Serials' PspU a ' Weatfier Partly cloudy, continued mild. 6S 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. 59 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issue ?S en rm i r it3 fi f J W I James Conant, Former Harvard President, To Address Students Noted Newsmen, Educators Appear James B. Conant, former president of Harvard Uni versity and former U. S. Ambassador to the Federal Re public of Germany, and now an analyzer of the American Public High School under a grant from the Carnegie Corporation, will address a statewide and regionwide meeting of educators and public school officials today at 11:45 a.m. in Memorial Hall. Dr. Conant's address will be telecast live over the facilities of WUNC-TV, Channel 4. His topic is "Individual De velopment and the National Need: A False Antithesis." Dr. Conant's address will be piped into Gerrard Hall at 11:45 a.m. today for the bene fit of students wishing to hear the former Harvard Univer sity president's lecture. He will also take part on a panel discussion at 9:30 a.m. dis cussing "The Effort Needed to Strengthen Our Schools" with newspapermen and educators being heard. The educators, besides Dr. Co nant are Dr. Henry Hill, presi dent of Peabody Teachers Col lege in Nashville, Tenn.; Dr. Epps Ready, director of the North Carolina curriculum study; and Dr. II. I. Willett, superintendent 01 schools in Richmond, Va. Dr. Guy B Phillips of. the N. C. School Boards Association will be mod erator. The newspapermen are W. D. Snider of Greensboro, Tom Las siter, Smithfield; Hal Tribble, Asheville; Hugh Patterson, Little Rock, Arkansas; and The press-educator panel will be telecast (delayed) over Chan nel 4 at 9 p.m. Tuesday. Massachusetts Native Dr. Conant is a native of Dor chester, Mass., born March 23, 1893. He received the A.B. degree at Harvard in 1913 and the Ph.D. in 1916. He was a major in the Chemi cal Warfare Service of the U. S Army in World War I. He tausht at Harvard after the war, rising to the rank of professor of chemistry and chairman of the department. He became president of Harv ard in 1933. During World II he was a member of the steering commit tee for the Manhattan District charged with production of atomic bombs and has been an adviser to the Atomic Energy Commission. He is author of "Education in a Divided World," "Education and Liberty," "The American High School Today," "The Child, the Parent and the State," "Harvard Case Histories in Experimental Science," and of textbooks in organic chemis- v. J- 1 Dr. James Conant Ex-Harvard President IFC Sending Two To Meet In Los Angeles Herbert O'Keef, Raleigh Times, try. Noted U.S. Soprano "Will Appear Dec. 1 The distinguished American soprano, Adele Addison, will appear in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 1, under the auspices of the Chapel Hill Concert Series. Balcony seats will be available free of charge to UNC students, through the courtesy of Graham Memorial. Hey, Joe, come on fellow, surely you can spare a match. The GM Concert Series Com mittee annually reserves the balcony for student use. With widely acclaimed suc cesses already behind her, Miss T-Day Express BALTIMORE, MD. Samuel Jackson, 205 Lewis, 8-9169, wants ride leaving after 12:15 p.m. Tuesday. SAVANNAH, GA. Andy Edwards, 405 Connor, 2-1733, wants riders; plans to leave after 11 a.m. Wednesday. NORFOLK, VA. Joel B. Mullen, 3-9109, 209 Grimes, wants ride leaving after 11 a.m. Tuesday or anytime Wednesday. NORFOLK or WILLIAMS BURG, VA. Charles Hobbs, 111 Mangum, 8-D065, wants ride leaving after 11 a.m. Wednesday. CINCINNATI, OHIO, area (Oxford, O.). Duncan Mc Naughton, 105 Lewis, 9-8036, wants ride leaving Tuesday a.m. or Wednesday p.m. AUGUSTA, GA. Joe Greene, 314 Lewis, 8-9055 and Joe John, 412 Connor, 8-9079, want rides leaving after Wednesday at 10. NEW YORK CITY and vici nity Leonard Berdick, 106 Grimes, 8-9197, wants riders leaving after 11:15 Wednesday. Addison won unqualified rave reviews for her four perform ances of Lukas Foss "Time Cycle," a work commissioned expressly for her by the Ford Foundation. Appearing with the Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, Miss Addison's performance was uni versally praised, and the New York Times wrote ". . , vocal and musical difficulties that would cause most sopranos to faint at the sight of them mere ly inspired her to extraordinary lyric expression." It is Adele Addison's voice on the sound-track of the motion picture "Porgy and Bess," and her remarkable versatility and range is shown with her per formances, for examples, as Melisande with the Washington, D. C. Opera Company, in Scar latti's "The Martyrdom of St. Ursula" with Clarion Concerts at Town Hall, with Berlioz; "Beatrice and Benedict" in Car negie Hall, appearances with major orchestras and her highly acclaimed annual appearances singing rare music at the Li brary of Congress. "She is one of America's proudest vocal products,", said Biancolli in the New York World-Telegram, and the Chris tian Science Monitor wrote of Adele Addison's Boston recital: "It was everything you could ask of art, as magnificent a re cital as one could ever hope to hear!" IFC President Pete Austin and Sophomore Representative Bill Sullivan were recently se lected by the Council to repre sent UNC's IFC in the National Interfraternity Conference at the Ambassador Hotel, Los An geles, Thursday-Sunday. Austin, a senior from Chatta nooga, Tenn., has also been chosen by the N.I.C.'s executive committee to be On .the under graduate committee and he will lead a discussion on "Rushing." This annual conference at tracts the nation's fraternity leaders and through the organ-1 ization and careful planning it is famous for, is' a great aid to those IFC's represented. This year's chairman of the undergraduate committee is William S. Zerman, Executive Secretary of Phi Gamma Delta, and the primary speakers are, in the main, university presi dents, deans, and executives of the various national fraterni ties. Senator Barry Goldwater will make one of the main Conven tion addresses. lilfiiili V?:':V;::;?::.;.;: : r:vx;:::;y:-w:;v;;:v:-: : .s S . i- ' - - ; Dr. Henry Hill Peabody President Governor-Elect Terry Sanforc! Holiday Exodus Getting Started dayAf-lJN Q Hastily packed suitcases, an over-stuffed laundry bag, hurried good-byes and crowded cars, trains, buses and planes will be the inevitable characteristics of the holiday exodus which gets underway today. The holiday officially begins tomorrow at 1 p.m., but some luckier (and more daring) souls are planning to begin the home ward trek today. Funtime of ficially ends at 8 a.m. Monday. With today's issue the DTH begins its eagerly awaited holiday respite. Publication will resume on Tuesday, Nov. 29. The staff extends its most cordial wishes for a happy holiday , to all . its readers, critics and anyone else inter ested in receiving good cheer from newspaper, people. The Continental Travel Agen cy reports that Piedmont and Eastern Airlines have scheduled extra flights to take care of the holiday rush. The agency re ports the usual heavy- airline traffic, with UNC, Dook and State students all winging homeward for Turkey day. Union Bus Station announced that as many as three extra "sections" have been added to each scheduled departure in order to accommodate the holiday-bound students. Extra sec tions have also been arranged for Sunday to facilitate the re turn trip. Staying Here For Holidays? The Nick Kearns' Combo will be featured in the GM Rendez vous Room, Saturday night at 8! Free refreshments will be avail able at this blast, sponsored by the Town Girls Association for students planning to be on cam pus during the holidays. GM will observe the follow ing holiday schedule: . Thurs day, 1:45-11' p.m.; Friday, 4-12 p.m.; Saturday, 1:45-12 p.m. and Sunday, 11 a.m.-ll p.m. - Turkey lovers won't be 'al lowed to eat holiday dinner at Lenoir; the venerated cafeteria will close after lunch Wednes day and will re-open for break fast Monday. The Pine Room will be closed from Wednesday afternoon until Sunday at 6 p.m Students staying in Chapel Hill over the holidays will find the Library closed on Thanks giving Day, but open from 9-5 on Friday and 9-1 p.m. on Sat urday. 5 p.m. will be the closing hour on Wednesday. The Li brary will also be closed all day Sunday. - Tour-Star' For N.C. Prop- C7 Schools rar By MICHAEL ROBINSON "I have chosen quality edu cation as the jock on which to build the house of my admin istration" declared governor elect Terry Sanford in a major address delivered to the South ern Conference on Education in Memorial Hall last night. Sanford called for the citizens of North Carolina to rally to the cause of quality education. He said that he was confident the people will support his sweeping, long-range "four-star program" in all its facets. Sanford enumerated four areas that he would seek to improve: 1. "Educational opportunities must be appropriate." He said educational programs should be started which will give individ ual children the chance to ex ercise particular talents whether in challenging academic courses or in vocational training. A more adequate guidance service is needed to achieve this. , Sanford : said he will present a specific program to the Gen eral Assembly to provide teach ers and training for retarded children, and to recommend a program of special school op portunities for gifted children. 2. "Education is available to all boys and girls." Sanford pledged financial help to coun ties for adequate bus facilities and school buildings. "I will propose a state school bond issue," Sanford said, "for the purpose of providing school buildings. "We must also be concerned with the quality of higher edu cation, and I shall discuss this in detail at a later date." 3. Sanford deplored the low salaries of teachers, saying the state must keep its quality teachers by paying competitive salaries. "I will recommend to the Gen eral Assembly substantial salary increases," Sanford promised. 4. "We need to support our schools and this means every body," he said. Sanford expressed hope that a lively program of encouraging private endowments to reward, exceptional teaching could be set up. He also asked parents to stand behind school boards which are striving to improve educational standards by cutting down on extra-curricular activities dur ing the week. CAMPUS SCENE A classified ad selling "two tickets to the Orange Bowl. Mrs Bill Murray, Durham." 'Under ' Milk Wood' Is Next Week Dylan Thomas' poetic mood play, "Under Milk Wood" will be the second production for the Carolina Playmakers 43rd sea son. The play, which is now in re hearsal will be presented No vember 30 through December 4th in the Playmakers Theatre at 8:30 p.m. By all indications, "Under Milk Wood" may be the most exciting, certainly the most original Playmaker dramatic production in several years. Louise Lamont, Chapel Hill actress and one of the show's principals, calls the enthusiasm engendered by the show among her fellow cast members "fan tastic. We love it. I don't know when I've seen a show work up so much excitement." By turns wistful, dreamy, and crackling with alehouse humor, Under Milk Wood" is the mas terpiece Thomas, completed shortly before his death in New York in 1953. Entitled "a play for voices," it had an early 1953 trial per formance at the Young Men's and. Young Women's Hebrew Association in New' York, with Thomas himself participating, then was expanded and broad cast on the BBC Third Pro gramme with a success that led one reviewer to exclaim, "It ex ploded on the air like a bomb a lifegiving bomb." . Four years later, after large productions at the Edinburgh Festival and in London, it was brought back to New York and became a major Broadway Z7W 4 - ? - t- '4 : - V X DORM DEADLINE Today is the deadline for ap plications for women's dormi tory rooms for second semester. A $25 deposit must be paid to the University Cashier before 3 p.m. today. LYLA-GAYE VON VALKENBERG is seen here in the role of Polly Garter in the Carolina Playmakers production of "Under Milk Wood" which will be presented Nov. 30-Decem-ber 4 in the Playmakers Theatre. Tickets are now available from the" Playmakers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall and at Ledbeller-Pickard's in downtown Chapel Hill. All seats are reserved at $150 each. crowd-packer. The play's loose structure, which spans one day, morning to night, in the life of Llareggub natives, permits a variety of in terpretations. For the 63 roles required in the play, Fitz-Simons has chosen a cast of 20, six women, ten men and four children, with many of the smaller roles being handled by one actor at once. To simplify changes as well as enhance the play's unity and style, costume designer Irene Smart Rains is creating for the men and for the women a basic costume to which can be added a bonnet, an apron, or a sailor's cap as the role may require. Cast members, in addition to Miss Lamont, are Mary Law rence, Dot Silver, Shirley Dixon, Lyla-Gaye Van Valkenburgh, Anne Fitzgibbon, Bill Trotman, Paul Gold, Randy Umberger; Jerry Walker, Skip Avery, Walter Smith, Tommy Thomas, Lloyd Infinger, George O'Han lon and Pete Shepherd. The children's parts will be played by Jimmy Vine, David Hawkins, Barbara Tyroler and Trisha Simmons. Tickets are now available from the Playmakers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall (next to the Scuttlebutt) and down town at Ledbetter-Pickard's. All seats are reserved at $1.50 each. The Playmakers Business Of fice will be closed - during the Thanksgiving holidays but will reopen on Monday, Nov. 23th. A ,. 1 : r $1 a.yili yy A 'L World News In Brief By United Press International A V v 7 Clark Clifford Lawyer New Kennedy Deputy PALM BEACH, Fla. President-elect John F. Kennedy worked today on a complicated blueprint of his new govern ment with Clark M. Clifford, a handsome Washington lawyer who could end up as one of the powers of the administration he is helping to construct. Clifford arrived late Sunday from a series of Washington conferences with representatives of President Eisenhower on the orderly transition of government. This is a problem that involves not only getting new people into key jobs, but getting the current job-holders out. Norstad Proposes Nuclear Pool PARIS Gen. Lauris E. Norstad, supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe, proposed today that a pool of nuclear weapons be set up for the alliance with each of the 15 member countries having an equal voice in control of their use. Only the United States and Britain could supply A-bombs to such a pool. U.S. law would have to be amended to carry out the Norstad plan. U.N. 'Rapidly Going Broke' UNITED. NATIONS, N.Y. Secretary General Dag Ham marskjold announced Monday the United Nations was rapidly going broke and he may have to "liquidate" the U.N. military operation in the Congo. Hammarskjold, in a bombshell report to the Budget Com mittee, said he expected the world peace organization to end up with an unprecedented cash deficit of at least S2 million by Dec. 31. He said the only way "insolvency" could be avoided and the critical peace operation continued in the Congo was through a radical step-up of contributions by member governments. Congo Soldiers Attack U.N. Forces LEOPOLD VILLE, The Congo - Congolese soldiers firing rifles, machine guns and armored car cannon attacked United Nations forces protecting the Ghana Embassy Monday night in a bloody assault designed to drive out the leftwing Ghanaian ambassador. . Casualites were taken to the U.N. hospital nearby and a hospital spokesman said he heard reports army stronsman Col. Joseph Mobutu was among the wounded. A Ghanian official reported from his beleaguered embassy that the Congolese had killed seven Tunisian U.N. troops and wounded seven more. Three wounded Tunisians and one Congolese were admitted to the U.N. hospital. I I f f I

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