U.!?.e. LIrary ,: Serials "ppt. bqs star Chapel "HI tl ttC. 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." Weather Sunny and not as cold. Volume LXIX, No. 64 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL,- NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issue L UMUMBA THROUGH STRE. Mobutu's Troop. Make Capture LEOPOLD VILLE (UPI) Col. Joseph Mobutu's troops returned fugitive Premier Patrice Lumumba to this Congo capital Friday night and paraded him in dis grace, before jeering throngs, his hands tied behind his back. Soldiers punched him, yanked his hair and threw him into an army jail. Lumumba, who slipped past the Congolese strong man's guards last Sunday and escaped from Leopoldville, was captured Thursday night in Port Francqui, 420 miles east of here, by Mobutu's gendarmes .who threatened to shoot him if he -were not sent back to Leo poldville at .once. A special DC-3 loaded with commandoes fetched him back to : the capital early Friday .night and Lumumba Was hauled off the plane at gunpoint, forced to ride past his former support ers as he squatted in an army truck, and jailed after a face to-f ace meeting with the 30 year-old .Mobutu. . ' Appeared Sullen Mobutu, an array colonel and chief of staff who was once the goateed premier's firm sup porter, slowly ' swung his gaze toward Lumumba- as he, was brought . to . his riverside resi dence. He spoke, but apparently not to. Lumumba, these words: "You see how my soldiers obey me." . " ' '. ' i Arriving with Lumumba were two former Lumumba cabinet members, Theodore Bonde and tieorges urerueii, , ana a secre tary, Jerome . Mutehungu. , Lu mumba and the others marched cut of the plane at gunpoint. Lumumba glanced around and frowned. The tall, slim former premier appeared sullen. He said nothing. - The prisoners were nudged and shoved into a waiting weapons carried and it moved off escorted by a jeep and an army truck. Another army es Travel Series Sets Northern Aenture "Beyond the Northern Ligths," an exciting drama of scientific exploration in the Arctic, will be the second presentation of the' Graham Memorial Travel Series, scheduled for - 8 p.m. Wednesday in Memorial Hall. Rear Admiral Donald B. Mac Millan, one of the three living members of the original dozen American Arctic explorers, will present the film-lecture. . Noted traveler Lowell Thom as has described MacMillan as "one of the foremost living ex plorers ( a grand story teller, one of the most fascinating per sonalities on the platform. I'd go many miles to hear MacMil lan any. day." A veteran of 35 Arctic expedi tions, Admiral MacMillan made hisr first polar trip in 1908 as an assistant on Admiral Peary's North , Polar Expedition. His most recent trip was made "in 1959. He has been awarded a spec ial Congressional medal for "distinguished service in ex ploration, . among many other decorations including the Na tional Geographic Society Gold Medal and the Elisha Kent Kane Gold Medal. Shortly before Admiral Mac Millan sailed on his last trip, The Boston Herald editorially commented as follows: "As a scientist, a military man, a citi zen, a teacher and as one of the last great explorers he deserves every honor the nation can give him." Tickets for "Beyond the Northern lights" will be avail able at the door for SO cents. cort took them into the city, Lumumba squatting on the floor of the weapons carrier in his shirtsleeves. v ... . , - - Taunts and jeers from the crowd along the way filled the air. "It's Lumumba" The military motorcade slow ed as it reached Leopoldyille's African quarter where Congo lese streamed into the streets to hoot and boo their former leader. . . "It's Lumumba," they shouted in glee. Hundreds of soldiers at Camp Binza greeted Lumumba with a chorus of snickers and peals of laughter when he was taken to the guardhouse only a few hundred yards Jrom Mobutu's residence. A woman and boy, identified as Mrs. Lumumba and her son, were aboard. the DC3 and were broUght to ; Camp Binza but LprP trpatprf Wntiv. Information Minister Anicet Kashamura and former. Defense Minister Mau rice Mpolo, reported captured with Lumumba, were not aboard the plane. - While Lumumba was being brought back to Leopoldville his supporters in Stanleyville, unaware of his capture, cracked down on Europeans, mainly Belgian residents. Fourteen Bel gians were expelled and many others were rounded up by Lu mumba men. World News in Brief k m I Harvard's Bell Named New Budget Director WASHINGTON (UPI) David E. Bell, Harvard University professor and former Truman aide, was selected today as budget director for President-elect John F. Kennedy's adminis tration. Kennedy said Bell would play "a large and vital role" in the operation of the new administration. Kennedy planned to announce another high-level appoint ment to his administration by noon Saturday. . Russian Satellite Disappears BEDFORD, Mass. (UPI) The Russian zoo satellite dis appeared from its normal orbit today and U. S. Air Force space trackers here said radar sightings showed that the space craft was returned to earth, transferred, to a new orbit or "burned up in the atmosphere." . Despite a Moscow radio announcement that the zoo space ship was still "alive" at a.m. est, the national space surveil lance control center reported that its more than 100 tracking stations could not hear the satellite's radio and could, not locate it by radar. U. S. Says Cuba Red-Controlled . WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States for the first time today officially labeled Cuban Premier Fidel Castro's gov ernment as Communist-controlled. It did so whcrT President Eisenhower invoked the "Kersten amendment" in the Mutual Security Act authorizing expendi ture of up to $1 million to aid needy Cuban refugees in Florida and elsewhere. ' Archbishop Calls On Pope VATICAN CITY (UPI) The Most Rev. Dr. Geoffrey Fran cis Fisher, primate of the Church "of England, called on Pope John XXIII for 65 minutes Friday in what; was described as "a notable event in the history of church relations." Both Anglicans and Catholics agreed Friday night the meeting had done much to ease the relations between the two churches. A Vatican source commented, "The ice has . been broken." ETS EST DISGRACE I ijHKvaaavBaav Ingres t 4 V - i - " s i - ' '5 - t 6 i - FLYING HIGH above the Morehead. Planetarium Friday .afternoon -was ."Satel lobn II'. a miniature of .the Echo' I satel- f lite currently orbiting around the earth. The silver ball is shown in detail in -the photo latelloon Students, faculty and passers by ih the Planetarium area' yes terday noticed : s o'm e t h i n g strange in the air. :" Kiddies on campus" for "The Star" of Bethlehem" ' showing craned their little necks toward the Morehead dome. - Bouncing in the breeze atop the Planetarium was a bright silver ball a Satelloon, minia ture of Echo I Satellite. The six-foot model of ,the 100-foot satellite is the outdoor ' If P 1 1 IS PARADED .' '4' -jwgg - . X ; Model Of Echo I - IBlies advertising for the 'Echo' I - ex hibit ' in ' Mbrehead's basement exhibit hall. ' 1 ; ' ' ' Made of -mil-" Mylar with a metalized rnirror ' surface, the Satelloon is a product of G.: T. Schjeldahl - Co. It is ' filled with helium : (to lift ; it) and air (to weight it) and secured by lines to the roof. - Actually- this is the second such balloon Planetarium Man ager A. F. Jenzanb has flown above the building this week. ver ' By SUSAN LEWIS Violence - struck , the - usually placid Dook University campus late Wednesday night, and for once the trouble was not caused by Carolina gents. Toilet paper flew and bonfires raged; as the Gothic rockpile on the outskirts ;of Chapel Hill seethed with discontent and de fiance. .' ' - It seems that the Dookmen; long noted for their intellectual pursuits, were annoyed because their Christmas holiday sched ule does not allow sufficient time for students to : trek to Texas for the Jan.- 2 Cotton Bowl game.. . . Dook footballers, , despite a recent 7-6 loss to. underdog Carolina, will meet Arkansas in the Dallas football classic. However, it doesn't appear that a student cheering section will follow the Devil gridders to Big D. University regulations dictate that triple cuts' be given for classes missed on the day after a holiday. The Dookmen need official cancellation of classes if they, are to have a New Year's weekend in the Texas sunshine. .Some 500 Devils hanged and burned an effigy of-Dn R. Tay lor Cole, Duke provost, in the main' quad of' West campus Wednesday night. ' : They then marched to Presi dent Deryl Hart's home and chanted, "We want a day." Hart told them he would con fer Thursday with faculty.- and student - leaders. Unaware that the promised Above Duke Students Riot mm inset, and the careful observer may see pho tographer rIra .. Blaustein reflected on its surface., (He's-, in the, center of the panel topped by the initials. "G.T.") Gamp us - Satelloon I was put up Mon day, but left its moorings that same day and headed northeast. Jenzano immediately peti tioned the manufacturer for an other. ; Satelloon II arrived Thurs day, but hgih winds prohibited its dome installation until yes terday. Today it flies high, a helium filled monument to its larger cousin, Echo I, encirling the earth. conference had been held, dem onstrators again ' assembled Thursday night at 11:30. In a two-hour demonstration, 350 marched several miles to the homes of three administra tors. Hart was first on the list. The President appeared at the door, saying he would again confer with student leaders. Provost Cole was next visit ed. Toilet paper was strewn in his yard, a shutter ripped from a window, a fence trampled and street signs removed. But. for all the noise, Cole failed to appear. Vice-president Herbert Her ring's home was last. His lawn was the scene of several bon fires and a charred beam thrown on his back porch. But Herring didn't appear either. Durham police witnessed the action but no official action was taken. . " Coeds were not involved either night as the demonstra tions occurred after coed cur few. . Students may petition the Undergraduate Faculty Council, which - has the power to alter Duke's calendar. According to Duke Chronicle Editor Leonard Pardue, how ever, this probably will have little effect on ' the original schedule. 'Apparently the administra tion is opposed to athletic em phasis," Pardue said, "and, there ' a '- possibility that they may issue a statement of anti-bowl sentiYvmw n irf rv .pi ),,.! .ii Oiiit ,inii .-I i tii Short Holiday On The Campus National Student Association will meet Monday at 5 in Roland Parker 1 to have the Yack pic ture retaken. The Carolina Gentlemen will appear tonight at the Castle Supper Club in Durham. This is the second of two , engagements. They can also be heard every Saturday at . 5 on WUNC-FM radio. "Madras to Calcutta," a pro gram of Indian life, will be pre sented by the Indian students on campus this Sunday at 4 in the lounge of second ' floor Howell Hall. The program is sponsored by the Cosmopolitan Club. All students who have not seen their Yack proofs are to come to GM sometime this week from 3 to 6 p.m. This is the last opportunity. A Christmas party for under privileged children, sponsored by the Carolina Women's Coun cil and the Interdormitory Coun cil, will be held Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 14, in Cobb basement. Gifts, . refreshments and Santa Claus will highlight the event. See Adlaide Cro martie for information. Cobb Dormitory is giving a party for a colored orphanage in Cobb basement. The party will be complete with all the Yule tide trimmings, including Santa Claus. Contact Jim Magner, sec ond floor Cobb, for further information. ry&v frog ram 4 Intramural Manag Four dormitory intramural managers will be selected to re ceive salaries for the rest of the 1960-61 year. This is an experimental pro gram of the Men's Interdormi tory Council and the Intramural Department. If it proves suc cessful, there is a "strong pos sibility that this program will be initiated in all men's and women's dormitories next year," said Bruce Raynor, chairman of the Intramural Committee. These four positions are open not only to the present intra mural managers but to any other interested student. Appli One Act Play Tryouts Set For Today Tryouts for three original one- act plays will be held in the Playmakers Theatre today and Sunday at 4:00 p.m. All three of the plays were written by UNC students. Au thor of "The Taste of Blarney" is Frank Murphy of Hamlet, "Unseen Enemy," a story of the Korean War was written by Oliver Bloomer of Whitakers, and "Oh, the Mysteries of Love!" is a farce by William Corpening from Hendersonville. There are parts for 13 men and 10 women. Three graduate students of the Department of Dramatic Art will direct the three plays. Shirley Dixon of Greenville will direct "The Taste of Blarney"; Anne Fitzgibbon. of Chapel Hill will direct "Oh, the Mysteries of Love," and Edith Jacobs of New York City will direct "Un seen Enemy." The one-act bill of plays will be presented on the 15th and 16th of December at 7:30 p.m. in the Playmakers Theatre. The presentation, of original one-act plays is a long-standing practice of the Playmakers. Over 800 new plays have been produced by the Playmakers since 1918. All phases of production of this bill of one-acts will, be executed by students fcAAAAO ,m,mA 'The Positive Hour' Set. In GM Tonight A psychologist at Western State Hospital in Virginia and a Pennsylvania prep school teacher will represent opposite ends of life's, totem pole in their roles in tonight's Oak Grove Players' production of "The Positive Hour" slated for presentation in the GM Main Lounge at C o'clock. Admission .will be free. Dr.' A. W. Jeffreys, the home-spun Boyd of Margaret Collins's new play, will enforce his insistence of "high morals and clean living upon i his family, and at the conclu sion of the suspense-packed drama," leave a question with the audience as to where mod ern - man's . success - searching road is leading. The .befuddled Bob whose schemes to gain fame and de sire to win favor with both his unscrupulous wife and his stub born mother leads to eventual destruction, is played by Walter Hoesel of the Germantown Academy in Pennsylvania. The mother, his wife and the other characters of the play are portrayed by a wide variety of professional " personalities: a civil, engineer, a tutor, a col lege textbook representative, a secretary, a school teacher and a Mary Baldwin College drama major. All are veterans of the Oak Grove Players' "experimental" theater which, will present "The Positive Hour" here tonight. Located in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, the novel outdoor Oak Grove Theater pre sents : five .' plays each summer ranging from the popular choice to the more difficult- and lesser known plays. One of each season's bill-of-fare is an origi nal play like "The Positive ers cation blanks may be picked up at - the Intramural Office in Woollen Gym or at the IDC of fice in the basement of Smith Dormitory on Monday, Tues day, or Wednesday. The deadline is 6:00 p.m. Wednesday. Interviews will be held Wed nesday night at 7 by a Selections Board chosen by the IDC and the Intramural Department. The Intramural Committee urges all dormitory presidents and IDC representatives to sug gest to interested residents of their dorms, that they apply for the positions. . To Pay Blind Captain Cat , f' ' ' s - I I BILL TROTMAN is seen in the role of Blind Captain Cat in the Carolina Playmakers production of Dylan Thomas' "Under Milk Wood", which, opened Wednesday in the Playmakers Theatre and will run through Sunday. Dec. 4th. Standing room only is available. Standing room only in the Playmakers Theatre means . sitting on the carpeleJ riser. . ..r... ; . ; Hour." Profits from the summer pro ductions are put back into the theater for new equipment and to finance its winter produc tions.' Dr. Fletcher Collins, director and producer at the Oak Grove is head of dramatics at Mary Baldwin College. The outdoor theater, is located on his farm north of Staunton, Va., and a dozen or more members of the troupe spend the season at his home. His return to Chapel Hill will find him no stranger to Carolina, for in 1940 he was president of the Carolina Dra matic Association. His wife and author of "The Positive Hour," Margaret Col lins, has written four plays which have made their initial appearance on the Oak Grove stage. Mrs. Collins also won first prize in the 1956 national James town Corporation contest for her play "Rebellion." She has had articles published in "This Week," "Scribner's Magazine," "Mademoiselle," "The Free man," and other magazines. "The Positive Hour" is brought to the campus by the drama committee of GMAB. Ad mission is free. Alaskan Journalist To Speak Here Miss Ruth Rush, a 25-ycar-old Carolina graduate, will speak on her experiences in Alaska at the UNC Press Club meeting 7:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. 5. at in ;e. The meeting will be held the Howell Hall student loun Miss. Rush, a native of Ashe- boro, will also speak on "A Woman's Role in a Man's World." She graduated from the UNC School of Journalism in 1D57. She is presently co-editor of Tha Ketchikan Daily News in Ketch ikan, Alaska. Miss Rush had always wanted to go to Alaska, so after her graduation she applied and was accepted for the Ketchikan po sition. V

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