i I I ? I f irHy Tp"" 'mn i1 - U.TT.C. Library C o 1 Tft''f" m iuld is i fJ it Box 870 Chapel Hill, IUC. On the inside Will the Village be im proved in the future? For comments see the edits on page 2. Soccer teams wins first game, see page 4. Weather 7 Rain in Tibet, Afghanistan, and Istanbul. Snow in Kilo man jar o. Volume LXIX, No. 18 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issu, psilon Tops In Scholarship fl Ft n no bps Scholastic . . ' O ..... rCTJT Jw il ei n tin ail rrTTT i Delta mm WW So n fflW M mm La ft::':': Trophy From IFC JIM NOYES IFC President Pete Austin presented Edwin Taff, President of Delta Upsilon, with the IFC scholarship im provement trophy at the council meeting Monday night. This trophy, which was won by Sigma Phi Epsilon in the fall of 1959 is awarded each semester by the IFC to the fraternity showing the greatest scholastic improve ment. President Austin then announced to the council that to further encourage fraternity, scholarship Phi Delta Theta will present a trophy each semester to the fra ternity with the highest academic average. "As fraternity men," he said, "we are obligated to ourselves, our university, and our fraternity to promote and encourage scholarship above all other things." Charlie Clement and his Rush Student Theatre Workshop Meets st Time Today Student Theatre Workshop members will hold their first meeting of the year today at 4:30 p.m. to lay plans for the organization's 1960-61 produc tion schedule. The Workshop, created last year by students interested in theatre work as an experi mental drama group, has eight production dates on its schedule. Any student interested in participating in Workshop pro ductions is invited to. join. Paul Green, Pulitzer Prize- winning playwright, was sched uled to speak to the Workshop's opening meeting on "The Re sponsibility of the Playwright, but because of illness, Green's address will be rescheduled for a later date. The meeting will be held in the Carolina Playmakers Thea tre. Needed In Life House Faith, Work, Play All By Lloyd Little "Peekaboo You Rascal You, Come Out From Behind That Chair," "Susanna," and "Casey Jones" musically spiced the "Last Lecture" of Chancellor Emeritus Robert B. House last night. More than 200 students, facul ty members and visitors and the listening audience of radio sta tion WUNC heard House pre sent "Words and Music," the first in the annual Last Lecture series. After an introduction by David Grigg, Student Body President, the professor point ed out that "faith, work and play" summed up his philoso phy of life. . The professor then pulled out a mouth-harp or harmonica and began to play the toe-tapping melody of "O Susanna." House said that tune symbolized the pioneer spirit of young Amer ica. "Our ancestors loved that song which represented one of the great epics of faith and courage in the world," said House. He defined faith as the willingness to try life without demanding a blueprint for everything. YACK PICTURES Sophomores, Graduates, Public Health Students and 1, 2, 3 Medical Students are to have their pictures made for the 1961 Yackety Yack today through Friday be tween 1 and 6 p.m. in the basement of Graham Memor ial. Men are to wear dark coats and ties with white shirts, while women are to wear black sweaters. Extension: Freshmen and Nurses may have their pic tures taken today through Friday also. A late fee of $1.00 will be charged. Committee were applauded by IFC members for their effort in making this year's Rush Week run "as smoothly and efficiently as it did." Austin announced to the Council that in order to better evaluate each fraternity this year for the R. B. House trophy, presented each year to the out standing fraternity, a commit tee will be formed from the IFC. To Supplement Evaluation "This committee's findings," he said, "will supplement the point total evaluation based on scholastics, intramurals, etc., and the Faculty Committee on Fraternities and Sororities' evaluation." After reading parts of a let ter from William Long, Asst. to the Dean of Student Affairs, stating his recognition of the importance of fraternity fellow-; ship and activities on the UNC campus and the necessity of close fraternity-administrative relations, President Austin passed out the names and phone numbers of all members of the Faculty Committee on Fraterni ties and sororities to each fra ternity president. His next tune, "Casey Jones" symbolized work, said House, adding that the hard work of Americans everywhere have saved the free world time and time again. "Play is the compliment of work," said House, in that it is like a coin play on one side and work on the other. The waltz "Peekaboo You Rascal You, Come Out From Behind That Chair," is a musical symbol of play, said the profes sor. Returning to the UNC history department after absences in the pursuit of research are Pro fessors E. P. .Douglass, S. B. Baxter, and G. B. Tindall. Professor Douglass has been away from the department for the past three years. In 1957 and 1953, he was a Fulbright professor of Ameri can History, teaching at the University of Erlangen, Ger many. From 1958 to the present he has been working on a history of American free enterprise under a grant of the Richardson Foundation of Greensboro, N. C, and New York. Professor Douglass's research areas are early American his tory and business history. Studied in Hague For the past year, Professor Baxter has been studying in the Hague and in London doing re search for a biography he is writing on King William III of England. Professor Baxter had a Guggenheim ' Fellowship for this area of research. His biography will be ' the H i story only biography in the English X 4 I WJ v :-V FOR SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT, Ed Taff, President of Delta Upsilon (right) receives the tro phy on behalf of his fraternity from Pete Austin (left), President of the Interfraternity Council. The trophy is awarded to the fraternity with the highest scholastic average for the preceding semester. Press Club Hears Chief Of AP Buenos Aires Bureau Carolina journalist in 1943, Korean correspondent in 1952, and today, Chief of the Associated Press Bureau, in Buenos Aires. Briefly, this is Sam Summerlin, one of the Univer sity's noted journalism graduates, who returned to Chapel Hill Tuesday evening for an informal talk before the UNC Press Club in Howell Hall. Summerlin covered topics ranging from his experiences in the Argentine revolution to the first interview with Hemingway after the Pulitzer Prize an nouncement. Of Communist advances in South America, he said: ""Political -domination is not the specific design now; rather, they want to gain trade and cul tural recognition. And, by subtle but effective propaganda, they are eager to pull these nations if not to Communism then at least to neutrality in the United Nations." Argentina Loyal Concerning anti - American feeling, however, Summerlin feels that Argentina is probably more on the United States' side than any other South American nation. But, if events such as the Chessman incident continue to occur, the U.S. may find itself "voting alone in the United Na tions." The majority of South Amer icans are Catholic, he pointed out, so Kennedy is a big favor ite with the people. But, with Stevenson, Summerlin said, "his popularity is amazing and un explainable." Spearman Introduces Introducing Summerlin at the Press Club's initial 1960 meeting was Prof. Walter Spearman of the School of Journalism. The speaker began his career language using Hague mate rials. Professor Baxter's research mm . 9 A TT .1 1 1 area is inn cemury j&ngiisn history. Professor Tindall, under a grant from the Social Science A LINE OF HISTORY Ancient and modern his torians of the department of history of the Univer sity of North Carolina meet. Pictured here are two new additions to the history department, and three J in Chapel Hill 12 years ago, covered the State Legislature in Raleigh for Associated Press two years, and then began his foreign correspondence which took him to Korea, Manila, Ha vana, Japan, and finally, Argen tina;1 " """ Dean of Journalism Norval Neil Luxon welcomed the group to the new quarters of the School of Journalism, Howell Hall. Howell Hall Open Late Evening hours for Howell Hall, home of the School of Journalism, were outlined by Dean Norval Neil Luxon at the Tuesday evening Press Club meeting. Five nights a week the daily reading room on the main floor and the Student Lounge will be open until 10:45 p.m. The weekly reading room and news editing room on the ground floor will remain open all night. "However, the use of the building will determine the con tinuation of the schedule," he said. am Research Council, has been ob taining material for the past year and a half for the tenth volume in a 10 volume series entitled "A History of the South." He spent most of his time here - U?IJJ fur I (r. Jrl - J -1 Hi " WMZ-Qt . ' aMJtl :?:-: j,. ' 4 1 - , v .? A r , v I - ,t V J ' - f .' - If . I t - i - i ! .-1 I : " ; s i 11 MSiiilSSk ' ............ .. r. . Av.tat.v. ..- wAMtf-.an h m " ' ' "V " - World News in Brief U.S. Orbits 500-Pound Military Communications Satellite : ' ; . :'... ::;: v """ CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) The United States hurled a 500-pound military communications satellite into orbit Tuesday, marking the nation's 28th and most complex space success since Russia launched its first sputnik exactly three years ago. It. marked the first step in providing the nation's mili tary with a communications system which scientists said would be "practically unjammable." An 80-foot Thor-Able-Star rocket carrying the ball shaped 51-inch orb rose from its launching pad in a burst of orange flame at 1:49 p.m. EDT. Two hours later jubilant of ficials announced an orbit had been obtained. Khrushchev Continues Demands UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, foiled again in the United Nations, fought back today with attacks on the United States and new de mands that President Eisenhower "find the courage" to apolo gize for the U2 and RB47 plane incidents. Defeated for the second time in his attempts to force U.N. Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold to resign, Khrush chev turned to the offensive on three fronts at the United Nations. Archbishop Charges Reds HAVANA (UPI) Archbishop Enrique Perez Serrantes of Santiago, who saved Fidel Castro from execution in 1953, charged today that "devotees of Marx and Lenin" are trying to reap the fruits of Castro's revolution. . A" circular written by the prelate, which is being distri buted to Roman Catholic churches throughout the country, denied Castroite charges that the church is influenced by the U.S. Embassy or supporters of Spanish chief of state Fran cisco Franco. The circular added, however, that if the church had to choose between the United States and Communism it would not hesitate to do so. Lumumba Losing Hold LEOPOLD VILLE, The Congo (UPI) Patrice Lumumba, the fast-talking beer salesman who became the first premier of the Congo, appeared today to have lost his magic hold ovr Parliament. A wholesale defection by 29 of the 44 senators and depu ties from Lumumba's own Eastern Province left the deposed premier with far less than the slim majority that put him into power. Diplomat Held For Narcotics NEW YORK (UPI) A Gautemalan diplomat and three other men were held in a record million dollars bail today in the smash-up of an international narcotics smuggling ring . that "defies the imagination in its magnitude." x Federal narcotics agents arrested the four men at gun point on a crowded Manhattan street Monday and confiscated 1 pure heroin worth $20 million on the illicit market. U.S. Attorney S. Hazard Gillespie said the heroin seizure was the largest single narcotics haul ever made in this country. New in Chapel Hill in the University Library obtaining information. One of the new additions to the faculty of the department of history is Assistant Professor Bodman, a graduate of UNC. Professor Bodman's research professors returning after leaves of absence. Left to right, they are: E. P. Douglass; George B. Tindall; H. C. Boren, a new faculty member; S. B. Baxter; and H. L. Bodman Jr., another new addition. Sn J n Professors area is Middle East history, and for the past few years, he has been obtaining on the scene material for his classroom teach ing. Professor Bodman has been working with the United States ' S I ' a - Ss i ' ... Prof. W. L. Wiley State Professor To Address UNC English Club Richard Walser, anthologist and authority on North Carolina literature, will address the UNC English Club at 8 p.m. Friday in the assembly room of the Louis R. Wilson Library. He will speak about his most recent collection, Nematodes in My Garden of Verse. Professor Walser is a member of .the . English Department at State College'. A native of Lex ington, he was a student at Davidson and at the University in Chapel Hill. Homecoming Queen, Court Chosen Today Selection of the UNC homecoming queen and her court will be made this afternoon at the annual home coming tea. Twenty-five finalists chosen from 53 entrants will be judged today, 3 p.m., at the home of Chancellor William B. Aycock, 306, Country Club Rd. Contestants are Andrea, Avery, Tina Baensch, Jayne Brown, Beverly Bunn, Isabell Collier, Joan Delves, Barbara Faulkner, Kathy Fulenwider, Jan Gannaway, Janice Haley, Judy Jackson and Jane Jordan; Gail Karnet, Sharon Kates, Mary Lester, Susan Merritt, Jane Page, Connie Pinyoun, Nancy Rogers, Pat Stallings, Information Agency (USIA) as chief of research for the Near East, South Asia, and Africa. His position took him in travels to 12 countries in four months obtaining information on such things as the feelings of the press . in these countries. Professor Bodman speaks Ara bic, and reads Turkish and Per sian. Another New Professor Another new addition to the faculty is Associate Professor Boren whose research area is the social and economic prob lems of the Roman Republic, the first and second centuries B.C. Before joining the staff, Pro fessor Boren taught at Southern Illinois University. Professor Pegg, chairman of the department, is a specialist in 20th century European his tory. He has been on the staff of UNC since 1930, the year in which he received the Ph.D. from here. A well known publication of his is "Contemporary Europe in World Focus," published in 1956. nnr rr Full C alendas' aces session n a r i By STEVE LINDELL A controversial sit-in resolu tion will be the first bill taken up by the opening session of the Student Legislature Thurs day night. This bill was moved to the top of the calendar by special action in the closing minutes of last year's last session. The resolution calls for "ap proving the aims and methods of students seeking service at lunch counters throughout North Carolina." A floor fight is expected on this bill. Repeal Oath Another attention getter is seen in the resolution to encour age the repeal of the much de bated loyalty oath provision of the National Defense Act of 1958. The calendar facing this ses sion is a full one. The greatest task of this session is the re vision of the General Election Laws, the revision of the Stu dent Constitution, and the re vision of the By-Laws of the Student Legislature. Also up for consideration is a bill to "establish standard pro cedures in all courts under the authority of the Student Gov ernment." Mary Townsend, Betsy Turner, Ruth Wallace, Nancy Wills, and Susan Woodall. Judges will be Mrs. Mayhcw Fambrough, office manager of Graham Memorial; Dr. Peter G. Philias, associate professor in the Department of English; and Mike Deutsch, chairman of the homecoming committee. Sponsors of the finalists will be responsible for getting the girls to the tea. The attire will be cocktail dresses. To Be Announced The queen and her six at tendants will be announced dur ing the half time of the UNC Notre Dame game Saturday. After the game they will be presented at the reception in the Monogram Club (time will be announced later) and at 9:30 during the Grail Dance in Wool len Gym. The Student Carolina Athletic Council is in charge of home coming. Flicklist CAROLINA "Why . Must I Die" starring Debra Paget. Times not available. VARSITY "Oceans 11" with Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Peter Lawford, Angie Dickinson and Samy Davis, Jr. Times: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:30 and 9:40 p.m. CENTER (Durham) "Oceans 11" with same cast. Times not available. CAROLINA (Durham) College Confidential" with Steve Allen, Jayne Meadows, Walter Winchell and Mamie Van Doren. Times not available. 1 I f