i I f" Weather Fair with temperatures in 508. 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 ol expression is the bacKooiiK of an academic community." Volume LXIX, No. 96 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1961 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Paaes This Is ue C f I I I V i I I 1 Representatives' Resolution Cites Billy Garmichael A resolution honoring the late William D. Carmichael Jr. was passed yesterday by the N. C. House of Representatives. Carmichael was vice-presi dent and finance officer of the Consolidated University at the time of his death, January 27. 20 Years Service He had served the C.U. for over 20 years, during which time he was always involved in some way with the preparation and presentation of the Univer sity's budget. Early last December he ap peared before the full Board of Trustees to help President Wil liam Friday present the C.U.'s position in reference to the re duced State Board of Higher Education recommendations. During Carmichael's years with the C.U. he was controller, acting president (1949-50), fi nance officer, and vice-president. University Additions Among the additions to the fhree University campuses at tributed substantially to Car michael's leadership are: the educational television station WUNC-TV; Morehead Plane tarium; Morehead Scholarships; N. C. Memorial Hospital; and the related Health Affairs cen ter; the Atomic Reactor at State College; Reynolds Coliseum; and numerous buildings at Woman's College. Mental Hospital Visits Arranged For New Term ,; Visits to the Dorothea Dix Hospital will soon begin for the spring semester. Any student who is interested must sign up Tuesday, February 14 at the Y. The weekly seminar, open to both townspeople and students, will meet for a supper and pro gram at 6 p.m. Tuesday in Le noir Hall. Layman's Role Dr. Walter Sikes, psychiatrist and superintendent of Dix Hos pital, will speak on the role of the layman in helping the men tally disturbed. These visits by students not only give the patients contact with reality, but they give the students a chance to learn about mental disorders. ; Students may sign up at the Y for the desired day on which they would like to go to Dix. Visits are made weekly. DEADLINE SET FOR 'QUARTERLY' MATERIAL . The deadline for writing sub mitted by students for the spring issue of the Carolina Quarterly is Wednesday, Febru ary 15th. Richard Rickcrt, editor of the Quarterly, announced that the editors want a broad range of writing for their selection. There is a particular need for better poetry written by the students. . The Quarterly offers a prize of $50 for the best fiction pub lished this year, and tvo poetry prizes of $25 each. , Rickcrt also called for more assistance from undergraduates in editing the Quarterly. He em phasized the - need for exper ience carried over into editing the magazine next year. The editors need, special help now from students who know contemporary poetry well enough to judge new writing. ANNOUNCES PURCHASE NORTH CANAAN, Conn. (UPI) TZhe Colgate-Palmolive Co. has purchased the Williams Division of Unecelled Chemical Corp. for $3 million, it was an nounced Monday. Colgate said no management changes are planned for the factory, ' which employs 100 persons. The local plant makes "Wash 'n Dn," compact paper product for waterless washing. -it . it t 1 , Mr. Haymaker and George Daniel of the UNC faculty try on masks for the Mardi Town To itli Masked By Kaiherine AIsop Chapel Hill's first Mardi Gras, timed to. coincide with St. Val entine's Day, will be celebrated with a masked ball on Tues day night, at the local American Legion Hut. Traditionally the last Tuesday before the beginning of tho Lenten season, Mardi Gras is characterized by f unmaking, dancing, good eating and every one coming "en masque." The . coming Mardi Gras Masked Ball will possess all of these characteristics plus a few unique ones of its own. It will probably be the first Mardi Gras held in North Carolina's history and is being planned on a large scale. Prizes will be awarded for the best costumes. The judges for the costumes are Mr. and Mrs. Kay Kaiser, Mrs. William Aycock and .UNC's Dean of Women, Katherine Carmichael. Entertainment will include a magician; singer Marilyn Zschau; and dancer Barbara Bounds. Music will be provided by Nick Kearns' orchestra and 'he Strange Ones 9 Free Flick "The Strange Ones," called a "remarkably beautiful" French film, will be tonight's featured Sunday Cinema presentation. The story, adapted from the novel "Les Enfants Terribles" by Jean Cocteau, concerns the private world of a brother and sister who share one room. They are bizarre, eccentric, lovable, . . V T JEAN COCTEAU 7:' 1 A fill' r- If -rff.""': Gras Masked Observe hors d'oeuvres will be " served throughout' the evening. The Alliance Francaise of Chapel -Hill, which is sponsor ing the Masked Ball, hopes to make this affair an annual oc currence. The purpose is to raise enough money to send a language teach er in one of Chapel Hill's pub lic schools to France for a sum mer of concentrated study. By doing this, the Alliance Francaise hopes to raise the level of foreign language edu cation in Chapel Hill by giving the teacher an opportunity to live among the French people and to gam a better understand ing of their language, literature and culture. The Chapel Hill Alliance Francaise is a member of an in ternational organization whose purpose is to promote interest and study in the French lan guage and culture. The presi dent of the Chapel Hill organ ization, begun in 1958, is Profes sor Jacques Hardre. Tickets for the event may be obtained at the Intimate Book Tonight wicked and strange people Isolated by circumstances from the world, they create a world of their own, scarcely aware of their two friends, the only outsiders admitted into their lives. Tragedy Inevitable Tragedy is inevitable when emotions begin to spin a net of strong, gossamer-thin threads about the brother and sister who are the "enfants terribles" of the story. Newsweek magazine described "The Strange Ones" as "a deep ly shadowed, eloquently de tailed study of lives beset by fire and confusions." Cocteau Wrote Script The script " for the film was written by Cocteau and there fore retains the originality ' of the 'novel. Music for the film is based on Bach and Vivaldi. The film will be shown at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall. A special short sponsored by the National Student Associa tion will be shown at approxi mately 9:10 p.m. between the two showings. Ball i 4 Ball of February 14. Holiday ues shop, Graham Memorial, or by writing to Mardi Gras, Box 362, Chapel Hill. Tickets are $5 a couple, $3 single. dav 1 IfV"Vr'!A I - ; ll World News In Brief By United Press International ft Nikita Khrushchev JFK MEETS ON RED POLICY WASHINGTON President Kennedy met today with his advisers on Russian relations in a conference which may lead to a meeting with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Krushchev within the next few months. The White House session was called by the President to chart what he hopes will be a more .dynamic American ap proach to the critical cold war issues between the United States and the Soviet. LUMUMBA'S CAR FOUND WRECKED ELISABETHVILLE, Katanga The Katanga government said today the escape car reportedly used by Patrice Lumumba to escape his makeshift jail had been found so badly wrecked in a drainage ditch the shock to the occupants "must have been violent." . , The announcement that Lumumba had met with vio lence increased the belief in some United Nations quarters that the reported escape really was a cover story for his death. There were reports the International Red Cross would be called in to try to find out if he actually had been mur dered. NAACP URGES FASTER ACTION NEW YORK The National Association for the Advance ment of Colored People urged President Kennedy Saturday to make up fcr a slow start on civil rights by taking across-the-board executive action. The NAACP made public remarks by Roy Wilkins, its executive secretary, stating that inaction .at the opening of the 87th Congress last month on the Senate filibuster rule indicated the new administration had no plans for new civil rights legislation. . RUSK MAY VISIT FAR EAST WASHINGTON Asian diplomats here were convinced today that Secretary of State Dean Rusk would visit the Far East next month on his first foreign tour. Rusk is under pressure to attend the annual meeting of the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization SEATO Council in Bangkok March 27-30. HEALTH BILL OK PREDICTED WASHINGTON A key Senate Democrat predicted Sat urday President Kennedy's controversial program to extend health benefits would win Senate approval this year. This- assessment was made by Sen. Clinton P. Ander son, D.-N.M., who said he would introduce the administra tion plan in the Senate. The hottest resistance, however, is expected in the House. The tip-off was supplied Friday , when it was learned that Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D.-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Committee refused to sponsor the Kennedy program. pill vumeeMeaciLeFS Af Lenoir Mall Serves 3, 600 Eggs Daily By Lynne Bartleti North Carolina's largest single cafeteria serves 10,000 meals every day. Itx serves 5000 first cups of coffee daily and 3600 eggs each morning. The cafeteria is Lenoir Hall, UNC's cafeteria which opened in "1940. Student service there was interrupted for three years when Lenoir was opened to the Navy Pre-Flight School located here during World War II. Ted Williams, stationed here then, is said to have socked a baseball from Old Emerson Field through a dining hall window. Twenty-one years in Lenoir has taught the cafeteria mana gers much about student tastes. They know that students are partial to hot dogs, hamburger, vegetable soup and vanilla ice cream. They find students from the North like spinach and as paragus, while turnips and black-eyed peas are favorites of those from Dixie. "Lenoir is a self-liquidating operation. All food and equip ment is bought from money that goes through registers, and we are never eligible to receive government surplus," asserts George W. Prillaman, manager since 1951. For this" reason all baking ex cept for loaf bread is done in Lenoir's own bake shop. Each ml J. F. Kennedy Jdieyman day they bake 375 dozen rolls, 30 to 40 loaves of French bread and 50 dozen corn muffins. And for lunch today he knows that two out of every three persons will choose the 40-cent special meat, two vegetables, bread and butter, coffee or tea. Friday Speaks Out On Budget Issue By Jim Clotfeller ' ."The people of the state have made it clear that they are be hind the new day in North Caro lina. They have indicated that they will support a program to qualify education." This is what President Wil liam Friday of the Consolidated University told a Raleigh meet ing Friday in reaction to the University budget controversy. The General Assembly is now charged with the duty of decid ing how much money is to be appropriated to state depart ments, including higher educa tion. On Thursday the Advisory Budget Commission presented the . legislature -with a record breaking $1.5 . billion biennium budget. But Gov. Terry Sanford said, in his budget message the same day, that the General Assembly Handbook Separation Recommended The Carolina Publications Board has voted to recommend that' student legislature con tinue separation of the Carolina Handbook from the Women's Handbook. The possibility of combining the two books was discussed in Thursday's meeting after a straw vote on the issue was taken of women students by the Women's Residence Council. The straw vote, although re sults were not known from Spencer dorm, was about 50 per cent for the continued separa tion of the two books. The Carolina Handbook is published by the Publications Board with money from legis lature. It is sent to all men en tering the University as fresh men. The usual format includes de scriptions of the University, campus life, athletics, extracur- riculars and academics. Tne women s jianabooK is published by .the WRC with money from legislature and the Dean of Women's Office. It is sent to all women entering the University for the first time, and it includes women's rules, de scriptions of campus life and the things of particular inter est to women students. The idea of the combined handbooks was developed by Susan Lewis who presented the combination case to the board She was editor of the 1960-61 Carolina Handbook and a mem ber of the board. Edith Davis. WRC chairman; Margaret Goldsborough, Wom en's Handbook editor 1960-61; and Mimi Smith appeared be fore the board to represent the opinions of the WRC and the Women's Handbook. Both sides gave reasons for and against combination, and members of the board ques tioned the two sides. The board's recommendation will go to stu dent legislature which will make the final decision on the handbooks. Called! Assault Carolina cheerleader Al Roper has been ordered to court in a case charging Duke basketball star Art Iley man with assaulting him during halftime of the recent Duke-UNC game. A subpoena was issued in Durham Friday summon ing Roper to testify, when the case comes up in Record er's Court Monday. Roper hasj stated that he wouldn't testify unless subpoenaed. McCoy Also Summoned Also subpoenaed as a witness was cheerleader Tim McCoy, Roper's fraternity brother. Ruling on a free-for-all which broke out later in the same game is expected soon from Commis- must appropriate more for edu cation than is called for by the budget (which was prepared by appointees of former Gov. Luther Hodges). The budget recommendations must next be thrashed out be fore the legislature's Appropria tions Committee. Then the recommendations will go before the complete General Assembly. All voter's bond issues (which I would include the money for a combination student union- undergraduate library at Caro lina) would have to be ratified in a general election, as well as by the legislature. It is not yet determined when the C.U. will get its budget hearing. ..Delayed Hearing C.U. officers have indicated that they don't want a hearing until after Gov. Sanford makes his promised education mes sage to the legislature, in which he will undoubtedly ask for higher school spending, and pos sibly a corresponding raise in taxes. The strands of the ball of controversy now centering around educational budget re- (Continued on page 3) Mi J ) - ! X i Ni ... I fa - r-PA . ,r, if jjiHi u.mm Miinifiaiirtlii " fi' f liii'itiii ii ii "f ii iT"' m hii iv,'WifrirtarM Hickey's Sweeties lake on Lcnnie Rcsenblulh's All Stars at Woollen Gym Monday night at 8 in the first annual Junior Classic. The Swcclics (alias lhe loolball players) will be dressed as gals and a jazz bands led by Lcs Sutcr ious will provide background music for lhe basketball hoopla. The game is a junior class project and all proceeds will go lo the University. Tickets will be 25 cenis and are on sale at the door. Into sioner Jim Weaver of the At lantic Coast Conference. A hearing was held at his office Saturday with officials of both Duke and Carolina attending. The warrant against Heynian was taken out three days after the game by a Durham attor ney. Blakewell M. Brogdcn, a Carolina graduate and former assistant prosecutor of Superior Court. Brogden was asked whether he intended to go ahead with the case although Roper said he had nothing lo do with bring ing the case and has no ill feel ing toward Duke or Hey man. Brogden replied that he had no further -comment. The warrant charges Heynian with assault and battery on Roper. According to ACC Confer ence bylaws, the commissioner is empowered to rule after the hearing, notifying the institu tions of his decision by mail. Public announcement may be made after the schools involved have been notified. Appeal Possible The school may appeal the ruling within five days after re ceiving by registered mail the notice of such action, and this appeal goes to the executive committee which must act with in one week after the filing of the appeal. The commissioner had - re ceived the game report from the officials, Charles Eckman and Joe Mills, and he also had several sets of game movies. The game at Durham, won by Duke 31-77, ended in a fight be tween some players and specta tors. Police quickly broke it up. Hey man, a sophomore, was the leading scorer with 35 points. Coach Frank McGuire said be does not favor prosecution f Heyman. I .- r

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