new Y service have been noti
fied that the regular dorm clos
ing hours will continue to be
observed.
For November Edition
uarter
is
Eager
Fas'
s
fudent OHennc
"We intend more and more to
work with students."
This is the intention of Dick
Rickert, editor of the Carolina
Quarterly, an outlet for stu
dents interested in literary
writing.
At ihe first staff meeting re
cently, Rickert appointed
major staff members. They
are Maxine Stern and Louis
Bourne, assistant editors;
Jerry Stern, fiction editor;
Sheilah Simpkins and Emily
Rushin, poetry editors; Rich
ard Windham, business man
ager; and Michael Robinson
and Joe Deutsche public rela
tions.
"Our purpose is to encour
age better writing for publica
tian in magazines like the Quar
terly," Rickert said.
The magazine suffered a brief
pause in 1948 when three votes
stopped its circulation for com
peting with the former humor
magazine, "Tarnation." A peti
tion of 1400 students imme
diately brought the publication
back into existence.
With ihe name changed
from Carolina Magazine io
Carolina Quarterly, the humor
was taken out to provide a
quality of writing which
would make it a University
"prestige organ."
Fiction, poetry, essays, short
stories will be featured in the
current edition. The students'
work appears with outside con
tributions and therefore is se
lective. It gives the student a
stimulus and an opportunity to
be read outside the University.
Students are inviled to sub
mil material io the Quarterly
office on the North Mezzanine
of GM. Office hours are on
Mondays, 3-5 p.m. or 8-11 p.m.
The first issue will be in late
November. .
y