U.TI.C. Library
Serials Dept,
Bax 870
Chaps I Hill, I!,C,
Weather
Killery finds snowman
His guide built it.
(CI Klrf f.
68 years of dedicated serv
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. 16
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1960
Offices in Graham Memorial
Four Pages This Issue
Kh
Reds
Hqv M cikes
tcot To ToicG
UN
Of
UNITED NATIONS (UPI) Soviet Premier Nikita Khrush
chev, in an arm-wavinff outburst of name-calling, raised the
threat Saturday that Communist countries might quit the United
Nations if Red China is not seated.
Western diplomats said Khrushchev's red-faced tirade against
the United States and some of its allies appeared to rule out any
chance for a meeting between him and President Eisenhower
which was demanded by the neutralist powers
Khrushchev's outburst, which caused Assembly President
Frederick H. Boland to bring him to order and direct part of
his remarks stricken from the record an action never before
taken here against a head of government was delivered during
a debate on a U.N. seat for Communist China.
ine assembly adjourned until Monday, without reaching a
vote on the China issue, which the United States demanded be
shelved without action.
Khrushchev read a carefully-prepared text on the Chinese
issue for some 20 minutes and then went on without notes. His
temper increased visibly until,
referring to Spain as a great
friend of the United States, he
called Premier Francisco Franco
"the hangman of the Spanish
people." At that point, Boland
gaveled the Russian to order.
Bellows Like Orator
Bellowing at times like a soap
box orator, Krushchev made his
main points when he:
Said disarmament is impos
sible unless Communist China
is brought into the United Na
tions. Warned the United States that
"sooner or later, it will have to
learn that a democratic system
is possible only under communism."
Denounced the United States
for racial discrimination.
U.S. Responsible
Said the United States was
responsible for violence in South
Korea and South Viet Nam.
Accused the United Nations
of having a "double standard"
for Western and Communist
speakers and issued a veiled
threat that Russia and its sat
ellites might pull out and form
their own world organization.
His tirade brought Spanish
Ambassador Jose Felix de Le
quierica to his feet shouting and
led U.S. Ambassador James J.
Wadsworth to take the rostrum
for the second time during the
session to answer Khrushchev's
"distorted image of the United
States."
"There is more freedom, there
is more opportunity, there is
more well-being for every Am
erican I say every American,
regardless of race, color or
creed in the United States than
there, is in any Communist
country," Wadsworth said.
"Anybody who knows America
knows this to be true.".
Oft foe
All Town Girl students are
asked to meet m Alderman
dorm, Tuesday, at 7:30 p.m.
There will be a meeting of
the U.N. Education Committee
of the YM-YWCA Monday, Oct
3, at 4 p.m. on the second floor
of the Y Building. All interested
students are invited to attend
The Philological Club will
meet in Tuesday, Oct. 4, at 7:30
p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of
Morehead Planetarium. Prof. J.
O. Bailey of the English depart
ment will present a paper en
titled "Heaven Versus Utopia.'
The Young Republicans Club
will hold a meeting at 8 p.m
Monday in Hill Hall.
immmmmmmm World News in Brief
US Citizens Warned To Stay Out
Of Cuba After Castro's Threat I
i Si
WASHINGTON (UPI) U.S. citizens were under State De
partment warning today to stay out of Cuba where .Fidel
Castro has threatened to shoot any "American spies or sab
oteurs" he catches. . ' t.
Neutrals Ask Ike-Nikita Meet
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) A "third force" of neutral
nations today backed the two reluctant giants, the United States
and Russia into a corner with demands for an Eisenhower
Khrushchev meeting that neither man would agree to attend.
The freedom and perhaps the lives of two captive Ameri
can airmen were part of the stakes as President Eisenhower
and Premier Nikita Khrushchev turned to private summit
meetings with close allies to evaluate the situation.
Apple Pie Causes Bomb Scare
NEW YORK (UPI) A Texas housewife set off a police
assassination alert Saturday when she sent Soviet Premier
Nikita S. Khrushchev a taste of American hospitality an apple
pie.
Within an hour after its arrival at the Soviet headquarters
on Park Avenue, the pie, still in its brown paper wrappings,
was resting on the bottom of a concrete bunker in Brooklyn,
just in case it should explode.
A call from a Texas housewife assured police that no bomb
was in the package so it was opened, examined and rewrapped
for delivery again to Khrushchev. It was a pie.
n.
Mi
JFK's Mom In
ope
Hi
By Mary Stewart Baker
Mrs. John F. Kennedy Sr., weary from her
personal campaign for the Democratic "grand
mother vote," stopped over in Chapel Hill last
night for a one night's rest. She arrived yes
terday afternoon and left this morning.
Looking anything but tired, Mrs. Kennedy
had a late lunch with Mrs. Herbert McKay,
National Democratic Committeewoman, at the
Carolina Inn where the candidate's mother
spent the night. Mrs. Kennedy sounded some
what tired, but she looked fresh in a neat
iweed suit.
Appreciative of the sunny Chapel Hill day
and fond of long walks, Mrs. Kennedy was
making plans yesterday to take a four or five
mile walk. This was her first visit to Chapel
Hill, she said:
Mrs. Kennedy tries to take a rest from the
tiring campaign every two or three days. "Rest
ful" Chapel Hill was suggested to her by Gov.
Luther H. Hodges and Mrs. McKay. She hopes
to take her next rest on Friday someplace in
Mississippi.
The candidate's mother explained that her
participation in her son's campaigns started
with Kennedy's 1952 campaign for the Sen
ate in Massachusetts. While Mrs. Kennedy
is campaigning here, her daughters are doing
the same in other parts of the nation.
She stressed the importance of the wom
en's vote in the 1952 elections. Because there
are even more women voting in this fall's
election, Mrs. Kennedy said she hopes to take
advantage of the statistics.
Of N.C.'s Marshall Ney
i
1 H
Bstaicem Bdenmyr
7
Prof
xplores
By NANCY VON LAZAR
During the first half of the
19th century, there lived in
North Carolina a man who
called himself Peter Stewart
Ney.
This man had the same char
acteristics and mannerisms as a
marshal of the Napoleonic
troops, a man by , the name of
(Marshal) Michel Ney, suppos
edly executed for betraying
Louis XVIII.
There are those who believed
that these men were one and
the same that the execution
was faked, and that Marshal
Ney escaped to America and
began a new life.
Taylor Studies
Associate Professor George V
Taylor, of the department of
history at UNC, has assimilated
the noted collections of the late
William Henry Hoyt, a New
House Speaks Tuesday
Last
Carolina's Last Lecture series is both new and old.
Chancellor Emeritus Robert House is the fourth speaker in
the series which started here last year. House's address will, be
in Memorial Hall, 8 p.m., Tuesday.
Last year the series began at Carolina through the work
of Jim Crownover, presidential assistant. This year's presiden
tial assistant, Bill Whichard, is continuing the series; therefore,
last lectures are just beginning the second year here.
But Crownover got the idea from Ohio State during the
National Student Association conference in 1959. An act of
Student Legislature was required to initiate the lecture program
because of the expense involved for posters the speakers are
not paid.
The legislative bill included a definition of the series:
"Professors are asked to come
and lecture on what they would
like to leave with American
youth most, what words of wis
dom they would desire to pass
on to college students if they
knew they were to die tomorrow
morning."
Boyd Gives 1st Lecture
Dr. Bernard Boyd, religion de
partment, gave the first Last
Lecture at UNC. His topic was
"Behind the World's Curve."
Dr. George V.' Taylor spoke
on "Reflections on Uncertainty"
for the second lecture, and Dr.
Maurice Natanson was the third
speaker with "The Discipline of
Passion."
This year Whichard plans to
present four Last Lectures with
House first on the program with
"Words and Music." There will
If
Robert House
be one more speaker this semes
ter and two next semester.
No Difficulty
Contrary to general thought,
Whichard said neither he nor
Crownover have had difficulty
in asking Carolina's outstanding
professors to give their "last
lecture."
"In the case of each speaker,
none had any quams about pre
paring his last lecture to stu
dents. Each has taken it as an
honor," Whichard said.
Urges Disarmament
JAKARTA, Indonesia (UPI)
Visiting Guinea president Sekou
Toure said Friday world dis
armament is necessary "to
avoid useless wastes of human
energy and to replace insecurity
with security." "The movement
6f emancipation of colonized
peoples should go side by side
with disarmament," , he added,
u i : "
aiming to occupy others while
others are arming to liberate
themselves."
York lawyer and researcher in
North Carolina history.
Professor Taylor has written
a pamphlet, "Scholarship and
Legend; William Henry Hoyt's
Research on the Ney Contro
versy," in which he describes
Mr. Hoyt's methods and in which
he gives documentation and a
summary of what would prob
ably have been Mr. Hoyt's con
clusions regarding the contro
versy had the latter lived to
complete a book he was writ
ing on the subject.
Reprint of Article
The article is a reprint of an
article which appeared in the
"South Atlantic Quarterly" o
the bummer issue 19b0, and m
its pamphlet form is a contribu
tion to the celebration of the
University's birthday, October
12, when the University honors
its Library.
jvir. Jtioyt takes three views
in approaching the legend:
(1) That the Marshal actually
fled on December 7, 1815;
(2) That because of physica!
and cultural differences the
Marshal and P. S. Ney could not
have been the same man;
(3) That P. S. Ney had an
identity other than that of the
Marshal before 1815."
If one of these three views
were held as true, the legend
would fall apart.
Idea False
The conclusions that Professor
Taylor has reached, in the light
of Mr. Hoyt's documentation,
show that regarding the first
view, the idea of a faked execu-
m i
Si
m.
FlicMist
Carolina "Oceans 11" star
ring Frank Sinatra and Dean
Martin. Features at 1, 3:10, 5:20,
7:30, and 9:40 p.m.
Varsity "Sex Kittens Go To
College" starring Mamie Van
Doren and Tuesday Weld. Times
not available.
Uptown (Durham) "Vice
Raid" starring Mamie Van Dor
en and Richard Coogan, and
o j-amt: cre siarriiifc
Robert Ryan and Aldo Ray.
Times not available.
Carolina (Durham) "Caro
lina Confidential" starring Ma
mie Van Doren (Who else?)
Steve Allen, Jayne Meadows,
and Walter Winchell. "It's like
a Kinsey Report on the campus."
Times not available.
Center (Durham) Oceans 11"
starring Frank Sinatra and Dean
Martin. Times not available. i
tion was false, and to believe
this theory would be "an act of
faith and not of reason."
There is evidence to prove
that the Marshal did die. Con
sidering the second view, the
most likely bit of evidence Mr.
Hoyt found to prove the theory
was Peter Stewart Ney's baptis
mal record, found in Scotland.
In regard to the third theory
that P. S. Ney had an identity
other than that of the Marshal
before 1815, Mr. Hoyt, after
much searching through obscure
records, found proof to the ef
fect that P. S. Ney did have
life in Scotland, and at the time
of his death, Mr. Hoyt was of
Student
Government
Needs Aid
The secretariat needs help.
Help to do its part in student
government.
Student body secretary Judy
Albergotti is the director of the
secretariat which is the clerical
division of student government
Miss Albergotti said the work
in the student government of
fices is more than she and execu
tive secretary Julia Staples can
handle.
Therefore, others are needed
to help with typing, filing, ad
dressing envelopes, stapling,
etc. Each person in the secre
tariat usually works two hours
or more a week, the secretary
said.
"This is a wonderful and one
of the few ways .means for
coeds to do student government
work. They help student gov
ernment, learn more about it
and meet other students," Miss
Albergotti stated.
The secretariat also works for
the attorney general's office in
codification.
Last year's secretariat staff,
seniors and juniors may apply
for work by contacting Miss
Albergotti in the offices in Gra
ham Memorial or by calling
8-9096.
INFIRMARY
Infirmary hours on Sunday
are 10-11 a.m. and 4-5 p.m. Stu
dents in the infirmary yesterday
included Julia Smith, Phillys
Jones. James Mauehton. James
King, Hoyle Robinson, Hariato
Schutzenberger, James Browder
and Peter Krones.
the opinion that P. S. Ney was
a fugitive from justice or a
refugee from disgrace.
Open to Question
This latter point is left topen
to further investigation. "If
there is a future in the Ney con
troversy it will have more to do
with the discovery of P. E. Ney's
early life than with fruitless re
affirmations of the legend."
Professor Taylor concludes
saying that Mr. Hoyt had a faith
that led him on to place the
matter of the legend for the
world to see. He attacked the
legend to expose scholarship for
the benefit of all, for its use and
not abuse.
d Stoaif
M
WC Will Be Host
To Fred Waring
On October 19
Fred Waring and his Penn-
svlvanians will appear in a
"Stereo Festival" at 8:30 p.m.
Oct. 19 at Woman's College Ay
cock Auditorium, Greensboro.
Dixie Waring, daughter of Fred
Waring, will also appear with
the group. Sponsoring the event
is the Theatre of Woman's College.
The show will feature glee
club, orchestra and soloists.
Electronic effects invented by
Waring will be used in this
panorama of music, motion and
color, a complete departure
from Waring's traditional con
cert shows.
Your GMAB
'We'll Be Radical'
Says GM Music Group
"We're going to be radical
this year," GMAB Music Com
mittee Chairman Mary Stewart
Baker replied when asked about
plans for the coming year.
The Music Committee is in
charge of programming the ser
ies of Sunday evening Petite
Musicales, and this year will see
a greater variety in both artists
and sounds.
Classical Programs
In the past few years the pro
grams, which are held in the GM
Main Lounge, have been sched
uled along classical lines, al
though modern composers have
been featured.
This season will feature ex
change talent from other schools,
as well as concerts highlighting
the less widely heard instru
ments such as the harp and the
guitar. A program of folk sing
ing and similar entertainment is
also being planned.
Serve As Hosts
In addition to its planning re
ponsibilities, the committee is
also in charge of making ar
rangements for the perform
ances and serving as hosts for
the visiting artists.
Students will have an oppor
tunity to find out more about
the committee's work during
GMAB Committee Sign - Up
Days," slated for Oct. 11 and 12.
Miss Baker is a senior from
Shreveport, La. A Pi Phi, she is
co-associate editor of the Daily
Tar Heel and served as a trainer
for the women orientation coun
selors last spring.
Mary Stewart Baker
ixfor
m
rancs
Male upperclassmen at UNC
interested in scholarly work at
one of the oldest and most re
spected universities in the world
now have a chance to apply for
this opportunity.
Applications are now avail
able for the annual Rhodes
Scholarships, donated by the
late Cecil Rhodes in his will for
study at Oxford University in
England, beginning in October,
1961.
Awarded For 2 Years
The scholarships, with an an
nual stipend of 750 pounds
($2100) are awarded for two
years and are subject to renewal
pending the judgment of the
Rhodes Trustees.
The conditions of eligibility
for these grants include that
the candidate be a single male
citizen of the United States with
at least five years residence.
In addition, he must, by Octo
ber 1 of the year in which he
applies, be at least eighteen and
not over twenty-four. Finally,
he must have at least a junior
standing at the university.
No Restriction
No restriction is placed upon
a rinoaes bcnoiar s cnoice or
study. He may read either for
a B.A. degree in any of many
specified honour schools, or, if
qualified by previous training,
may be admitted to read for an
advanced degree.
Applications for the scholar
ships can be obtained from the
office of Dean J. Carlyle Sitter
son in 203 South Building.
Applicants should return these
preliminary forms to Dean Sit
terson by October 10. Those who
are nominated by the Univer
sity to the state committee of
selection will be assisted in com
pleting the lull application.
Faculty Available
Members of the faculty who
will be available to talk with
students about Oxford and the
scholarships are Professors S.
Shephard Jones, 102-A Caldwell
Hall, and C. P. Spruill, 20G
Hanes Hall.
Rhodes specified in establish
ing these grants the candidates'
qualities forming the basis of
selection. These include (1)
proven literary and scholastic
ability; (2) "qualities of man
hood" especially courage and
unselfishness; (3) moral force,
character, and leadership, and
(4) physical vigor, as shown by
a iondness for sports. "Some
definite quality of distinction,
whether in intellect or character,
(Continued on Page 3)
Assistant
Com
visit.
osped
Here
AAosidav
Colonel John C. Robertson,
Assistant Commandant of Air
Force ROTC, will visit here
Monday to confer with UNC of
ficials and inspect the personnel
and facilities of Detachment 590
at the University.
During his one-day visit,
Colonel Robertson will be the
guest of Lt. Colonel Gordon D.
Kage, Professor of Air Science
at Carolina.
Colonel To Meet
Colonel Robertson will meet
with Chancellor Aycock andj
Dean Godfrey to discuss the
AFROTC program at the Uni
versity. The Assistant Commandant is
also expected to speak with
Senior Cadet officers Monday.
Commissioned on November
15, 1940, Colonel Robertson has
served over 19 years of active
duty.
From June 1942 until Sep
tember, 1945, his overseas duty
included Europe and North
Africa.
C7
JLJ Ufl
gHHtf'MlitoWttJIbNMBi SlW' littfii HfriTtli jMi J VMV
rl r
- " - $ v mj j 0 m , iai y
13 rV)
)) n i f
r
J Ik "'J
' L I
J '
f"T?""""""" ''--- ".--!, ii,j...-i.-jMt)tjm mjjt wj muiiwi II Ml f in i 'l'"ln r m mi m1 nni iir- iin- nr - i nim r mi i '1 f if-tn itr inn una iLiinrn -inn.,raTuil.in...iii. i n.-n.-itr. i 1 1IM TlV rn . .-r . , . ... 11. i i mm .mii.nn.. . . . . , in,. .inm , minrn . i.nm. hihj n iMfct.tfc, -L., ...
Mi
x If