s O I I Continued Fair and Warmer Offices in Graham Memorial TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Service HUAC Issue Siorea ON WA Y TO CEASEFIRE j jjjjjj ;UNC Profs Knew : Evans Testified A University History De- ber advising Evans on his Ph.D., rurfmm, i ontA f,Jrefused to comment to The Daily day that the department knew t)f William A. Evans appear ance in 1955 before the House Un-American Activities Com mittee. Evans, who received his A.B. and M.A. degrees at UNC, resigned his job as a history professor at Mount Olive College last Friday after college officials learned that he used the Fifth Amendment in testifying before the House committee. The information about his testi mony before the committee was not mentioned, in UNC's recommenda tion of Evans to 'Mount Olive Col lege. - Evans Says Evans said in connection with his resignation: "Some six years ago I was, in fact, an uncooperative wit ness before the House Un-American Activities Committee. I gave iio information to the committee other than that strictly required by law. . "In so doing, I made use of the Fifth Amendment and other consti tutional provisions protecting indi Vdiual rights against government en croachment . . ." Refuses to Comment George Tindall, the faculty mem- University Employs 74 New. Faculty Members For 1961-62 Seventy-four new faculty mem bers 'Joined the University staff this fall. . This total encompasses full time faculty from the Divisions of Academic Affairs and Health Affairs including research asso ciates and instructors. ' In the Division of Academic Af fairs, by departments, new facul ty are: City and Regional Planning: Asst. Prof. Lawrence D. Mann and Lecturer Karl O. Schmid; . Classics: Instructor Edwin L. -Brown; English: Instructors Mau "rice Basson, James A. Hart, Dav Rooms Being .ye The eye of the storm has passed." ..This was Housing Director Henry Wadsworth's relieved comment on fiie current on-campus housing shortage. X" "The problem has been nearly felieved now. There are only about a dozen people living in the base ment of Cobb. We think that nearly everyone that wants a room on Campus has one now." Thanks to the publicity from WCHL andT he Chapel Hill Weekly this summer, many people that had not been renting rooms before, opened them to students this year." tr Eipected a Crowd iMr. Wadsworth also said that he thought that due to the advance publicity about the housing short age this ' year that everyone came to school expecting to be crowded. 'This kept a lot of people from being terribly dissatisfied." "This situation will probably not arise next year since wc expect to open the two new seven-story dor mitories, presently under construc tion, by September 1962." Rub-a-dub-dub The shortage has been alleviated by putting three men in all the two men rooms except in Avery, Parker and Teague which have built-in fur nishings which makes adding an other occupant very difficult. In B VP, four men were put into the two-room suites. ' In an effort to make space for the men who were housed in the basement of Cobb dormitory, an extra occupant was added to the rooms on the fourth floors of-Winston, Cobb and Jayner. Three in Booms . Students who -are living in a two CTn room currently occupied by Says Tar Heel yesterday other than to say he has not heard from Evans since his resignation. C. H. Pegg, chairman of the His tory Department, also declined to comment for publication and Evans himself was unavailable for further comment. Yack Pictures Senior pictures for the 1962 Yack ety Yack will be taken 1-6 p.m. Monday through Friday this week in the basement of Graham Memo rial. Men are required to wear a dark jacket and dark tie, women are to wear black sweater and pearls. Dick Reppucci, co-editor, suggested that students report early in the week and as early in the afternoon as pos sible for faster service. Reppucci also said that these pic tures will also be used for the fra ternity and sorority sections and any senior not reporting may wait until a later scheduled week and pay $1.50 for Greek pictures. The co-editor also announced that the Yack would receive new students who are interested in working on the yearbook from 1-6 p.m. any day this week. id Hughes, W e 1 d o n Thornton, Florine. M. -Viverette. and James. W. Tuttleton: . Germanic Languages and Rus sion: Instructors Mrs. Ttia Stam baugh and Vasa Milhailovich. History: Instructors Douglas D. Hale, Paul J. Pinckey and John E. Semonche; Mathematics: As st. Prof. Ancel C. Mewborn; Nav al Science: Lt. Peter S. Shearer, Lt. (j.g.) Haywood H. Harrell, Lt. Commander Randolph Moore, Lt. (j.g.) George S. Smith, Lt. James Harkins. Philosophy: Asst. Profs. Rich ard A. Smyth and John P. Dre- Found By All Of Storm' Passed For Housing Director Wadsworth; Few Out three men may request a refund of their rent. The refund is made on the basis of how long the student has lived in the dorm. This policy It X- 7r i l. ....i' ''K.v . V r 1 ft I J'f '-IK I MODERN LIVING UNC's answer to split-level living is the basement of Cobb Dormitory "tempor ary" residence of about 12 Carolina students. Meanwhile, the University is working to come up with permanent living space for these students. The basement contains a bureau for each bunk bed, but not cough desks to go around. Photo by Jim Wallace Campus Briefs The debate team will hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday in 105 Caldwell. All interested students have been invited to attend. No pre vious experience is required. This year the team will debate, Re solved: That labor organizations should be under the jurisdiction of antitrust legislation. The Railway Express Agency has moved into a new office and ter minal facilities at 207 E. Main St., Carrboro. The new facilities will continue to serve Carrboro, Chapel Hill and Carolina. All student government commit tees will be meeting some time this week. Time and place will be an nounced in the DTH. Students interested in work on WUNC-TV are asked to attend a meeting at 4 p.m. today in the tele vision studios or to contact Roger Koonce, production manager. The staff of the attorney general will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in the council room at GM. The UNC Men's Glee Club is hold ing tryouts for positions now through Sept. 30. Dr. Joel Carter, director, has announced that he and student director Bob Williamson will hold auditions for interestea ludents for the rest of this month. Dr. Carter may be contacted at 207 Hill Hall. her; Physical Education: Instruc tors Bill Lovingood Salvatore R Esposito, and Thomas II. John- son; Romance Languages: Prof. Myron Peyton; Sociology and An thropology: Reasearch Associates M. Richard Cramer, Ha.lowell Pope (also an instructor), and Al Higgins; Zoology: Asst. Prof. Elizabeth A. McMahan, Ins. Douglas Ross man; School of Business Admin istration: Asst. Prof. David C. Brown, Assoc. Prof. William Hamburger, and Lecturer J. Meade Wright; School of Educa . (Continued on page 4) allows students wlio have been able to find off-acmpus housing to move out of. the dormitories. "The students have been quite i. a r ft. k " c t I ' i I " " t I f UN .Dead. k lammarsKj o. Icicle; By United Press International "He is a man with icicles in his veins," an associate of Dag Ham marskjold once said, and he meant it as a compliment. For to Dag Hkalmar Agne Carl Hammarskjold had fallen the job of Secretary General of the United Nations a position calling for a man of tact, rare intelligence, and patience. And in the eight years in which he held the' Job, Dag Hammar skjold found that those "icicles in his veins" came in handy more than once. Hamraarskjold's life was mark ed by irony. Born July 29, 1905, in Jonkoping, Sweden, Hammar skjold spent his first 15 years in a family that looked upon "world involvement" with distrust. Yet one day he was to be guiding spirit of the United Nations, perhaps the supreme example of "involvement" between nations. Father Prime Minister Hammarskiold's father Hialmar was the Swedish prime minister who kept that Scandinavian coun try out of World War I. The eW der Hammarskjold, ever- isolation ist, also - fought -Sweden's partici pation in the League of . Nations, forerunner of the United Nations. But Dag Hammarskjold, scion of an aristocratic family that played important political ropes in Swedish history for more than 200 years, was a sensitive, thoughtful, and at once hardheaded young man who looked beyond his family horizon. He studied economics at Uppsala and Stockholm universities, receiv ing a doctorate from the latter in 1934. In his school days he admired the advanced economic theories of cooperative this fall. I would say that this has been one of my most pleasant years since I have been here," (Mr. Wadsworth said. 4,4 i .11... if .Lead. ill Com o m His Britain's John Maynard Keynes, i As a student and throughout his life, Hammarskjold was regarded as a shy, modest and scholarly man who apparently preferred to curl up with a volume of T. S. Eliot poems or the writings of Goethe, Proust, and Joyce than to be a man-about-town. Once, a friend and fellow eco nomist, Bertil Ohlin, attempted to act as matchmaker between Ham marskjold and a desirable girl. The would-be romance fizzled and Ohlin shrugged "Apparently the girl didn't like T. S. Eliot." Hammarskjold Never Married Hammarskjold's early career was one of steady success: Secretary of the Swedish Commission of Un employment, 1930-34; Assistant Pro fessor of Economics at Stockholm University, 1933; Secretary of the Bank of Sweden, 1935-36 and chair man of the board, 1941-48; Under secretary of State in the Ministry of Finance, 1938-45. Hammarskjold, who considered himself "proudly" a civil servant, seemed to withdraw more and more from active social life as his career- in public service -advanced. After World War II, he served DTH STAFF MEETING All old and new members of the Daily Tar Heel staff should re port to a general staff meeting to be held Wednesday at . 4 p.m. in the DTH office. AD persons inter ested in working on the paper staff should come to this organ izational meeting. Students 9 Helpmates In Old Rut Husbands are going back to school and their wives are going back to babysitting, TV watching, and house keepingthe same old rut. However, UNC student wives have a chance to improve themselves and meet each other while their hus bands are busy preparing for the future. As long as their husband is enrolled in some part of the Uni versity regardless of the depart ment or the class a girl is eligible for membership in the UNC Student Wives Club. The club will hold its first meet- jing Tuesday night, Sept. 19, at 8 o'clock, upstairs in Graham Memo rial, according to Mrs. James Gentry, president. The whole program will be de signed to teach . the student wives more about the chj and the uni versity where to shop and save, what- to do for fun, about medical and dental services. There will be gifts and prizes for the get-acquainted activities. The evening will close with refreshments and a social hour. Among the other programs plan ned for this first semester are talks by Mrs. William Aycock, wife of the chancellor, and Dr. Robert Sen ior, local pediatrician; a make-up demonstration by a Chapel Hill cosmetician; cooking and Christmas decorating demonstrations; a Christ inas bazaar, ami a combination caroling-gift making session. Informal instruction, and practice in bridge, knitting, sewing, and other hobbies will be included dur ing the social portion of the eve nings. Another phase of the club's ac tivities is a baby-sitting , co-op that doesn't cost the members anything except some of their spare time. Other officers are Mrs. Anne Thaxton. vice-president; Mrs. Betty Donaghy, secretary; Mrs. Nancy Fawcett, treasurer, and Mrs. Sandy Blodrow, program chairman. aniinar "P go d Mad Veins Sweden in a variety of economic and foreign assignments. He was deputy foreign minister, 1951-53, and served also as financial ad visor to the Foreign Ministry. He also served as Swedish delegate to the Paris conference in 1947, and as delegate to the Organization for European Economic Cooperation in 1948. It was when he came to the United Nations in 1949 as a member of the Swedish delegation that Ham marskjold began, in his quiet, au thoritative way, to draw the admir ing attention of powers in the Secretariat. Gardner Portrait Will Be Presented A portrait of former Governor O. Max Gardner will be present ed to the University in cere monies at Hill Hall Saturday, September 30, at 11 a.m. ; Painted by New York, artist Albert Murray, " the ' portrait is the gift to the University by the Gardner family and will be pre sented by Mrs. O. Max Gardner of Shelby and will be received by President William C. Friday. Governor Gardner was in of fice when the three institutions, the University at Chapel Hill, State College in Raleigh and Wo man's College in Greensboro were consolidated into one Uni versity. Governor Gardner con sidered Consolidation one of the major attainments of his career. He died in 1947 after, his appoint ment as Ambassador from the United States to the Court of Saint James and was on the point of departing from New York for London when he was stricken. Former Presidents of the Uni versity since consolidation will speak: Frank P. Graham and Gordon Gray. Others to take part will include Governor Ter ry Sanford and former Governor Luther Hodges, now Secretary of Commerce. ; O. Max Gardner III of Shelby will participate in the actual un veiling of the portrait. Chan cellor Emeritus Robert B. House of Chapel Hill will pronounce the invocation, and the Reverend Marion DuBose Jr., minister of the Kings Mountain Baptist Church, will deliver the benedic tion. A large number of people in side the state will be present for WORLD npif : NEWS (0:, BRIEFS By United Press International Adenauer Rejects Bid BONN Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who lost his absolute majority in Partiament in Sunday's elections, Monday rejected an opposition Socialist proposal that an all-party coalition gov ernment be formed for West Germany. There were strong indications that Adenauer's 12 year tenuer as chancellor may be coming to an end. The balance of power in Parliament is held by the Free Democrats whose leader said the price for their support is Adenauer's surrender of the chancel lorship. . JFK Will Appear WASHINGTON President Kennedy decided late Monday to make a personal address before the United Nations General Assembly to reassert U.S. support of the policies carried out by Dag Hammarskjold. The White House said Kennedy would appear before the world organization late this week or early next week. Kennedy's decision was reached after he expressed a "deep sense of shock and loss" over the death of Hammarskjold in a plane crash in Africa. The precise subject of his address was not disclosed. Jo ane r - f i ' ' ' S f f ' ! J' V' $ . & ; 5 r- - 'Cxi Hammarskjold the ceremonies, which will be open to the public. The event was scheduled on the day that the University and State College play each other in football in Kenan Stadium here. Governor Gardner was an. alumnus of both State College and the Uni versity at Chapel Hill. Chancellors of the three insititutions will be present, William B. Aycock of Chapel Hill; Otis Singletary of Greensboro; and John Caldwell of Raleigh. Cardboarders Will Organize For Fall Term The NC Cardboard Club will hold its organizational meeting of the year in Roland Parker Lounge No. 3 at Graham Memorial 7 p.m. Thursday. Students interested in joining the club, which produces card stunts during halftime at all home foot ball games, are invited to attend this meeting. Officers of the organization will be present to explain its functions and to answer questions. New mem bers will also be able to select a specific staff on which to work. Students who miss the first meet ing may join later by contacting an officer of the club in its offices on the second floor of Emerson Stad ium. . Willy Brandt j , i -' i- ,j old Survivor eports OSlOil By RAY MOLONEY (United Press International) NDOLA, Northern Rhod;sia Secretary General Dag ILimmar skjold was killed Monday on a peace mission in thr Congo when his white United Nations plane crashed in a wood of young trees seven miles from the Ndola air port. The one survivor among the 14 persons on the DC6B said there were explosions, aboard the four engine aircraft shortly before it smashed into the ground and burned. The badly burned survivor, identi fied as Harold Julian, a UjN. guard and American citizen, also told res cuers that Hammarskjold at the last minute decided not to land at Ndola for a cease-fire rendezvous with Katanga Province President Moishe Tshombe whose warriors were still fighting U.N. troops. Shortly after the 56-year-old Hammarskjold ordered his pilot to change his course, there was an ex plosion aboard the plane followed by several smaller explosions, Julian said. ' Then the white-painted plane hit a lsdge and caught fire. Jacques Poujalat, Swiss U.N. as sistant -at Leopoldville. said two engines of the DC6B were damaged by Katanga jet fighter fire or by ground fire from the Katangese troops at Elizabethville airport early Sunday during a strafing at tack. It was not clear whether the en gines had been replaced. The plane returned to Leopold ville later Sunday for Hammar skjold's flight to Ndola. Death Shocks Delegates The death of the cool, courageous Hammarskjold came as a stunning shock to the United Nations dele gates assembled in New York on the eve of their critical 16th Gen eral Assembly. The crash succeeded where So viet Premier Khrushchev had failed in removing Hammarskjold as secre tary general, a post he had held for the past eight years. Khrushchev had demanded Ham marskjold's removal in favor of a "troika" a three-man directorate (Continued on page 6) Traffic uies Traffic regulations, including a promise of stringent enforcement, have been announced for the fall semester. All freshmen and sophomores not having a C average cure not eligible to keep a car in or around Chapel Hill. Any student who owns or operates an automobile in Chapel Hill must register it with the Dean of Student Affairs, 206 South Building, and dis play a sticker on the lower right hand corner of the windshield. Failure to comply with this shall subject the student to termination of his University registration and to the usual University fee of $5 charged for re-enrollment. He also may not be eligible to have an automobile. $2.50 Fee A fee of $2.50 for each automo bile will be collected at the time cf registration. No student shall park on the cam pus between the hours of 7:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. Monday through Friday, and between the hours of 4:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. on Saturdays. Illegally parked cars may be towed away at the owner's expense. A new regulation authorizes the Dean of Student Affairs to suspend or revoke permits issued to stu dents who commit five or more vio lations a year. The business manager is author ized to suspend or revoke permits issued to staff members who com mit five cr more traffic offenses. R Exp R