63 years o 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." Weather Sunny, with lemperaiures in upper 60's. Volume LXIX, No. 44 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issi o o S off cSB--- cry rilBf?--s What They're Saying United Press EN ROUTE WITH KEN NEDY Sen. John F. Kennedy in one of his roughest attacks of the campaign, Thursday accused Vice President Rich ard M. Nixon of using "the blackmailer's tactic of dis torted threats" in handling the farm issue. The Democratic presidential rominee made his charge in a speech at Amarillo, Tex., as he headed east in a final, fur ious drive for presidential votes. Kennedy called Nixon's own farm plan for consump tion of surplus crops a "boon doggle," plainly manufactured on Madison Avenue" and he said Nixon's land retirement program would "expand and continue the extinction of the family farm" which, he said, Agriculture Secretary Ezra Taft Benson began. Falls Back "It is precisely because his own program does not meet the farmer's that Mr. Nixon has fallen back on the black mailer's tactics of distorted threats of threats to the con sumer and threats to the farmer," Kennedy said. "But the only possible con sequences of such tactics is to foment bitterness and distrust between city and farm and thus to add . new burdens to the staggering load already borne by the farm community." Harvard Wesley Lecture Tonight Dr. Samuel H. Miller, dean of Harvard Divinity School, will be guest speaker at the third annual Wesley lecture scries beginning tonight. The" Hill Hall program will consist of two lectures by Dr. Miller tonight at 8 p.m. present ing "The Contemporary Diffi culty of Faith" and Sunday "The Post-Christian Man." The first Baptist Dean of Har vard Divinity School, Dr. Miller has written a number of works on theology. Among these are "The Life of the Soul," "The Life of the Church," "The Great Realities" and "Prayers for Daily Use." Graduate of Colgate Dr. Miller, born in Philadel phia, is a 1923 graduate of Col gate University. .- He was minister to Baptist churches in Belmar, Arlington and Clifton, N. J. In 1933, he began duties at Old Cambridge Baptist Church in Massachu setts. While at Cambridge, he was also Adjunct Professor of the Philosophy of Religion at And-over-Newton Theological School from 1953-57. In 1959, upon appointment at Harvard, Miller stated his mis sion to "Newsweek": "Can WITH ADVANCE HOOP-DE-DOO: Victory Girls' Will Add To Lodge Weekend Here A big weekend celebrating the visit of Henry Cabot Lodge to Chapel Hill will include motorcades and ad vance hoop-de-do by Carolina Coed "Victory Girls" who favor the Nixon-Lodge ticket for president. Lodge will speak to the campus and town residents at Memorial Hall at 7:45 p.m. Saturday. Frank Borden Hanes of Win ston-Salem will introduce form er Ambassador Lodge. After the address, the vice presidential candidate will answer questions from the audience. Saturday is. also "National College Youth for Nixon-Lodge Day" on 750 campuses over the tatioxi. . 'I s i f ' . r. V J it i i International 3tieiSSM COLUMBIA, S. C, (UPI) Vice President Richard . M. Nixon, flanked by the vener able James F. 'Byrnes, evan gelist Billy Graham and New York Yankees second base man Bobby Richardson, made a spirited appeal for support Thursday in the heart of the Old South. : Nixon told a lunchtime audience of ' oyer 30,000 gath ered in warm autumn sun on the South Carolina Capital steps that 1 they could best support the principles of the founding fathers of the Demo cratic party by voting Re publican next week. Makes Strong Bid The GOP presidential can didate thus made his strong est bid for traditionally Sou thern Democratic support be fore continuing on the cam paign trail into Texas to do battle with Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, the Democratic vice presidential candidate. Nixon's Columbia speech will be carried by television tonight into 11 southern states. State and local GOP organizations joining with Democrats, opposed to Sen. John F. Kennedy are footing the broadcast bill. The Yankee second base man, on . the program because he comes from nearby Sum ter, S. C, endorsed the Nixon Lodge team. Evangelist Gra ham asked divine help "to turn from our wicked ways and heal our country." o Lrive .world, the world as it is today, through the arts and sciences? We have succeeded in answering the question at Old Cambridge, and if I can't do the same thing here at the divinity school . . . I'll feel I've failed." Christianity validate itself in our fy' V X 'V Dr. Samuel H. Miller ... Harvard Dean Neil. Matheson of Charlotte, UNC senior who is president of the - Young Republican : Club, stated today that "North Caro lina has received more; "attention from presidential , candidates ' in this election than at any previ ous time in the nation's history." 1 t i , 1 Silent Actor Marceau , Says Mime Art Has No Barriers Marcel Marceau, the world's, greatest living exponent of the art of mime that medium of entertainment often described as "silent acting" claims that the sudden revival of interest in it in the past few years is per- fectly "logical." "Mime has become popular again because it is the universal art," says the celebrated French man, who is slated to present a . program here at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Memorial Hall. "Mime knows no language barriers," according to the re knowned artist, "and therefore is the perfect medium for achievement of the common ground of understanding for man." GM Sponsors Marceau's appearance here Tuesday evening is under the sponsorship of the Graham Memorial Concert Series. Students will be admitted free to the 8 p.m. performance, and student wives will be charged $1. Townspeople may purchase seats for $3 if any are available after 7:45 p.m. Series chairman Joe Bell has urged that students come early for choice seating. "As usual, seating will be on a first come basis, and we expect an overr, flow "crowd," Bell said. Capacity Audiences Capacity audiences and un precedented public demand have followed Marceau through out his world tours. Marceau holds the unique dis tinction of being reviewed in ecstatic phrases by the New York critics no less than four times. From his American debut at the Phoenix Theatre in 1955 to his current record-shattering North American tour, the one- man phenomenon has played to standing-room only crowds and has generated "electric excite- (Continued on page 3) World News in Brief 3? U.S. Atomic Scientists Awarded Nobel Prizes STOCKHOLM, Sweden (UPI) The Nobel prizes for physics and chemistry were awarded Thursday to two Ameri can atomic scientists in California Donald A. Glaser and Willard F. Libby. Libby, 51, a former member of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission, was the chemistry winner. He devised the "tomic time clock" a method of dating organic matter through radioactivity that has enabled scien tists to tell the age of such things as the dead Sea Scrolls. Red China Sends Airmen. To Cuba HAVANA (UPI) Red China is sending airmen. to Cuba, presumably to train pilots for the Russian-made jets expected soon to join Premier Fidel Castro's air force, it was reported today. Informed sources said some Red airmen already have ar rived. At the same time, it was reported the Castro regime is installing Communist-made antiaircraft guns with late-model fire control equipment on the roof of each of Cuba's sugar mills. Eisenhower May Attend NATO LONDON (UPI) Reports circulated in European "capitals Thursday that President Eisenhower will go to Paris for the mid-December meeting of the NATO council, irrespective of who wins the presidential election. His presence in the French capital would turn the annual NATO conference into a full dress Western summit. Britons Demand Debate On Base LONDON (UPI) A group of 32 maverick Laborite mem bers of Parliament Thursday demanded House of Commons debate on the establishment of an American Polaris missile submarine base in Scotland. Against shouts and catcalls from both Conservatives and fellow Laborites, the 32 left-wing "backbenchers" charged that the submarine base and other American defense installations in Britain are matters of "gravest possible anxiety." - T"1 A ' " JL O JxuD 1 s HESITANT AND UNSURE. "Bip," Marcel Marceau's alter-ego pauses for reflection in one of the celebrated pan lomimist's vignettes on life. The French artist will appear in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday under the auspices of Gra ham Memorial. Students will be admitted free. i(.w MViWMiViiVWMi .""".-. .'..-'.. To ear i JL " LA PETITE DRAMATIQUE'S: 'Cadillac Campus Debut Of Two GOLD CADILLAC This innocent "liiile eld lady," Mrs. Laura Partridge played by Annabelle Garrido, upsets the "big corpora tion" in the GMAB production of "The Solid Gold Cadillac" Saturday and Sunday at 8 Student Times The Tunisian delegation will arrive today at Raleigh-Durham Airport where they will be met by the host committee. - Their schedule for . the re mainder of the day is as fol lows: 2:15 p.m. WUNC-TV, to tape a film on the subject, "The North African Student" with John Brent, Rachid Ienouamour and the Tunisian delegation. 3:45 p.m. Graham Memorial, greetings by student government andor an administration offi- 4 cial. 8:30 p.m. Morehead Plane tarium production followed by an informal gathering at the Rathskeller. Legislature Quits Early; No Quorum A roll call quorum called midway in last night's Student Legislative session led to the automatic adjournment of the body. The action was taken when the body had just begun the anticipated long and complicat ed debate on the new student constitution. Rep. Davis B. Young asserted: When such an important thing as tne new student constitu tion is being debated, I espe cially object to the wholesale absences that occur week in and week out. ... I say one ab- sence as allowed by the by laws and they art out. . . . They are not serving this body and they are not serving their dis tricts. . . . Let's get rid of the dead wood." On this note Bob Sevier adjourned the body at 9 o'clock. i L iiiiJiSiLSM 1! onsors -D ay Chapel Hill One Of Six US. Towns On Schedule BY ED RINER Three Tunisian students, representing the Union Na tionale des Etudiants.de Tunisia (UGET), arrive here this afternoon for a three-day visit. Chapel Hill is one of the six towns the Tunisians will visit in the United States. The month-long tour includes Philadelphia, New York City, Boston, Detroit, Washington and Chapel Hill. Sponsored by the National Student Association, the delega tion is sight-seeing, attending conferences, visiting colleges, talking with professors, visiting political headquarters, talking with student leaders and stay ing in American homes. Meet With Leaders While in Chapel Hill the three will talk with ex-NSA officers and Algierian students on cam pus and meet with student lead ers and leaders in the race re lations field, including the stu dent "sit-in" leaders. At a Saturday luncheon the students will meet with a num ber of professors including Dr. Shepard Jones, Dr. Sherman Cooper, William Geer, Dr. John Honigmann, of the anthropology-sociology department and John Sanders of the Institute of Student Government. An interpreter will accom pany the Tunisians, and the local host committee is arrang ing for them to meet as many French speaking persons as pos sible. Represents Students The UGET represents all stu dents studying in Tunisia and those Tunisians studying in foreign countries. The delegates are Taieb Zou ard, head of the . delegation, member of the UGET executive J - p.m. in Gerrard Hall. The play is the sea son's first production in the GM Petiiie Dra matique series and no admission will be charged. (Photo by Blaustein.) aLyL(ULC 1 H I fl t JLiLiL isit committee and a student of his tory; Abdelaziz Ghachem, mem ber of the administrative com mission of UGET and a student of medicine, and Mohamed Karoui, member of the admin istrative commission of UGET and a student of humanities. Di Phi Defeats Gavin Idea A resolution favoring Robert Gavin's quest for the governor ship of North Carolina was de feated at Tuesday night's Di Phi meeting. Representative Arthur Hays introduced the motion endors ing the GOP candidate and spoke' for the resolution. Hays cited Gavon's "sound financial policies," his program for better highways and for education. He also dwelled on the need for a two-party system in North Carolina. In rebuttal, Representative Turner countered with Demo cratic candidate Sanford's fi nancial and highway programs, as well as his proposals on edu cation. Turner talked o f the Democratic primary in refutting the lack of a two-party system. A vote then taken by repre sentatives and guests resulted in the narrow defeat of Hays' reso lution. When the GM La Petite Dramatique production of "The Solid Gold Cadillac" opens to morrow night, it will mark the UNC stage debut of Mrs. Anna belle Garrido. The wife of an assistant pro fessor in the Spanish Depart ment, Mrs. Garrido is no acting novice. She has appeared in several productions of the San Jose, Costa Rica, Little Theatre. Her most important (and highly acclaimed) performance was that of Mary Tyrone in Eugene O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey Into Night." She has also appeared in several come dies, all of which were done in Spanish. A native of Costa Rica, Mrs. Garrido hopes to return to theatrical life in that country, after completing her current graduate studies in the Depart ment of Dramatic Arts here. In tomorrow's production, Mrs. Garrido will be seen as the female lead, Mrs. Laura Part ridge. LOST IN FIRE Chapel Hill Fire Chief J. 2. Bcone has reported the less cf three helmets valued at fiflccn dollars each and a crowbar during the fire at the Tin Can Wednesday. Any student knowing the whereabouts cf any of this equipment is ask ed to call the Daily Tar Heel or the Chapel Hill fire detriment. V