Off 68 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 temperatures in upper 60's. Volume LXIX, No. 45 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1960 Offices n Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issuu ON THIRD WORLD TOUR: Lauded 'Genius Of Gesture' To Perform For Students "Marcel Marceau is the sort of theatrical gift that no one really deserves," Walter Kerr wrote in the N. Y. Herald Tribune this fall. "To ask for such perfection would be presumptuous; you can only stare at it, believe it and be thankful. The fellow is, in case I forget to say it, superb." Kerr's comments are typical of the ecstatic phrases heaped upon M. Marceau by critics the world over. The celebrated French mime has been called "the world's great est pantomimist," "the genius of HENRY CABOT DGE SLATES 'MAJOR J CAI PAIGJN ADDRESS' US MEM IAL gesture and ' the most superb interpreter of the language of the heart." UNC students will have an opportunity to witness the ex traordinary talents of Marceau on Tuesday evening, when the reknowned artist will appear in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Two Accompany Performing here under the auspices of the Graham Memo rial Concert Series, the cele brated Frenchman will be ac companied by his partner and protege, Pierre Verry. Students will be admitted to the performance free, and their spouses will be charged $1. Marceau will offer a program Tuesday night featuring his famous "Bip" sketches as well as many of his stylistic satires on human experience. A new program is scheduled, but by special request Marceau will include some old favorites, notably "Youth, Maturity, Old Age and Death," the two min ute vignette which "creates the story of a lifetime in the lan guage of the heart." Pari of World Tour Marceau's Chapel Hill per formance is part of the mime's third world tour, which has played to record-shattering crowds in the major cities on the North American continent. Critics have been unanimous in their praise of M. Marceau. Brooks Attkinson of the N. Y. Times suggested that "we might as well know what many other nations have learned already; Marcel Marceau is a brilliant pantomimist. He has brought genius to us, "The white-faced Gaul is one of the most wonderful perform ers in the business," declared the N. Y. Daily News critic, and the six other Broadway critics echoed these sentiments. I ) 6 -v. v.v.- v J h ( f MARCEL MARCEAU Social Work School Gets Large Grant A $200,000 grant has been awarded to the UNC Graduate school of Social Work by the National Institute of Mental Health announced Arthur E. Fink, dean of the school. This grant assures a five-year program and will enable the school to support, strengthen, and extend its psychiatric social workers training . program which has been underway for the past 12 years. The amount of $40,000 a year will be used to support the teaching service and the fellow ship program for psychiatric social workers. FOR TWO-DAY RUN: G old Cadillac Curtain Up The La Petite Dramatique production of "The Solid Gold Cadillac" will open tonight for a two-day run at 8 p.m. in Ger rardHall. Written by George Kaufman and Howard Teichmann, "Cadil lac" ran on Broadway and on the road for three years before being made into a motion pic- II II 11 eWorld News in Briefs;- Khrushchev Arrest Rumors Killed By Soviet Authorities Sunday Flick Is Love Story By Al Dumas "La Traviata," a magnificent blending of Alexandre Dumas' classic love story, "The Lady of the Camillias," and the music of - Guiseppe Verdi's opera, will mark, the fourth in this semes ter's Sunday Cinema Series. To be shown Sunday at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall, the film features an Italian cast with Massimo Serato and Nelly Corradi in the acting roles and the voices of Tito Gobbi and Onelia Fineschi in the singing roles. Music is played by the Or chestra of the Rome Opera House. The opera is sung in its origi nal Italian with the action fol lowed by an English commen tary. Tonight's Free Flick is "The Song of Bernadette," the beau tiful, simply told story of Ber nadette Soubirous, the humble peasant girl who was visited by the apparition of Mary, at what is now the famous shrine of Lourdes in France. Jennifer Jones stars in the role which won her world-wide acclaim and Hollywood's covet ed Oscar. LONDON (UPI) An obscure Austrian with some second hand "inside information" Friday fired off a rumor heard round the world that Nikita S. Khrushchev had been deposed and arrested by his Stalinist enemies. Soviet officials said it was all "nonsense." The White House heard it. Diplomats at the United Na tions in New York buzzed with "have you heard" that Khrush chev had been arrested and replaced as premier by Georgi Malenkov, a Kremlin has-been. On the surface, there was reason to see fire behind the smoke. There has been a Soviet military shakeup. Only Thurs day war hero Marshal Semyon Timosshenko had been re moved fro mhis command. There is a deep ideological quarrel between Khrushchev and Stalinist Red China. s Dillon, Bowles Vie For Top Post WASHINGTON (UPI) Undersecretary of State Douglas Dillon and Rep. Chester Bowles appeared Friday to be the leading candidates for secretary of state in the next adminis stration. Neither Vice President Richard M. Nixon or John F. Kennedy have indicated their choice for the post. However, Nixon is understood to have settled on Dillon, while Kennedy is reported to lean toward Bowles to succeed the present secx-e-tary, Christian A. Herter. Many insiders believe that, if elected, Kennedy will name Adlai E. Stevenson as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. De Gaulle Appeals To Parliament PARIS (UPI) President Charles de Gaulle Thursday night told a French nation faced with the possibility of open rebellion and civil war he is ready to assume full dictatorial powers if the grave crisis over Algeria worsens. He appealed to parliament not to try to overthrow his gorenmrent during the present crisis and renewed his offer to let Algerians vote to their own future although right-wing Algerian settlers ando some army officers are reported to rebel if Algeria is lost. ture. Judy Holliday starred in the film version. The play is a spoof on corpor ations and corporation directors and is dedicated to Charles Wil son and Robert Young, former heads of General Motors and the New York Central Railroad. The parody is directed not only at big business but at gov ernment as well. Mrs. Laura Partridge, female lead, is played by Annabelle Garrido making her UNC debut. Mrs. Partridge becomes in volved when she attends her first stockholder's meeting. Play Directors The directors, played by Bob Bloodworth, George O'Hanlon, Cole Wachdell and Graham Pollock, send Mrs. Partridge to Washington to ask for govern ment contracts. Here she meets former Gen eral Products head, Ed "Mc Keever, played by Johnny Meadows, who is a member of the president's cabinet. Mc Keever resigns his post and re turns to New York for a battle of. wits with the corporation di rectors. The production is directed by Don Curtis also appearing in the play as the narrator. This is Open Discussion To Follow Talk; La Petite Dramatique Delays Play Infirmary Students in the infirmary yes terday included: Rebecca Wea thers, Dan Yeary, Mary Morris, Louise Waters, Sally Fortune, Nancy Himlick, Albert Jernigan, Jerry Rosenbaum, Richard Peterson, James Densmoor, Rob ert West, Clyde Kirk, Sam Jones, John Nickerson, Charles Short, Lanz Boerfner, Hal Tan ner, Tom Downer, Robert Down er, Robert Mayfield, Ben Rushin, Allan McKnight, Carolyn Cook, James Mosor, Ridley Kessler and Charles Shaffer. Carter's initial endeavor on the dramatic field on campus. The rest of the cast includes ! Debbie Ives as Miss Shotgraven, Fred Hollingsworth as Mark Jenkins, Johnnie Sibold as Miss LiAviere and Suzanne Whitney as Miss Logan, Paul Johnston, Rebikak Royster and Blake Green also appear in the play. UNC Adds 2 To Canadian Delegate List Two more students will par ticipate in the UNC-University of Toronto exchange sponsored by student : government. Sandy iRogers" and Ed Riner have been named to the original 22 student team that will host the Canadians here Nov. 11, 12 and 13 and visit Toronto during the semester break. Miss Rodgers and Riner were first alternates before being add ed to the delegation. The addi tion came because of a mixup in communication. Send 22 Students The Toronto chairman said they were sending. 11 women and 11 men to Carolina next weekend; therefore, Carolina selected 11 women and 11 men as the host committee here and for the trip to Canada. Further correspondence re vealed the Canadians meant 22 in addition to the co-chairmen 24 students from Toronto. So in order for each Canadian to have a host or hostess, Caro lyn Kelly and Roy Michaux, Carolina co-chairmen, selected Carolina's first alternates to give UNC 24 delegates. ; " ' " f , ,. if - - - 3 I - -i ' ' ' - ; ' , - o , - ' 4 ' -: n A , - - ' , , . - :l ' X V - - - - - ' I l '" f , ...i.. li .mriir 1 1 urn i i .i in. J AMBASSADOR HENRY CABOT LODGE Delegates Await Okay State Legislature To Fourteen delegates and seven alternates await the approval of student legislature before they represent Carolina at the State Student Legislature. Selected by an interviewing committee appointed by the student body president and legislature, the 21 students must be approved by legislature be fore they attend the Dec. 8, 9 and 10 meeting in the state capitol in Raleigh. Approval is usually automatic. SSL is an intercollegiate mock legislative session to consider student and state problems and r M 1 1 u nutans To H ear Lodge ) :T- - r j I ' -" I ! j . 1 ' y ) I ' ' : i ? if i I I K : J " ' ' v - if ; TUNISIAN STUDENTS meet Student Body President David Grigg on the steps of Graham Memorial during a ihree-day visit to the Carolina campus. They are (1-r) Moham med Karoui, a student of the humanities; Grigg; Taieb ZouarL head of the delega tion; and Abdelaziz Ghachem. a student of history. (Photo by Little.) Tonight Tour Designed For Insight In UNC, State The National Student Asso ciation host committee for the Tunisian student delegation on campus has six items on today's schedule each planned to give the three-man team an insight into UNC, the state and the South. The following is today's Tu nisian timetable, according to Mima Bruce, host committee chairman: 10 a.m. Tour of the comput er and statistics laboratory by a competent French-speaking guide. Noon Luncheon with select ed professors in the middle din ing room, second floor, Lenoir Hall. Afternoon Tours of a tobacco plant in Durham or the UNC Medical School. 6 p.m. Dinner at the Carolina Inn with student government and past NSA leaders. j 7:45 p.m. Attendance at speech by Henry Cabot Lodge, Republican vice presidential candidate. 9 p.m. Informal gathering at home of Miss Anne Queen for dessert with student leaders and administration members. to actively participate in the law-making procedure. Delegates are as follows: David Grigg, Lila Smith, Jey Deifell, Dwight Wheless, Judy Albergotti, Tony Harrington, Bob Sevier, Hank Patterson, Claudia McLaughlin, Bill Whi chard, Swag Grimsley, Jim Scott, Dave Dansby and Wayne Babb. Alternates are Pete Thomp son, Al Pollard, Bonnie Menak er, Dan Robbins, Tom Presson, Tom Tygart and Linda Bizer. Miss Albergotti and Whichard have served on Carolina's in terim committee. The delegates will have a vote, not alternates, and two of the delegates will be seniors in SSL. BY JIM CLOTFELTER Republican vice-presidential nominee Henry Cabot Lodge will speak at 7:45 tonight in Memorial Hall. His speech is billed as a "major cam paign address' by posters put up around the campus by the UNC Youth for Nixon Lodge group. A question period will follow the formal talk by Lodge. The GM La Petite Dramatique pro duction of the "Solid Gold Cadillac" will begin fifteen minutes after the close of Mr. Lodge's speech. The former U. S. delegate to the United Nations has played an unusual role in this campaign. His statement that a Negro would be put on the cabinet if Nixon were elected made Lodge subject to a barrage of "rac ism in reverse" charges. Previous to that remark, Lodge had been portrayed as a "diplomat, above politics." This is the last pre-election speech at I I I I I III .1 ! .1 I J 1 me university by a major political figure in this cam paign, which has seen them visit Chapel Hill and a num ber of surrounding cities in great number. Democratic presidental candidate John Kenndy spoke in Raleigh last month. GOP gubernatorial candi date John Gavin came to Chapel Hill for a speech two weeks ago, about the same time that prominent Demo crat Adlai Stevenson was speaking in Durham. Nixon got as close as Greensboro. Lodge will arrive at the Ra leigh-Durham Airport at 6:00 p.m. He will be taken to the Caro lina Inn, where Mrs. Lodge will meet with women voters. He is stopping off from Knox- ville en route to New York. vhere his campaign will be wrapped up. Today is National College Youth for Nixon-Lodge Day across the nation. What They're Saying i United Press International tt. CHICAGO Sen. John F. Kenndy described Vice Presi dent Richard M.- Nixon Fri day night as a man with "a fear of the future." The Democratic presidential candidate said in a speech prepared for delivery at a po litical rally in the Chicago Stadium that he did not share such fears because he has "confidence in the American people." In the speech, scheduled to be televised nationally on the NBC network at 9:30 p.m. EST, Kennedy set forth an explanation of what he had been trying to do and to say during the campaign for the White House. Climaxes Day His appearance at the stad ium climaxed a day which he began in Norfolk and Roa noke appealing to Virginian voters to swing their state back to the Democratic col umn after having given it to President Eisenhower in 1952 and 1953. EN ROUTE WITH NIXON Vice President Richard M. Nixon Friday charged that Sen. John F. Kennedy's cam paign promises represent "the crudest any politician has ever tried to foist on the American people." The GOP nominee, swing ing harder than ever at his Democratic opponent, braved snow and cold to swing his determined stretch drive from Fort Worth, Tex., into chilly Wyoming and Washington state in a back-breaking day during which he concentrated on attacking Kennedy's eco nomic program and campaign promises. Nixon, in remarks prepared for a Spokane, Wash., appear ance, branded Kennedy's eco nomic proposals "a takc-it-away from the poor people program" designed to "buy his election with your money and your future." Several hundred Casper residents braved the elements to cheer Nixon and his wife.