r c- n n Vau.! dill 1 , ;,C. -JCSjjecrs of dedicated serv ice to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, vihosz motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." Weather Parily cloudy, somewhat warmer. Volume LXIX, No. 51 Complete (UP!) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issue ' - - , : 22i tAt ik tSt it tAt tt 'Severe lllllliipllf ; PAT HUNTER . WAA President S.C. Miss Cops WAA Post Upon the recent resignation of Mimi Smith, Pat Hunter has assumed the position of presi dent of the Women's Athletic Association. Pat has served as Representa tive for the Nurses Dorm and was elected Vice-President last Spring by the Council. A native of Rock Hill, S. C, Pat is now a junior in the School of Nursing. Assisting Pat on the Execu tive Council are; Ginger KLen. ney, secretary; Judy Newton, treasurer; and Catherine Bolton, publicity diretcor. A new Vice-President will be elected in the next meeting from a roster of Jeanne Huntley, Jackie Womble and Ann Crawford. 4 AfwlA KIawc in RrSnf mrnmmm&zz" GOP Views Vote Reversal As 10,000 To 1 Chance II I 1 WASHINGTON (UPI) Republican leaders realistically viewed their chances of reversing the presidential result today as a 10,000 to 1 shot. Vice President Richard M. Nixon's lieutenants still talked hopefully of taking back his home state of California from President-elect John F. Kennedy when the absentee ballots are counted. They also nursed a hope that the official canvass in Illinois would throw that state to Nixon. Nixon To Stay In Politics WASHINGTON (UPI) Vice - President Richard M. Nixon intends to remain active in politics after he leaves office Jan. 20 and is being urged not to shut the door on another try for the White House in 1964. Although Nixon has not yet announced his plans, it is widely reported that he will set up a law office here, perhaps in partnership with retiring Atty. Gen. William" P. Rogers Jr., a long-time close personal friend. k k k Kennedy Heads For Florida HYANNIS, Mass. (UPI) President-elect Kennedy left by airplane for a working vacation at Palm Beach, Fla., Friday after sending assurances to West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer that he favored controlled disarmament as a guaran tee of world peace. Viet Nam Strongman Holds Out SAIGON, Viet Nam (UPI) Strongman President Ngo Dinh Diem held out in his shell-pocked palace today against attacking American-trained Marines and paratroopers who seized the rest of the anti-Communist capital and proclaimed an -'anti-corruption" regime. At least 50 persons were reported killed, several of them civilians, in bloody clashes between rebel forces proclaiming themselves anti-Communist and palace guards loyal to pro Western Diem. No American casualties were reported. . Algerians Storm U. S. Center ALGIERS, Algeria (UPI) Hundreds of youths stormed and wrecked the U.S. information center building Friday after security guards and gendarmes crushed an anti-De Gaulle re bellion with tear gas and rifle butts. Fifty persons including 17 gendarmes and mobile guards were reported injured in fighting which flared when tens of thousands of Algerian settlers flung themselves at the police with shouts of "Algeria is French!" and "De Gaulle to the gallows!' Scores were arrested. Blow To Grigg, Young Blast 'Unrealistic' View Leaders Are Urging Strong Support Of Budget Proposals By Students Student Body President David Grigg and State Af fairs Chairman Davis B. Young spoke out yesterday afternoon in direct opposition to the cuts of the State Board of Higher Education in the University, budget for 1961-63. Thursday, the State Board recommended the University s budget request be slashed by 67.5 per cent in the first year of the biennium and 76.6 per cent in the second. The recommendations of the Board will be taken into con sideration by the Advisory Budget Commission in its report to the 1961 General Assembly. Cuts In Salary Included in the recommenda tions were severe cuts in facul ty salary increases and a total depletion of the section per taining to new faculty positions. In a statement, Grigg hit at the action saying, "The cut in UNC's budget request was ex tremely drastic in my opinion. I am .very muqh concerned and! disturbed by yesterday's action. I am not fully informed at this point as to the situation, but it seems to me that this must be interpreted as a severe blow to the undergraduate li brary-student union - request. The least we can say is that the p UNC union request is in an extremely precarious position at present," the student leader added. Not Released The board's recommenda tions regarding the proposed undergraduate library-student union have not yet been re leased.) Young termed the Board's ac tion "mystifying." He said, "It is beyond my comprehension how men train ed to deal in this area can make such drastic recommendations. It is simply impossible for this University to operate on a third or a lourtn oi its original re quests. "You can't get something for nothing. You can't keep a top-, flight faculty without increasing salaries. It is a fact of life that our professors will leave in droves to accept more attractive offers if this persists." Young went on to say, "Fur thermore the idea of no new faculty positions is totally un realistic in view of increasing student enrollment. Capital Improvements "As for the proposed under graduate library-student union, the capital improvements recommendations have not yet been released. But if they're anything like those in the "A" and "B" budgets, we could cer tainly be in a much better po sition. "The only frank thing to say is that I am not encouraged. I feel we have been given an un warranted bad break, and that students must demonstrate their support of the University ad ministration's budget requests in all areas and their disappro val of the State Board's propo sals," he concluded. Can 1 f4 7 vr 1 MJi A 4 TORONTO EXCHANGEES Part of the group of 24 Canadian students visiting Chapel Hill this weekend on the UNC Toronlo University exchange program are shown resting from various tours around the M-m-m Moves Out Beauty And Brains To Get Divorce NEW YORK (UPI) Marilyn Monroe and her- playwright hus band, Arthur Miller, have sepa rated and the actress will file for a divorce, it was announced today. A spokesman for the 34-year-old Miss Monroe, one of the most glamorous personalities ever developed by Hollywood said she has no immediate plans to consult her attorneys. The parting of the ways after four years and three months of "perfect marriage" came , last weekend when Miss Monroe finished filming "The Misfits" in Hollywood. Share Bungalow She and Miller had been shar ing a bungalow at the Beverly Hills Hotel but they returned to New York separately. The marriage of "Beauty and brains" in White Plains, N. Y., on June 29, 1956, was one of the nation's most publicized wed dings. " Miss Monroe, whose acting be gan to be taken seriously by critics, and Miller, winner of a Pulitzer Prize, seemed ' ideally happy until a few months ago when the actress made a film with French movie star Yves Montand. - . Rumors Reported There were rumors of a ro mance on the set of "Let's Make Love" and Montand was report ed to have told friends that Miss Monroe had a crush on him. However, friends said Miss Monroe was not seriously inter ested in Montand, husband of Oscar-winning actress Simone Signoret. He does not figure in her separation and divorce plans, they said. Interdorm Council Tries Three Cases Three cases were tried before the IDC Court Thursday night and three men were convicted. . The first case involved a fight in Lewis dorm and the two de fendants were found guilty. One received probation, the other an official reprimand. One student was acquitted for lack of evidence of shooting Roman candles in a dorm room. In the third case, the defendant was found guilty of setting a fire in the waste can in his room and was put on probation. ns J V i '' " ) arte- ! f c -r v H -J PI 0 adia Take in S s v mmm :':";:$:: .- mm ifrriri.nalif ' mm. Mm. 47 Marilyn Les Petite Miisicale Qo)Feature:Gh'opin "Carolinian," a symphony which endeavors to make use of the folk idiom of the tains, and. "Joe Clark Steps ern folk dances, are two works by Dr. Charles G. Vardell, a talented native composer who will be featured Sunday evening at 8 o'clock in Hill Hall by Les Petites Musicales, part of the GM Musical Com- a a . mittee. Admission will be free to the performance, which will feature an all-Chopin program. Dr. Vardell has selected a program of representative Chopin com positions in honor of the 150th anniversary of the composer's birth. In the previously mentioned works and others, Dr. Vardell has incorporated themes de scriptive of the state of North Carolina. "From, a Mountain Walk," one of his earlier com positions, took a prize in the state : competition for the Shir ley Cup, offered for work by a North Carolina composer. This cup is now in the perma nent possession of Dr. Vardell. "Song in the Wilderness," a later work, is a cantata for Campus JL .... S I '6 5 campus. Also shown with the group are Ed Riner and Susan Lewis of the Daily Tar Heel and Ray Jeffries, assistant to the dean of Student Affairs. ; (Photo by Blausiein) On Miller - 1::::::::: V Monroe JL Southern Appalachian Moun Out," a setting of old South baritone solo, chorus, and or- I chestra. The poem for the cantata was written by Paul Green. , It has been published by the North Carolina Press and had its first public performance at the Piedmont Festival " in Winston-Salem in May of 1947. PAYING GUESTS BARNEGAT, N. J. (UPI) Sgt. Stanley Zenew, a tollgate policeman on the Garden State Parkway, thought he was being bombed Thursday when a white object was dropped from a U.S. Navy blimp and landed near his booth. Zenew picked it lip, found a quarter inside a knotted ' hand kerchief and a note reading: "The Navy pays its way." - By Surp Students Arrive Early For Weekeiid Exchange Twenty-four energetic Canadian students invaded Chapel Hill Friday for a weekend of the UNC-University of Toronto exchange program. Arriving at Morehead Plane tarium parking lot in a green and white bus about noon, the Canadians took the campus host committee by surprise-they ar rived earlier than expected. Camilla Joseph, Susan Lewis, Ed Riner and Dennis Rash, of the host committee, just hap pened' to be in the parking lot when the bus arrived. However, others of the committee gath ered in a few minutes. Marks Second Year This weekend marks the be ginning of the second year of the . exchange program. During the semester break, 24 Caro lina students will go to the Uni versity of Toronto to complete the exchange. Friday Objecting I b Salary Stains President Fears Faculty Loss If Requests Refused By WAYNE KING William C. Friday, president of the Consolidated Uni versity, issued a statement Thursday objecting to the recommended cutback in the University's budget. "We must object to this severe reduction as it will seriously jeopardize our facilities," Friday stated in com menting on the recommended 45 per cent reduction in funds requested to raise faculty! salaries. Referring to the proposed in creases as "modest, tne uni versity president feels that the proposed cutback will seriously hamper UNC in her attempts to maintain competitive faculty salaries. Losing Faculty Friday pointed out that even now the three divisions of the University have . continued to lose some of their most compe tent and eminent faculty mem bers despite all-out efforts to hold them through competitive salareis. UNC, Woman's College, and State requested a total of $14, 181,958 for the expansion of the greater University, under the enrichment program. The State Board of Higher Education recommended only $4.5 million of the amount re quested, a reduction of around 70 per cent for the biennium 'Severe Damage' President Friday felt that the proposed reductions "would do severe damage to the quality of the University." Appreciation was expressed in the statement for the Board's endorsement of the "A" section of the budget, which includes the necessary capital to con tinue operation of the Univer sity at its present level, allow ing for increased enrollments. The huge slice was taken out of the "B" budget, which is in tended to provide for "enrich ment" or improvement and ex pansion. Hardest Hit Hardest hit in the appropria tions, in President Friday's es timation, were the items per taining to increased faculty salaries and improved and ex panded library facilities. . He called these items, along with the others ' on the "B" rise Carolina students (which is the host committee this week end) were selected by inter views last month. The exchange is a student government proj ect. The Canadians are staying at the residences of the hosts. Saturday's activities include a tour of Duke University, of a tobacco factory in Durham, of Chapel Hill and the campus, of the Univac computer. The group will go together to the Mary land game and fraternity hop. After a dinner at the Metho dist Church, the group will have a party in the Beta Theta Pi barn. budget, "the true measure of tho distinction of the University." Further commenting on the "enrichment" or "B" item re quests, President Friday stated that they were "our best judge ment of the increased appropria tions necessary to maintain our place in the company of (the leading Southern) universities and to do our rightful share in fulfilling the great demands upon higher education in Amer ica." Board of Trustees "As to procedure, under the laws of the state, the Board of Trustees is responsible for the maintenance of the quality of the faculty and the excellence of the programs of the three fold University. 1 In recommending a cut of 67 per cent of the first year in the biennium, and 76 per cent for the second . . ., the Board fails to advocate increased support necessary to preserve and im prove the University." Students Are Urged To See Legislators A few hours after the Board of Higher Education had slash ed the proposed University budget , Addison Hewlett, Speaker of the House of the state's General Assembly, was telling a meeting of student of ficials what had impressed him most about 'the 1959 plea for funds. "The fact that a delegation of students from my hometown of Wilmington came to talk per sonally to me about the needs of the University impressed me greatly," Hewlett said. "I would think it would be a very good idea for you to sec your own representatives on this matter." Hewlett Addresses Hewlett addressed a joint meeting of the Student Legisla ture and the campus Committee on btate Airairs in riowcu Thursday night. His main topic was a discussion on the work ings of the General Assembly. After his formal speech, Hew ett answered questions from the floor, many of which pcr- ( Continued on page 3) Latest Popular Vote The latest popular vole for president: Nixon 33.329.831; 49.73 per cent. Kennedy 33.687.392; 50.27 per cent. Nixon had won 25 siaics with 191 electoral voies Nixon was leading in one more state with three elec toral votes. Kennedy had won 23 stales with 332 electoral votes. Unpledged electors won in Mississippi with 8 electoral votes.