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Box 870 Chaps l HiZA.Bh&. And A Cry Remove All cars should be moved from Raleigh Street today, ac cording to a notice near Joy ner Dorm. The road is to be paved. See Edits, Page Two Offices in Graham Memorial WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Service 'Today's Revolutions' Topic Of Next Carolina Symposium Dr. Crane Brinton of Harvard University and Sen. Gale McGee of Wyoming are two of the sev eral speakers who will discuss "Today's Revolutions" at the April 1-5, 1962, Carolina Symposium, ac cording to Joe Oppenheimer, chair man of the Symposium's executive committee. Dr. Brinton, co-author of sev eral required reading textbooks in UNC's "Modern Civilization" course", will begin the series April 1 with a discussion of "The Concept of Revolution." Sen. McGee, an educator and presently the youngest Senior Senator, in; Congress, will speak April 3 on "Political Revolutions." The Symposium will feature sev eral other nationally-known fig ures, to be announced later. Each will discuss some aspect of cur rent social, political, economic, technological, literary and artistic "revolutions." In addition, each speaker will be requested to remain on campus the day following his lecture to participate with students in class- Exams To e Given Prof. IC C. Frazer of the De partment of Political Science an nounced that the next written For eign Service exam will be Dec. 9. The one-day exam will cover stu dent's ability in English expression and general background. There will be an oral test also. Candidates for the exam must be 21-23 years old. Applications may be obtained from: Capital Board of Examiner Foreign Serv ice, State Dept., Wash. 25, D. C. and must be filed before Oct. 23. Pamphlets can be obtained from the Political Science Department office. The newly ' appointed officers serve the first term in Washing ton or at one of 290 embassies, le gations or consulates. Starting sal ary is $5625-$6345 a year. UNC Student Said Improved Jerry Knight, 21:year-old UNC student injured. Sunday when, he fell 40 feet into rocky' Linvilie Gorge in western North Carolina, was reported still in fair condi tion but improved at N. C. Memo rial Hospital last night. Knight, of Chapel Hill, was brought out of the gorge late Sun day by rescuers who clambered for hours over the mountainous terrain. He was given emergency treatment at a nearby Spruce Pine hospital, then transferred by am bulance to Memorial Hospital here in Chapel Hill. Knight, admitted to the hospi tal's intensive care unit, suffered possible skull and spine fractures and multiple scrapes and bruises, authorities said. B Louise Lamont, Playmakers' Lead, Is By Gordon Clark Louise Lamont is a rare com bination top-notch actress and skillful homemakcr. How does she do it? "If you don't get the leading role, go home and bake a cake," she says with a smile. But the talented actress is sel dom caught in this situation. The Chapel Hill resident will appear as Mrs. Levi in The Carolina Play makers 1961 tour production of "The Matchmaker," opening in the Playmakers Theatre here Oct. 11 for a five-night run. The role was played in the motion picture version of Thornton Wilder's farce comedy by Shirley Booth. Ruth Gordon played the role in the hit Broadway production. Born in Tuscaloosa, Ala., Mrs. Lamont (the wife of manufacturing representative John Lamont) has acted professionally throughout the United States : and Canada. Her performances include "Criminal at Large" and "Good News" op posite Cameron Mitchell, "Every where I Roam" in New York, and "Her Cardboard Lover" with Tal lulah Bankhead. National Tours Mrs. Lamont played in national tour productions of "Stage Door," "You Can't Take It With You" and J'George Washington Slept Here." She had creviouslv worked with The Carolina Plavmakers as Queen Gertrude ia "Hamlet." the 4. ' i vMurilsv-w: liliaillliiiili Joe Oppenheimer room discussions and afternoon seminars. Chairman Oppenheimer met with the heads of the dorms, fraterni ties and sororities last week, to discuss an idea for informal dis cussions between the various liv- PREPARE EXCHANGE. Pat Morgan (right) and Lynda Rich ert, Co-Ch airmen of the Canadian exchange program, discuss plans for the UNC trip to Canada during semester break. Applications for the trip should be at GM Information Desk by Friday. TO MEET NEHRU NEW DELHI (UPI) Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru will meet with British Prime Minister Harold ' Macmillan in England Nov. 6 during a stop-over on his way to a U.S. visit, a gov ernment spokesman said Tuesday. The spokesman said Nehru would arrive in London Nov. 5 and fly to the United States on Nov. 7. Actress And Cook ; production in which the Playmak ers' founder, Frederick Koch, played Hamlet. Then came. New York, . seven years of acting in stock and the national tours prior to returning to Chapel Hill to live. Why didn't she remain in New York? - "There are old people still hang ing on in New York waiting for that one part. With no home, no other life, they become nothing but shells. I always said Id never be like that." She compares, her homemaking to the theatre. "Both are creative, both are an effort to. make some thing beautiful. You can combine domesticity and art" - Likes Gardening Among her favorite activities are gardening, making dried flower ar rangements and jewelry at her Laurel Hill Road home. Upon her return here from New York, she found time, to . finish work on her degree in drama at the University, and set up the La mont School of Drama for chil dren. '"There was no children's thea tre when I came here," she said, "and theatre can be a great help in a child's development." She also helped organize a reli gious drama group called . The Pulpit- Players, teaches in The Carolina Playmakers summer pro gram for high school drama stu dents and serves as a regular judge and critic at the Carolina ing units to prepare the campus for Symposium week. He said the idea was favorably received by those present, including Bill Sul livan, president of I.F.C.; Jim Gaulden, president of I.D.C.; Janice Haley, president of the Pan-Hellenic Council; and Pam Parker, Women's Resident Coun cil. Oppenheimer said the program, to start this fall, will consist of in formal discussions among students from fraternities, sororities and dorms. The nature of the discussions be tween two or more living units at a time will be determined by the students who attend them. Faculty members will be available to as sist in leading the discussions. Yack Pics Junior Class pictures are being made today through Fri day in the basement of Gra ham Memorial from 1-6 p.m. Attire is dark coat and tie for men, black sweater for women. Late freshman pictures will also be made for a fee of $1.00. 5 GLOOMY NEW YORK (UPI)-Thc weather outlook for Wednesday's opening game of the 1961 World Series is gloomy with a forecast of morn ing rain, stopping by game time 1 p.m. EDT. However, skies over Yankee Stadium will remain cloudy throughout the afternoon with the temperature in the 60's. Dramatic Association's state festi val every spring. "Rain" She has performed with the group as Sadie Thompson in "Rain," Regina Giddens in "The Little Foxes," Mama in "I Remem ber Mama," title roles in 'Lysys trata," "Mrs. McThing" and her most recent success, "The Curious Savage," this past summer. Of her performance as Mrs. Savage, reviewer Joe Nagelschmidt said: "Her every moment onstage, her every line, her every heavy lidded, foxy glance, her every all- knowing rejoinder spell Lamont at her best. She makes golden every thing she says and does ..." "I guess I'll go on acting when I can, as long as I can, for the pure enjoyment of it," she says. "But it won't get in the way of my homemaking. I'll be a woman and an actress." Tour N.C. Mrs. Lamont will tour cities throughout North Carolina and as far south as Augusta, Ga.; follow ing "The Matchmaker.", The Play makers carry the play to. Golds boro, Oct. 16; Buies Creek, Oct. 17; Wilmington, Oct. 18; Wilson, Oct. 19; Statcsville, Oct; 20 and Augusta, Oct. 21. Tickets for the Chapel Hill run are on sale at the Playmakers Business Office, 214 Abernethy Hall (next to the Scuttlebutt) and at Ledbetter-Pickard . ' t-i ! V. f jr ! f t i , - - - i - n 3 I ! ' 'I 0RLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press Inlernalional Casualties High In Viet Nam WASHINGTON (UPI) The State Department said Tuesday that the Communists' "mounting campaign of terror and guerrilla war fare" in South Viet Nam is claiming 1,500 lives every month. The toll of South Vietnamese was. cited as part of a U. S. effort to show that this Southeast Asian crisis has been growing steadily while the world's eyes were focused on Berlin. The situation is such that the United States announced Monday that it is pressing ahead with "urgent measures" to bolster the de fense of South Viet Nam against the Communist guerrilla attacks. Bomb Banners Can9t Speak - MOSCOW A band of Western "peace marchers," including 13 Americans, walked into Moscow Tuesday to complete a trek that began in San Francisco 10 months ago. But the marchers were for bidden to make any disarmament speeches in Red Square. The 31 marchers, some dressed in blue jeans, baggy sweaters and tennis shoes, were halted by Soviet officials 100 yards short of the Lenin-Stalin tomb in Moscow's main square. The leaders obviously were upset by the ban. Eight of the Amer icans had trampled 8,000 miles across six countries on two continents to carry their message to the Russian people. Legalized Terror 9 In Cuba? WASHINGTON Cuban exile leader Jose Miro Cardona told the Inter-American Human -Rights Commission Tuesday that Fidel Cas tro has "legalized terror" in Cuba. He asked the commission to intercede. He made the plea during an hour-long private session with the human rights group at the Pan American union here. Production Speeded-Up WASHINGTON Senate military investigators called Tuesday for a speedup and expansion in production of the M-14 "Army rifle, only recently issued to U. S. troops in Berlin after years of delays. The Senate preparedness subcommittee charged that for 16 years the M-14 fully-automatic rifle project has been "marked by a con tinuing absence of a sense of urgency and emphasis." - International Situation Looking Better ' WASHINGTON Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges said Tuesday that because the international situation "looks a little bet ter he is hopeful that"cnsnjncrs wiH- begin to spend more fi-ccly, rrr Hodges told a news, conference that although most other meas ures of business activity have been rising, consumers have been "holding back" and saving a large part of their incomes. ; US. Helicopter Lift Rescues 5 Germans BERLIN (UPI) A U.S. Army helicopter flew five East German refugees over the Iron Curtain border to West Berlin Friday from the barbed-wire ringed Western anclave of Steinstuecken one mile inside East Germany. The helicopter lift, second such flight in a week, came as Com munists police fired bursts from their automatic pistols at other refugees who continued to brave death to flee to West Berlin. In Goettingen, police disclosed that a group of 55 East Germans including an 89-year-old woman? 23 children and an expectant mother fled in one group last night to Western Germany. The group, representing one tenth of the residents of Boeseck Endorf, bundled their belongings into a coveerd farm wagon, muf fled the horses' hooves with rags, and rolled quietly across the bor Faculty News Dr. Burnett Returns After Dr. Charles Burnett of the School of Medicine has returned after a year's research at the London Uni versity College and the London Dramalique Try outs Held Forecast for the Petite Drama tique's first production, "The Rain maker" may be "undercast" if more students don't try out. Director Kermit Ewing will hold tryouts tonight : from 7-9 p.m.: in Roland Parker Lounge Jfo. 3 - in GM. He is particularly looking for H. C, . the father of the Curry family and his elder son, Nash. Callbacks for -'the 'six male and ouc female parts will then be jjost ed and final tryouts held. No previous experience is neces sary. Approximately 20 persons have already tried out for the ro mantic comedy by N. Ttichard Nash which takes place in thejrnid west in the middle of the last dec ade, r "i l Francisco Franco der. The East Germans fled after hearing reports that the Commun ists planned to destroy or oust all inhabitants from the village be cause it lay too near West Ger many. Lifted Refugees Out The five airlifted East Germans had entered the Steinstuecken en clave when they saw signs in the village saying the territory was under American jurisdiction. They thought they were in West Berlin. After a tense day of waiting, the American helicopter lifted out the refugees to Berlin. A U.S. Army Berlin announcement said: "Dur ing a routine visit, a Berlin com mand helicopter lifted five indi viduals from Steinstuecken to an other part of the American sector of Berlin today.' Steinstuecken residents, however, identified them as refugees. University College School of Medi cine and Hospital. Dr. Burnett, chairman of the De partment of Medicine performed research in the . field of genetics while at the. college and did clinic al work at the school of medicine and hospital. ; This project was supported by a Commonwealth Fellowship granted Dr. Burnett by the Commonwealth Fund of New York. . Dr. Henry T. Clark, administra tor of Health Affairs, has been appointed a member of the Gen eral Clinical Research Center Com mittee of the National Institute of Health. 1 The committee, .one . of several groups being established by the U. S. Surgeon General. of the Pub lic Health Service, has the duty of assisting the National Institutes of Health in reviewing applications for support of Medical research. Dr. Clark, who has been appoint ed to &e committee for a four-year term, wil be serving with experts in the fields of academic medicine. hospitatdministration, medical AW" Strike TED SHI' Girls To Have Later Hours For Concert Coed hours have been extended to 1:30 a.m. Friday for the Uni versity Entertainment Committee's first concert of the year. Featuring the Four Aces, Alan Black and Richiardi, the concert will be held at 4 and 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Also Friday night will be an IDC-sponsored dance from 9-1 p.m. at the American Legion Hut. Mu sic will be furnished by the Duke Ambassadors. A bus . will leave Y-Court after the Memorial Hall concert and be fore the dance and will return to the campus afterwards. , IFCToMeet On Rules For Coed Visiting The IFC will' participate in a conference to adopt an acceptable visiting agreement Tuesday. President Bill Sullivan , vice president Billy Riley and chairman of the IFC Court Bill Farrell will join with representatives from the Pan - Hellenic Council, Woman's Residence Council, the Dean of Women's Office and Dean William Long to revise the present short term agreement, Dean Long spoker .to - the IFC Monday night and told them that the temporary (valid until Novem ber 1) visiting -agreement signed by Sullivan was not acceptable to the administration. He mentioned that there, was a discrepancy be tween coed and "import" visiting hours as well as an inadequate ruling on chaperones. The present agreement has elim inated the unenforceable drinking clause (no alcohol consumed in front of women) but some method of supervision of house functions will be demanded by the faculty. Dean Long asserted his belief in the necessity of fraternities and said that the IFC and the adminis tration must work hand-in-hand to see that it; is perpetuated. ' Other Business . . It was announced by Dean Long that ZBT will soon break ground for their new fraternity house by Finley Golf Course. There will be a meeting of the entire membership of all the fra ternity houses on October 25 to discuss the new visiting agreement and other rales which the IFC wishes to make explicitly clear for all fraternity men. v. V' Dr. C. Burnett care cost accounting and research. The committee will advise the NIH concerning application for fed eral grants to establish a clinical research facility such . as the one Its Ac i, Yt 1 s On ross DETROIT (UPI) The auto industry's second major strike in less than a month shut down Ford Motor Co. Tuesday when the United Auto Workers Union called 120, 000 members off their jobs at 88 plants across the nation. UAW President Walter P. Reuther said the company and union reached accord on a national economic agreement four hours before a 11 a.m. EDT, strike deadline but that "there wasn't time to work out a full agreement" on non- economic issues by the deadline. Malcolm L. Denise. Ford vie president, said this first company- wide strike against Ford in 20 years was "unnecessary ... not over economic issues" and would cost hourly paid employes about $2.6 million a day in lost wages. Reuther emerged from an around-the-clock bargaining ses sion at 11:04 a.m. EDT, to an nounce the strike was on. He said negotiations were being recessed until 11 a.m. EDT, Wednesday be cause the bargainers on both sides were exhausted. Might Make Progress "We feel that if we come back with clear minds, we might be able to make meaningful prog ress" toward a quick end to the strike, he said. General Motors was plagued by strikes during much of September with more than 100 plants closed and a quarter of a million work ers idled. The last of the walkouts at GM did not end until eight days ago. The strike action against GM also was in the non-economic area. Agreement was reached on Sept. 6 between the largest of the Carmakers and the UAW on a three-year economic package, but then the union authorized walkouts five days later over unresolved local contract issues. Reuther said the strike against Ford was called over such non economic matters as production work union wants its members to do and union charges that lower-paid .unskilled workers Were being assigned to do the work of higher-paid skilled employes.' -Will- Draw Benefits The union built up a $42 million strike fund in advance of this year's negotiations with the auto companies. Last month's strikes against General Motors ate up about $5 million of this. Infirmary The following students were in the Infirmary yesterday: Virginia Carter, Caroline Manuel, Jean Mc- Dougal, Betty Lumpkin, Thomas Iseley, Franklin Howard, Walter Roberts, Eugene Scruggs, John L. Kennedy, Allen Ostergren, Charles Lail, Phillip Howell, Phillip Jor gensen, Andrew Winkleman, George Durham, Tim Cole, Elizabeth Clark, Elizabeth Sanders, Alvin Poindexter, Douglas Messcr and Frank Farrow. Genetics Researci here at other medical centers. A clinical research committee was formed at the School of Medi cine last year with a grant from the National Institute of Health in the amount of $897,528 to cover the first three years of its operation. Three members of the UNC rec reation curriculum attended meet ings of the American Recreation Society and the National Recreation Congress in , Detroit ending today. Harold D. Meyer, head of the Division of Recreation, will present legislative programs on federal, state, county and local levels. He is also participating on programs relating to recreation for the aging. H. Douglas Sessoms, assistant professor in the Department of So ciology and Anthropology, will pre sent a paper on "The Dynamics of Programming in the Therapeutic Setting," and a report on the cur rent status of recreation education in the institutions of higher learn ing in the United States. Miss Francis Cleary, recreation director for . the Department of Ford Nation Ford workers would not begin drawing strike benefits until the second week of a strike. In addition to Ford, the UAW still must work out a new contract with Chrysler Corp., last of the industry's big three, and with Studebaker-Packard Corp. r "j Li Today Tickets for the Four Aces pro gram Friday are on sale from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m. in Lenoir Hall and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Y-Court and Kemp's. . Anyone selling 25 tickets to the concert will .receive one free ticket and anyone selling 50 will get two, according to the University Enter tainment Committee. Classes in karate and self-defense judo start today at 4:30 p.m. in the Tin Can. The Tennis Club will meet today at 4 p.m. on the courts behind Joyner Dorm. The University Entertainment j Committee will meet at 5 p.m. in GM's Roland Parker Lounges II and III. Tomorrow There will be a UP Caucus in GM's Roland Parker II at 7 p.m. All UP Legislators are urged to attend by newly elected party chairman Bill Criswell, who invites all interested students to attend. The Dance Club will meet at 4 p.m. in Women's Gym. Campus Affairs committee will meet at 4:15 p.m. in Woodhouse Room, GM. $ its Friday The following areas will be closed to traffic and parking on Friday evenings at 11 p.m. before each home game: area 1 between Woollen Gym and the Tin Can; area 2 between Gate 6 and Memo rial Hospital; area 3 the Ram varsity parking lot behind Kenan Field House and area 4 between the Bell Tower and Parker Dorm. Students selling football pro grams for the Clemson game have been asked to report to Fetzer Field House at 4 p.m. Psychiatry, is a member of the executive committee of the society and is presenting the work of thv committe for the year. Tryouts Held For Civil War Tryouts for the first of four television plays to be produced by the North Carolina Civil War Cen tennial Commission will be held today and tomorrow at 4 and 7 p.m. in Studio A, Swain Hail. The play, "One Night in Cham bersburg," has been written espe cially for the Commission by Chapel Hill author Manly Wade Wellman and concerns a romance that develops between a young Pennsylvania girl and a sergeant in Jeb Stuart's Confederate caval ry. The play calls for a cast of four men and two women and will be directed by Dr. John Clayton, as sociate professor in the RTVMP Department. 'WV.WVAVrf.'AVV.VMV.W.V.VAV.V.VaViV.'. .V.'.V.rtft'.V.V.V.V. m I Gampus I Briefs
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 4, 1961, edition 1
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