V Pqnn sState 34 Duke ....... Ga. Tech. Maryland 15 S. Carolina 0 Wake Forest . ...28 Virginia 20 Navy 14 Notre Dame ... . 7 Ohio State 21 Michigan St 10 Northwestern ....21 Indiana 3 Vanderbilt 22 Clemson 20 W: . Virainia 13 0 rtL fff off ' 'i 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. 40 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This I Weather Mostly sunny and mild to day. High in the 80's. XT Am rrb IV ill II II -r I 1! I I ii t i I i I 1 11 "ggls aimlS ii. t 1 E VII I I i 1 r I f What They're Saying United Press VALLEY FORGE, Pa. Sen. John F. Kennedy brought his campaign for a "new frontier" to the once "cold and bitter frontier of American independence" Sat urday with a charge that Vice President Richard M. Nixon lacks trust in the people. The Democratic presiden tial candidate said the nation cannot meet the frontier of the 1960s with "soft compla cency, a satisfaction with things as they are, or a com mitment to the past." Kennedy climaxed a day of campaigning in the rain in Philadelphia suburbs with a speech at a Democratic fund raising dinner at Valley Forge, where George Wash ington held the line against the British in the Revolution ary War. He drew big, enthusiastic crowds in a motorcade tour through usually Republican areas of eastern Pennsyl vania as he stressed the state of the nation's prestige. Kennedy attracted thou sands of persons, many of them women, who ignored the rain to seek a glimpse of him as he toured Lawrence Park, Chester, Upper Derby and other points. Large crowds swarmed around his open convertible. In Chester, a woman pulled so hard on his right hand that there were fears he had been hurt, but he continued to gesture to make his points in speeches. Kennedy's only concession to the rain was to wear a hat. It was the first time per sons in his party could recall his having done so during the campaign. W Pledge Officers Chosen By Fraternities, Sororities Fraternity and sororities have elected pledge officers as fol lows: DELTA EPSILON: Ron Mac Arthur, president; Gus Williams, vice-president; Mitch Legler, treasurer; Dave Williams, secre tary. PI BETA PHI: Dee Dee Za netti, president; Alice Dudley Howell, vice-president; Carol Ann Tadlock, secretary; Linda Richert, treasurer; Janice Haley, standards chairman. New pledges are Penny Dunn El Salvador Government 'Is Democracy' SAN SALVADOR, El Salva dor (UPI) Members of El Sal vador's new revolutionary junta said Friday their govern ment will be based on "pure de mocracy" and will comply with all international treaties. They emphasized, however, that they considered null and void such "personal agree ments" as those between ousted President Maria Lemus and President Ydigoras Fuentes of Guatemala in which the two men pledged a "united front" against Communism. Junta member Ricarda Falla Caceres, a lawyer, said the Le - musydigoras accord was not ratified by the legislative as sembly and hence could not be considered binding on the new government. International rs&5&Zi&z&:?k CHICAGO Vice President Richard M. Nixon carried his presidential campaign into Chicago's Republican suburb Saturday accused his oppo nent, Democratic Sen. John A. Kennedy, of conjuring up economic hobgoblins. At one " point in his tour, security agents received a re port of an anonymous tele phone bomb threat against the vice president. The caller told Illinois state police a bomb would be placed at the Southfield shop ping center in suburban Bridgeview. A check of the area by police, the FBI and security agents turned up nothing in the way of a bomb and Police Chief Albin Ziar ko said the "area is secure." It was another in a series of incidents on the vice presi dent's campaign swing through the Midwest this week. Pelted by Tomatoes In Michigan he was pelted with tomatoes and eggs. Out side of Fort Wayne, Ind., authorities found a fluorescent light transformer fixed to a railroad track some hours be fore the Nixon train was to have passed the area. Nixon drew large crowds in his swing through the Chi cago area, and pulled an esti mated 20,000 to 25,000 per sons in a stadium at Wheaton, where he whip-lashed Ken nedy as too "rash and im pulsive" to have the "White House as a training ground." Earlier on his arrival, in a seasonal reference to the "trick or treat" holiday Mon day, Nixon said America has not responded to Kennedy's "wail of woe because Amer- ica long ago learned the les son of Hallowe'en." and Nancy Wilson. CHI OMEGA: Lynn McGre eor. president; Marietta North rop," secretary; Florence Nash, treasurer: Lyia Gay . Van Valk enberg, Panhell Representative. TAU EPSILON PHI: Phil Guller. president : Ira Madans, vice-president; Elliott Murnick, secretary; Steve Kaplan, treas urer. Eight new members have been initiated into the Kappa Psi Fraternity. They are: Wil liam Allgood Jr., William Fuller Jr.. Arthur Hill,' James Little, Halbert McKinnon Jr., Wiliam Patterson. . New officers have been elect ea and a number of new mem bcrs have been pledged to the Alpha Gamma chapter of the Phi Delta Chi fraternity of the UNC School of Pharmacy. The new officers are William Farrior, president; Willis John son, vice-president; Fred Cham- blce, secretary; Malichi Jones, treasurer, and Roy Collctte Jr., corresponding secretary. The new members are Mai colm Burroughs, James E. Cam eron, Tommy Gregory, Lewis Stocks, Joe Grecson, Jasper Hunt, Edward Whiscnant, James Dealon, Emil Cekada, William Burch, Myron Sime and Barry Watson. New officers have been elect ed by the Xi Chapter of Rho Chi, national pharmaceutical society. The new officers are James Sheets, president; Charles Himes, vice-president; Barbara Bell, secretary-treasurer and Walter Lasater, historian. On The Campus Lawrence Ferlinghetti, of San Francisco, will read from his poetry for the public at Car roll Hall, 8:00 p.m., November 17. His appearance on campus is sponsored by the English Club, through the auspices of the Gra ham Memorial Fund. A recep tion at GM will follow the talk. The International Relations Comittee and the U.N. Educa tion Committee will meet on Monday at 4:30 p.m. on the second floor of the Y-Building. John Pritchard will speak on the Congo. All students attend ing the U.N. Seminar in New York are urged to attend. The Christian Science Organi zation will meet this afternoon at 4:00 in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. The Philological Club will meet on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of More- head Planetarium. O. B. Hardi- son of the English Department will present a paper entitled, Poetry and Praise: The Fusion of Rhetoric and Literary Criti cism." Faculty members and Graduate students are invited. Thursday evening at eight. Dr. Eugen Merzbacher of Caro lina will address the joint Duke- UNC Physics Colloquim in the Duke Physics building. He will discuss the "Theory of . Nuclear Structure." Dr. Ernst van der Spuy's talk has been, postponed due to illness. i Medical Carolina's School of Medicine has been awarded $897,528 for the establishment of a clinical research facility. The grant, from the National Institutes of Health of the U.S. Public Health Service, covers a three-year period. A total of $287,884 may be expended during the first year, the second year budget for the new research unit is $285,400 and $324,244 is allocated for the third year of operation. The announcement of the award was made yesterday by Dr. W. Reece Berryhill, dean of the School of Medicine. At the same time, Dr. Berryhill said the new. research unit would be directed by Dr. Walter Hollander Jr., assistant pro fessor of medicine and Markle Scholar in Medical Science. Dr. Hollander is a graduate of the Harvard School of Medicine and has been on the faculty for four years. Explain Program, Dr. G. Halsey Hunt and Dr. G. Donald Whedon, both of the National Institutes of Health, writing in a recent issue of "The Journal of The American Medical Association" ex plained the new program: - "A clinical research facility supported" by this program is designed to H a resource" within a medical institution, which will permit enhancement of the quality and quantity of clinical investigation through the establishment of a dis crete physical unit or research ward in the hospital but apart from the general care wards,, with a stable, well-trained nurs Tm Gonna ,1:1 : I ' , I, f,-;,; r-.ii' t f if iff" I I " t ' ENSIGN NELLIE FORBUSH explains to her fellow nurses that she has "Washed That Man Right Out of Her Hair." in the Carolina Playmakers production of "South Pacific" which opened Friday night and will play through this evening in Memcrial Hall. Tickets axe still available ELEVENTH COM Vote For President, Too: Campus Election Tuesday To Have Mock US. Ballot Students will have a chance to indicate their choices for president of the United States when they go to the polls Tues day to elect class officers and honor and student council rep resentatives. The presidential voting will be made under the supervision of the campus Elections Board in conjunction with the Young Democrats Club and the -Young Republicans Club of Carolina. The purpose, of the presiden tial poll is to obtain "a general consensus of the campus and perhaps the state," according to Elections Board Chairman Dave Alexander. Candidates Fail Candidates failing to submit an account of their elections ex penditures by noon Monday will . be fined a late fee of $5, To Build Clinical School Receives Large Grant Wash That Man Right Outa My Hair n I- I FROfr H AN BE Alexander said. The lists may be left at the Graham Memorial Information Desk or slipped under the door of the elections office there. Dormitory presidents have been urged to remain in their rooms between 10 and 11 p.m. Monday to receive ballot boxes and to submit lists of poll tend ers. ... " , The following is a list . of can didates for campus office. The name is followed by endorse ment in parentheses: Brown Running . Freshman ' Class: President, Charlie Brown (UP-SP), G. Watts Carr, III (Independent); vice-president, Johnny Johnson (UP), Jerry Odum (SP); secre tary, Dershie Bridgford (UP), Mary PfafT (SP); treasurer. (Continued on page 3) Research Facility: ing and dietetic staff to provide needed precise control and observation and with directly supporting specialized labora tory facilities." Thus, under this grant, the School of Medicine will have a type of research facility not hitherto possible permitting intensive study and treatment of all types of patients. Plans Underway Plans are underway to have the new research facility opened by this spring or early summer. For the first several years, it will temporarily occupy one floor of South Wing, which was made possible because the Department of Psychiatry voluntarily agreed to release . the space for this purpose. A permanent location for the new facility will be arranged at a later date. Patients will be .treated in the research facility without any charges, either for hospital room or for professional serv . ices. Patients will be admitted on a volunteer basis and pro vided their illness is one which is under investigation in the research programs of the School of Medicine. The staff for the new facility, to be named later, will be the same as that of a regular general hospital ward supple mented by research nurses and other specialized personnel required for the more intense observation and study of these patients. 5s i for tonight's performance. The box-office at Memorial Hall "will open at 7 p.m. The Playmakers business office at 214 Aberneihy Hall will be open from 1-5 p.nx. RANKED ' .'' ' I s J. I ... :: r i I "' ' I , " if n.,,.t.. i .,.,,1 ! , iiicunl.n.n.iii ,- -n . n RALPH POTTER has been elected as state secretary of the State YDC Executive Council. A law school senior from Wilmington, he . is a member of Chi Phi and Delia Thela Phi. He was president of the tirst-year law class and secretary of the Barristers' Speakers Club. A VO BEHIND 27-14 Elliott Puts Tar Heels Ahead In First Period By Davis B. Young KNOXVILLE The University of Tennessee had too much to offer yesterday afternoon, defeating the Uni versity of North Carolina by a 27-14 score in Shields Watkins Field here before 27,060 highly partisan Volun teer fans. The home team stormed cit, completely dominating quick opening score. Tennessee kicked off to open the game. On the first series of downs, UNC quarterback Ray Farris was, forced to punt. Volunteer tailback Billy yard boot '3 yards to the On the first play from Tryouts Today For 'Under Milk Wood' Tryouts for the Carolina Play makers second production of the year, "Under Milk Wood," by Dylan Thomas, has been an nounced by Foster Fitz-Simons of the Department of Dramatic Art who will direct the Poetic Drama. Tryouts will be conducted in the Playmakers Theatre at 3:00 p.m. today and at 4:00 and 7:30 p.m. on Monday. Mr. Fitz-Simons states that there are parts for 20 actors and actresses. There are four parts for children age 10, two boys and two girls. Four dancers will be required for the production. "Under Milk Wood" will be presented by the Playmakers in the Playmakers Theatre, Nov. 30-Dec. 4. mmm World News in Brief t Anti-Castroites Plane; Seek Asylum In Florida KEY WEST, Fla. (UPI) Anti-Castro passengers over whelmed armed government guards on a Cuban airline plane today in a blistering airborne gunbattle and forced the crowd ed DC3's crew -to fly it to asylum in Key West. One army guard was slain, the pilot was injured and a third person, a boy of about 12, was wounded as passengers shot it out in the air with Castro troops. But the plane landed safely. Several dozen passengers were aboard the DC3 operated by a nationalistcd internal Cuban airline, Aerovias Q, which took off shortly after 7 a.m. from a Havana military airport headed for Cuba's Isle of Pines. Fidel Bans Gulf Flights WASHINGTON (UPI) Fidel Castro's government has issued an order banning flights within 30 miles of the north coast of Cuba's westernmost province of Pinar del Rio and warned it may force down any plane crossing the '"forbidden zone." The order, covering a block of airspace over the Gulf of Mexico, was brought to light Saturday by U.S. military sources. It was issued Oct. 2, to apply "until further notice" and was received at the Pentagon here Oct. 10. Questioned about the order the Navy, the U.S. agency most affected, said in effect that it had no intention of honor ing the order because it sought to ban operations over inter national waters. 5,000 Balubas Rioting LEOPOLD VLLLE, The-Congo (UPI) A horde of 5.000 Baluba tribesmen armed with machine guns and automatic rifles rampaged through the jungle Saturday, killing and burning in a tribal bloodletting that sent U.N. reinforcements to the area with orders to shoot ii attacked DEFEAT back from an early 7-0 defi the game after Carolina's On a third and ten situation, Majors returned Farris' 41- Tennessee 46. scrimmage, Volunteer full back Bunny Orr fumbled and UNC's John Stunda fell on the ball at the midfield stripe. Carolina promptly marched 50 yards on 11 plays, with Bob El liott going the final yard and a half for the marker. Elliott Adds Elliott added the extra point for a quick 7-0 Tar Iloel lead with 7:28 to go in the first quarter, and Vol fans were ner vous. The big play in this march was a 22-yard run by Farris. Elliott's extra point was the first successful point after touch down attempt of the season fct Carolina. The score remained 7-0 until he 9:35 mark in the second stanza when alert Tennessee center Mike Lucci intercepted a Farris aerial on the Carolina 43-yard line and sprinted the distance for Tennessee's first score. The extra point was added by Cotton Letner, and the score read 7-7. The turning point of the game (Continued on page 3) Grab Cuban