11 'm ")-"-p-np-1g-iiriHii'l"'"'i""Ji i-if 'n
Wednesday', f uary' 22, Isl
THE DAttY f AR HEElL
On The Campus
(Continued from page 1)
again, E. I. DuFofit, U. S. iCavy
Mine Lab, New York Life In
surance. This is the final week in
which graduation invitations
will be sold by the Order of
the Grail. They will be sold
on Wednesday and Friday from
9 a. m. to 1 p. m. in Y Court.
Columnist Lynn Nesbit will
discuss, some of the bills before
the North Carolina legislature
at a meeting of the Young De
mocrats Club tonight at 7:30 in
the Law School Court Room.
ESCAPES INJURY
PLAINFIELD, Conn. (UPI)
Irvin L. Collins, 31, . escaped in
jury early Tuesday when a fast
moving New Haven freight
train struck his car, which was
parked on the tracks.
Police . said Collins left the
highway, drove across a field
and parked on a grade crossing
where he fell asleep. He was
charged with driving under the
influence of liquor.
WHEN YOU THINK OF
DIAMONDS
THINK OF
T. L KEMP
JEWELRY
E. Franklin Si. Chapel Hill
L"
RELIGION AND
THE REBEL
BY COLIN WILSON
A passionate statement of be
liefs,, by England's exciting
young rebel. If you share the
rebellious urge, here's a chap
who has something to say to
you. Published at $4.00.
A Spring Bargain at
$1.98
THE INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
119 East Franklin Si.
Open Till 10 P.M.
3
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS '
X Rodents '
(S.A.) .
Siding' '. ;
11. Size of
type
12. Seaweeds
13. French
essayist
(poss.) ,
15. Malt
beverago
16. Size of coal
17. Like
IS. Stinging
plants -
21. Fruit
drink
22. Over
2. Nimble 19.
3. Military 1..
' 4. Consumed
E. Compass
- point
(abfcr.)
C. Founda
tions - Bulging
jar
, 8. Moslem
official
D. Monamme
dan
' fasting
period
10. Pie or
cake
4
H.
16. Roosting
bars
(poet.) -
23. Like a
wing
24. Dilemma
28. Distance
measure
29. Hawk
parrot
30. Equip
3LRe-fona
35.1am
(contracted)
36. Bronze
money
37. Humble
38. Plague
40. Old
womanish 42, Terminated
d3.West
African
seaport
44. Porticoes
45. Cleaners
etna
DOWH
2. Heathen
PEANUTS
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Can You Hit . . .
A Billiard Ball?
Head For GM
If you can hit a billiard ball,
you are eligible for the Campus
Pool Tournament. " To regis
ter, sign up in the Graham
Memorial Billiard Room by
Wednesday.
Tomorrow, all names will be
placed into a container and
will be paired by the drawing
of names. Partner drawings
will be. posted on Feb. . 23 and
the tournament will begin on
Feb. 27.
Scholastic eligibility for ath
letic participation at UNC is re
quired. The games will be played ac
cording to the rules governing
14.1 straight pool, with varia
tion in scoring.
Semi-final matches will be 75
point games and the final match
will be a 125 point game in both
the championship and consola
tion brackets. f
Foreign News Commentary:
Violence
Area Of The Dark Continent
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Violent emotions stirred by
Black Africa's determination to
guide its own destinies threaten
to erupt soon in another vast
area of the dark continent.
It is in the Central African
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE: MEMOIRS AND
SECRET CHRONICLES OF
THE COURTS OF EUROPE.
Handsome 11 -volume set, in
cludes Evelyn's Diary, St. Si
mon, Napoleon, DuBarry and
others. Only $8.50 for the set,
at the Intimate Bookshop.
NOTE TO A GIRL: CONCERN,
ing the handbag taken from
Bingham Hall keep the money
if you must, just please return
the bag. I need it very much.
Pro.
ducer
3.licliael p
20. Floral
wreath '
21. Malt
23. Oriental
nurse
24. Fool's
Yesterday Answer
33. Kind of
Dear
34. Pitchers
, 36. On the
u ocean
39. Fuss
40. Affix
41. Negative)
vote
gold
25. Garments
2S. Unit of
work
27. Sloths
31. Bamboo-
like
grasses
32. Similar
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LITTLE MAN
III 4ffti
'l woulpnt woew p&cot ceriim
Threatens In New
Federation of Rhodesia and Ny
asaland where the national as
pirations of more than 12 mil
lion Africans are running head
on into the determination of
less than half a million white
settlers determined to keep the
gains of generations.
This week, after more than
two months of bickering over
proposed constitutional reforms,
the Africans charged that Brit
ain had "sold us down the river
to the fierce and reactionary
white minorities of Central
Africa."
The Central African Federa-!
tion is a governmental hodge
podge put together by Britain in
1953, with an area equal to
California, Texas and New York
combined.
Self-Governing
Southern Rhodesia, with a
population of 233,000 Europeans,
is a self-governing British colo
ny with its own prime minis
ter.
Northern Rhodesia and Ny-
asaland are British protectorates
with a European or white
population of about 230,000.
Prime minister of the federa
tion is tough, 54-year-old Sir
Student Receives
$150 Scholarship
Miss Dorthy Dumville Hu-
lick, a student of physical ther
apy at the University of North
Carolina, has been named the
recipient of a $150 scholarship
from the United Cerebral Palsy
Research and Educational Foun
dation. The grant, which is for the
academic year 1960-61, is to be
used toward tuition costs for
the physical therapy course at
the University of North Caro
lina Medical School.
The grant stipulates that the
recipient will accept employ
ment in the field of physical
therapy under expert supervi
sion for one year after comple
tion of the physical therapy
course. It aims to stimulate in
terest in the complex problems
presented by the patients of
Cerebral Palsy.
ON CAMPUS
an p oh th fp&m uu witv
Roy Welensky, a Rhodesian of
Russian Jewish parenthood who
married a South African, Dutch
Protestant girl.
Subject To Veto
In theory, legislation which
discriminates against Africans
is subject to vote by the Brit
ish secretary of state for com
monwealth relations. In prac
tice, the veto never has been
exercised.
Southern Rhodesia's segrega
tion policies are the chief rea
son for the bitter opposition to
federation in both Northern
Rhodesia and Nyasaland, and
the reason why this week the
African leaders charged they
had been "sold down the river."
The man is the middle is
Welensky.
District Man
Many of Africa's non-whites
distrust him, yet he himself has
declared that a man should be
judged by his achievements and
not by the color of his skin.
At the moment, he does not
feel that an African-governed
federation would be good for
the community. He says:
CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY
CAIRO (UPI) The United
Arab Republic Egypt-Syria
celebrates its third anniversary
Wednesday with military pa
rades, factory openings and
other festivities.
President. Gamal Nasser will
lead the celebrations in Syria,
leaving lesser officials to pre
side at Egyptian festivities.
THREATEN WALKOUT
BROADMOOR, Eng. (UPI)
Women nurses at the Broad
moor Mental Hospital Tuesday
threatened a walkout because of
the lack of control over the pa
tients. A spokesman for the
nurses said mental patients,
who include some of the most
dangerous women prisoners in
Britain, were openly discussing
which nurse to attack next.
NOW YOU KNOW
The world's highest tempera
ture recorded under standard
conditions was taken on Sept.
13, 1922, when the mercury
climbed to 136 degrees Fahren
heit in Azizi, Tripolitania.
By Schulz
HELP! 'M BBN6 HtLD PRISONER
IN A SCHOOL LUNCH FACTOR "
By Walt Kelly
He
Mike Sings In
Folksinger Mike Hall does not
sing folk songs. He sings in the
"folk tradition."
There is quite a difference ac
cording to Hall, who sings
nightly at the Ranch House.
"Folk songs are the songs of
a particular area or country.
The folk tradition includes all
folk songs of all countries. An
old favorite may be a folk song
in Mexico, but it's not a folk
song in the United States," Hall
says.
Professional For 5 Years
He has been a professional
folksinger for five years, ever
since he left his home in Cali
fornia at age 16.
He has sung all over the Unit-
led States in concerts, night
clubs, coffee houses, high schools
and private parties.
Mexico and Europe also have
heard Hall, who is considered
by some to be "better than Pete
Seeger" (folksinger who ap
peared on campus in 1959).
With a group or as a one-man
show, Hall plays his guitar and
sings. He can play other string
instruments, but the guitar is
his favorite.
Offered Job
Although he was offered a
job years ago to do a rock 'n'
roll record, Hall passed it up
because he had rather work at
being a better folksinger. He
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GETTING DOWN TO CASES . . .WITH AN ELECTRONIC COMPUTER
Ayoung lawyer may spend many years searching through
the countless volumes in a law library before he ever
gets a chance to plead a case. His job is to research the
cases which may provide legal precedent. It's a very
necessary but tedious task.
Recently it was demonstrated that an IBM computer
could accomplish electronic retrieval of statutory law.
Nearly 2,000 statutes pertaining to a specific area of the
law were stored in the computer's memory. In response
to inquiries, the computer searched its memory at elec
tronic speed and on instructions pointed out either
citations or the full text of relevant statutes. This was
accomplished in minutes. It might have taken a young
lawyer the entire day.
You naturally
Doesn't Sing Folk Songs
ii nn
OIK 1
doesn't have an agent, so he
books his own shows.
"I don't particularly like
playing in nightclubs because
people aren't paying attention.
I like for my audience to ap
preciate the songs.
"I prefer the concert-type
show, but I have songs for all
occasions. For a concert I fig
ure the audience wants to be
there, and it has paid money
to hear good music, and that's
what I try to give them," Hall
says.
For most performances he
wears a suit, but for some shows
he dresses informally; however,
he does not use "crazy hats" to
dramatize the music.
Hall Keeps '
Hall keeps his shows to sing
ing and giving a little historical
background to the songs. . He
doesn't tell jokes or try to be a
comic.
Background to the songs is
important according to Hall.
"Some love songs would be
schmaltzy if they were trans
lated into English from, say,
Spanish or Israeli," he says. Hall
has a repertoire of about 400
songs including songs in Eng
lish, Spanish, French, Israeli
and German.
Favorite Song
"I guess my favorite is one
that I've sung only five or six
times in Chapel Hill. It's about
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BYWARNEfl D
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nave a Deuer cnance 10 grow wun
9 m
racMtiion
seven men arid a donkey going
to the" Witticorhe Fair.' Usually
people think it will be some
thing they've already heard . . .
I will not sing 'Scotch and
Soda.' ,
"This is not because the King
ston Trio has recorded it, but
my style differs. When I sing
it, people say, 'That's fine, but
what did you do to it? The Trio
doesn't sing it that way'," Hall
recalls.
In a way Hall is ahead and
behind his times. He was sing
ing in the folk tradition before
it became popular, and he plans
to continue in the folk tradition.
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'
Putting computers to work in unusual ways is not new
at IBM. Computers are now doing remarkable jobs in
interesting and important areas of business, industry,
science and government.
If you are interested in a company that offers you an
exciting career with virtually unlimited growth potential,
then you should investigate IBM. Positions are open in re
search, development, programming and manufacturing.
.The IBM representative will be glad to discuss any one
of these fields with you. Your placement office can give
you further information and arrange for an appointment.
Or you may write, outlining your background and
interests, to: Manager of Technical Employment, IBM
Corporation, 590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N.Y.
TT
Tom"?
a srumu bumpany. 1 1 f
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Grail Uins i
To Study
?
, 5
J 4 . 4 .
Jerry Hillard, graduate r ' u -dent
at UNC, has received a no
tary Foundation Fellow.-.hip for
study abroad during the lTJl
62 academic year.
The award was announced by
the Rotary International, a
world-wide service club organ
ization. As one of 133 students from
33 countries to receive thi.3
honor, Hillard will study busi
ness administration and eco
nomics at one of the major Eu
ropean universities.
The Rotary Club of Salis
bury, Hillard's hometown, rec
ommended him for the fellow
ship. 1
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