Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 19, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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U!!CJ Library Serials DQpt. Box 870 Chap5l Hill, U. 2 C. The Hungarian Revolt See Edits, Page Two Weather Generally fair and cooler. Offices in Graham Memorial THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servic 0 r Campus Briefs m r m TODAY Pictures for the following groups will be taken in the basement of GM on Oct. 19-20 from 1-6 p.m. Students in physical therapy, den tal hygiene, pharmacy, and late sophomores for a fee of $1; fra ternity and sorority members who have not had their pictures made for a fee of $2. Men should wear dark suit and tie; women, dark sweater. German Club and Dance Committee members should wear tuxedos. Absolutely no more pic tures will be made after this Fri day. The Women's Bi-Partisan Board will interview all women interest ed in Honor Council positions from 7-9 p.m. in the Council Room, GM. Come by GM to sign up for ap pointments. The Annual Co-Rec Sports Car nival will begin tonight in the Tin Can. . The Finance Committee of Stu dent Legislature will meet at 3 p.m. in GM. The University Party will hold its weekly Legislative caucus at 7 p.m. in Roland Parker II, GM. All students have been invited to at tend. The Carolina Quarterly's Second Writers Workshop will be held at 7:30 p.m. All comers should bring manuscripts. Alpha Phi Omega service organ ization will hold its annual fall in formal rush at 7: 00 "in the Library Assembly Room. The Ed Wives Club will elect officers at 4 p.m. in 8 Peabody Hall. Dean Perry of the School of Education will conduct a tour of Peabody Hall for new members. ' ( The following organizations will have their pictures made today at the indicated times. There will be a charge if the groups have to be rescheduled. These pictures will be taken in the Grail Room: 1:40 Town Women's Association; 2:00 Di-Phi; 2:20 Carolina Forum; 2:40 State Affairs Committee; 3:20 International Students Board; 3:40 Men's Council. Please con tact Al Roscman at the TEP House if this schedule is impos sible. Also bring captioned proofs for the yearbook. The Campus Affairs Committee will meet at 4:00 p.m. in Roland Parker I, GM. FRIDAY Foreign Students Leadership Project Committee will meet Fri day at 3:00 p.m. In the Wood house Conference Room, GM. AFL-CIO MAKES LOAN JERUSALEM (UPI) Israel's Histadrut Labor Federation an nounced Wednesday it will receive a $4 million loan from the AFL-CIO to build 1,000 housing units in Beersheba for immigrants living in substandard conditions. The project will take three years. John Ehle Gets Rave John Ehle's novel about Ashe villc, "Lion on the Hearth," is re ceiving rave reviews from book critics all across the country. Ehle is at present a teacher of script writing for TV, radio and motion pictures at UNC. Harper & Brothers, who pub lished the book on September 27, has just released the following quotes from the first reviews re ceived in their office: "The mountain people, with their ancient ways and fierce pride, are vigorously portrayed in this book. . . . John Ehle, a native of Ashe ville, covers a 15-year span in this, his third novel, that includes the 1930's depression." Chicago Sun-Times. Wolfe's Eloquence "There is Thomas Wolfe's own eloquence, and none of his dis cursiveness, in the evocation you will find here of sight and sound and smell, of the enchantment of the hills, of food and speech, and the facts and acts of love and the 1 somber tones of death." New York Herald Tribune. "Mr. Ehle is to be congratulat ed for writing such a lucid book about so many diverse personali ties. . . . The book will hold your attention until the last page." lliami News.' Rusk Says Khrusli ay Ease By Donald May WASHINGTON UPI ) Secre tary of Sate Dean Rusk said Wed nesday that Soviet Premier Ni kita Khrushchev's relaxation of his deadline for a German peace treaty "may serve to reduce ten sions somewhat" in the Berlin crisis. But the secretary said Khrush chev made "little if any" change in his Berlin demands under which the West has refused to DEAN RUSK negotiate. Consequently, he told the news conference, it is impos sible to say whether the prospects of war or peace have changed. Rusk said even if Berlin talks between Moscow .and the West could be arranged, there was no guarantee they would succeed. However, he said, catastrophe was the only alternative to keeping the door open to such negotiations. Russia Reaffirms Stand Rusk spoke as Russia delivered new notes to the Allies in Mos Police M I! r i f " x -; $ r J L '4 &P Dty Clea All students who picked up-their dry cleaning from Mike Barham after 9:35 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 6 were requested by Chief W. D. Blake yesterday to contact the Chapel Hill Police Dept. They are checking for traces of spilled cyanide to see if any was brought into the room in Cobb and possibly what type it was. The SBI is currently running tests on the boys' vitals organs and samples of vomit to determine the approximate time of death and the amount of cyanide used. The two students, Mike Barham and Bill Johnson, were found dead in their room at about 11:30 Fri day morning by a janitor. Both were lying in unnaturally straight positions in their beds with traces of foam on their faces. Death by Cyanide A corner's jury ruel the cause of death was cyanide poisoning. No traces of cyanide have been found in their room and the source 's Novel Reviews John Elile "When all the brittle foldcral about North Carolina authors is cast aside, the fact remains that it takes understanding, compassion, and affection to say nothing of a high degree of skill to write a book like this one." Chapel Hill Weekly. I. M 1 i 'I hi -3 f II r y f. Tension cow reaffirming the Kremlin's stand that the West can use air corridors to West Berlin only to supply its military garrisons. The United States, France and Britain insis they can use the corridors for whatever traffic they want In the first official U.S. reac tion to Khrushchev's speech to the 22nd Communist Party Congress in Moscow Tuesday, Rusk said he believed the Soviet leader now understood the firm Western stand against Russia's Berlin threats. But Rusk would not commit himself to early East-West nego tiations. He said it was vital to continue exploratory talks to de termine whether there was room for negotiations. Turning to the other key point in Khrushchev's speech, Rusk re newed Tuesday night's White House appeal to Russia to aban don plans to set off a 50-megaton nuclear bomb late this month. Rusk said Khrushchev should con sider the world reaction that such a blast might touch off. Won't Win Admission . On other world issues, Rusk said: He thinks Red China will not win admission to the United Na tions this year. The United States is impatient after four weeks of haggling over a successor to the late U.N. Secre tary General Dag Hammarskjofd. If agreement is not reached soon, this country may ask the General Assembly to name a successor over Russia's objections. The United States is giving thorough consideration to Peru's call for collective Western Hemis pheric action against Cuba. Rusk said the next exploratory discussions looking toward pos sible Berlin negotiations would be carried out by U.S. Ambassador Llewelyn Thompson in Moscow and perhaps by other Allied am bassadors there. Check inn of the cyanide is unknown. Johnson made inquiries about a "fast acting poison" the day be fore the deaths according to police Cyanide is very accessible in the many laboratories on campus. Po lice Chief Blake said that he be lieved the possibility of finding the source of the poison was small. A student saw Barham collapse in the laboratory at 11:30 the pre ceding Thursday night. Several students carried iBarham clown to the room and placed him on the bed. Johnson, his roommate, said that if Barham didn't get any better he would call a doctor. Neither boy was seen alive again. Laotian 'Neutral' To Form Cabinet LUANG PRABANG, Laos (UPI) "Neutralist" Prince Souvanna Phouma Wednesday won King Sa- vang Vathana's permission to form a new coalition government with himself as premier provided all three Laotian factions agree on the division of cabinet posts. The king has called for a truly neutral government that would re unite his country and put an end to the long-smoldering civil war between the Communist-backed reb els and the pro-western rightwing forces. The monarch made known his wishes in an audience with Sou vanna, the compromise choice of the rival princes as premier of the proposed coalition. Souvanna, who heads the so called neutralist faction supported by the Communist-backed pathct lao, scheduled conferences with Premier Prince Boun Oum, whose post he will take over if he suc ceeds in bringing the feuding fac tions together in a "government of national reconciliation." Infirmary Students in ue Infirmary yes terday included Linda Little, Mar tha Myers, Carol Krug, Lucy Elan, Mary Ittncr, Joyce Vaden. Wil liam Marslender, Roy Lowry, Robert Klanc, Hugh Webster. Paul Webster, John Harrison, Phillip Stubing, Jim Wallace, Steve Vaughn, Clayton Smith, Rebecca Weathers, Barry Portnoy, Freder ick Burney, Phillip Klapp and Henry Anderson. Current Broadcast v . , , A " r i x -- Z - -4- 1 f ' t -i ' , w s-rt vf . vl- 4- -J ? y -. . -.:- .-.-y r.-: :-$::-.: --. v.. ? - rJ rtf v J tin o &t Carrier Current Is Installed; Pi ogram Slate Announced WUNC Carrier Current has been installed in seven dorms: Alder man, Winston, Connor, Teague, Joyner, Cobb and Parker are all receiving the broadcast. All other transmitters will probably be in stalled by the end of the month. Campus organizations are asked to call the station to announce various activities. WUNC will also publicize any and all activities and events of interest to the students. They will be mentioned over the University Report heard at 4 p.m. Mon., Tues., Wed. and Fri., over -WCHL as well as the three hews reports given each evening. Carrier Current spotlights for Grail To Hold New Sale For Official Ring The Order of the Grail will hold a ring sale today from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Y-Court. A $5 deposit is needed to order a ring with the rest payable C.O.D. A student must have passed the equivalent of five semesters ; work in order to be eligible to purchase a ring. The class of '63 will not be eligible until February. Rings may be ordered at any time by contacting Bob Bilbro at the Phi Delt House. The Balfour Rings sold by the Grail are the only official Caro lina Ring. Islam Scholar To Visit UNC For Lectures Professor Gustave E. von Grune baum, director of the Near Eastern Center of the University of Cali fornia and one of the country's leading scholars of Islam as a cul tural movement, will visit the UNC campus next Monday and Tues day. Professor von Grunebaum will deliver a public lecture on "Islam and the West," Monday evening in the auditorium of the Pharmacy Building at 8 p.m. He will also meet with classes in the Departments of History, Re ligion, Political Science and Ro mance Languages. Born in Germany, he received degrees from the Universities of Vienna and Berlin before coming to this country in 1933. He has been a professor at the Asia In stitute and the University of Chi cago. He was invited to UCLA in 1957. Among his publications arc Me dieval Islam: A Study in the Na ture and Growth of Culrural Tra dition; Muhammandan Festivals; and Islam: Essays in the Nature and Growth of a Cultural Tradi tion. In 1953 his stature in the field was recognized when he was in vited to preside over the meeting of the International Symposium of Islamists at Spa, Belgium, and to edit the proceedings in the form of a book. Unity and Variety in Muslyn Civilization, published in 1955. the week of Oct. 19-25 follow: Thursday: Carolina Roundtable, 7 p.m., will feature interviews with heads of various departments as they discuss departmental ac tivities. Friday: Let's Listen to Opera, 8 p.m., features Norman Cordon, Metropolitan Opera star, discuss famous arias and opera classics. Saturday: Pete Ivey News, 10:05 p.m., features a round-up of Uni versity news. Sunday: The Quiet Hours, 10:30 p.m., . features the music of Dave Brubeck. Monday: Music from the Screen, 6 p.m., features the original score "Oklahoma!" Tuesday: Hill Hall Concert, fea tures Joel Carter, pianist. State Of Emergency Declared By South Viet Nam President By STEWART IIENSLEY SAIGON, Viet Nam (UPD President iNgo Dinh Diem on Wed nesday declared a state of emer gency throught Communist threat ened South Viet Nam. The declara tion was timed to coincide with the arrival of Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor for an on-the-spot survey of the Red guerrilla menace. Taylor's conclusions may deter mine whether President Kennedy commits U. S. combat troops to help stop communism from engulf ing all Southeast Asia. He lost little time in plunging into what he described as an "across-the-board assessment" of the situation. Almost immediately after his arrival Wednesday he held a round of conferences with Diem and top American military and diplomatic officials. The state of emergency decree suspends the application of all laws as necessary during the duration of the emergency which will con tinue until "further notice." It was a first step to rally the national resources for an all-out struggle against the Communists University Party To Hold Convention For Fall Nominations In Memorial The University Party will hold its annual nominating convention on Tuesday in Memorial Hall at 7:00 p.m. The convention will nominate candidates for the positions of president, vice-president, secre tary, treasurer, and social chair man of the freshman, sophomore, and junior classes. The convention will also elect a treasurer for the University Party who will automatically serve as a member of the Party Executive Committee. Gerrard Inadequate - Attendance at this convention is especially requested by party chairman Bill Criswcll. He said, Hall at 7:20 p.m. to prevent the have been held in the highly inade quate Gerrard Hall. "This year, however, due to the great enthusiasm which has al ready been exhibited in the Uni versity Party and its platform for Shrashchev Dream: Of Rosy WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press International Truman Confers With Camel Driver KANSAS CITY, Mo. Bashir Ahmad, Pakistani camel driver, carri ed his quiet goodwill mission into the heart of the middle west Wed nesday. He ate a Kansas City steak for breakfast, witnessed the auc tion of a grand champion steer, and conferred with former President Harry S. Truman. Ahmad is in the United States as the invited guest of Lyndon B. Johnson who met him earlier this year on the Vice President's own goodwill tour of Pakistan. Nikita Quarreling Wth Mao? LONDON In his sharp attack on Albania at he Soviet Party Con gress Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev apparently was delivering a message to Communist China. Soviet experts here interpreted his remarks as a warning to a potential rival rather, than a mere dressing down of a small nation that counts for little in the Communist scheme of things. One of Khrushchev's listeners Tuesday was Red Chinese Premier Chou En-lai, who was reported to have sat stony-faced during the attack on the tiny country that has been a strict follower of the Red Chinese tough Stalin line. Soviets Accused Of Nuclear Murder MUNICH, Germany A private Western radio station said Wednes day Soviet scientists made a mistake in weather prediction during a nuclear bomb test four years ago and winds dumped radioactive fallout over a part of Kazakhstan causing a "high death rate." The account of the fallout poisoning was beamed to the Soviet Union by Radio Liberty, a privately-financed station specializing in Russian language broadcasts. French Deport Rioters PARIS The French government announced Wednesday it will deport to Algeria 1,500 of an estimated 30,000 Algerian Moslems who ran riot through Paris Tuesday night andvirtually took over sections of the city for six hours. The government ordered reinforcements of riot police to protect the capital from any .recurrence of the rioting that broke out in pro test against an unofficial curfew on Moslems in the Paris area. within and outside the frontiers. The national assembly met to dis cuss a draft bill giving Diem "exceptional powers" and approval was a foregone conclusion. Taylor began his appraisal of what military measures the United States must take to keep Commu nists from overrunning South Vict Nam with a three-hour briefing at the U. S. Embassy. Confers With Officials He was given a fill-in on the overall military, political, econom ic social and ideological situation by U. S. Ambassador Frederick Nolting, Lt. Gen. Lionel McGarr, head of the U. S. Military Advis ory Group iMAG, and other diplo matic and miiltary officials. Dur ing the afternoon, he met with Diem in the presidential palace for a general 'discussion of the South Vict Nam position caused by the increased Communists pres sures. There was no immediate in formation on the details of the discussions. On Friday, Taylor will leave for a two-day survey of various battle the coming year, we are holding the convention in Memorial m order that adequate seating facili ties will be available." Doors Closed Criswcll further added that the doors will be closed to Memorial "In the past the U.P. Conventions late entry of delegates who come only to vote for their particular interest. Delegates will be allowed to leave whenever they choose, but their absence will be counted against their delegation by the subtraction of that number of votes from the respective delegations. To aid in this process, voting will be conducted this year on a roll call basis. Each delegation will have a delegation chairman who will respond to the chairman from the floor when he calls for the votes of that particular delegation. .Red f i ,' ? 1 lynden Johnion areas, including some where American military men are train ing anti-Communist rangers. He is scheduled to return to Saigon Sunday. NOW STANDARD EQUIPMENT IIOUNSLOW, England (UPI) The British Army has introduced a new piece of standard equip ment for its barracks an officially approved bulletin board for pin up pictures. F-100 CRASHES AD ANA, Turkey (UPI) Offi cials said Wednesday that a U.S. Air Force F-100 jet crashed 10 miles southwest of Incirklik Air Base Tuesday. The pilot, 2nd Lt. Harvey Ayakowski, 24, of Haskell, N. J., parachuted to safety. FORMER AMBASSADOR DIES KHARTOUM, Sudan (UPI) Dr. Ibrahim Annis, former Sudanese ambassador to Washington, died Wednesday of a heart attack while presiding over a meeting of the Khartoum Lions Club. ? s . - - -I BILL CRISWEIX, UP chair man, smiles in anticipation f an active nominating convention. Criswcll and the UP hope to start off the year with a bang in their nominating convention next week . Photo by George Wallace. Utoioi Hits Capitalism For 'Softness;' Presents Plan By Henry Shapiro MOSCOW (UPI) Premier Nikita Khrushchev on Wednesday prom ised the Soviet people a rosy fu ture of a world without war and without want a world in which he foresaw capitalism crumbling and communism supreme around the earth. by 1980, if the world stays at peace. And he told assembled leaders of world communism they can have every confidence of "prevent ing a world war" because "the balance of world political, economic and military forces has changed in favor of the peace-loving Com munist camp." Speaking as first secretary of the Soviet Communist Party, Khrush chev presented his party "plat form" to more than 5,000 delegates at the second day of the 22nd Party Congress inside the ancient Krem lin. The six-hour speech Khrush chev's second in two days repeat ed the flowing promises published last July in the Kremlin's new 20- year program to give Russia a "peaceful" victory over the Unit ed States. Invitation To Socialism It also issued a special invita tion to the underdeveloped nations of Latin America, Asia and Africa to "throw off the yoke of colonial ism and enter on the road to so cialism." But his speech contained more of the bombshells of Tuesday's six-hour address in which he an nounced Soviet plans to explode a 50-megaton hydrogen bomb and tentatively lifted his year-end deadline for concluding a separate Soviet peace treaty with East Ger many. The Soviet chieftain Wednesday declared the principal aim of the Communist party foreign policy is: "No war, to banish it from the life of society in one generation." "Once the Soviet Union will have become the first industrial power," he said, "once the so cialist system will have become the decisive factor of world develop ment, the scale will tilt and the barometer of international weather will show: 'clear,' the menace of world war is gone, never to re turn." Will Strengthen Defense In the meantime, Khrushchev said, the Soviets will maintain "the most up-to-date means for the defense of our homeland, atomic and thermo-nuclear weap ons and rockets of every range . . . the strengthening of U.S.S.R. defense and the might of the So viet armed forces." Khrushchev told the delegates that "American capitalism has passed its prime and is on the de cline" and said the United States is "the pepicenter of the capital ism's economic difficulties." A weakness of the capitalistic powers, he said, is that war pro duction has become a "permanent element" of their economy, with "15 to 20 per cent of the national income spent on armaments." I Plans for this year's convention also include the sectioning of specific areas of the hall to be as signed to the different delegations. All dormitories, fraternities, and sororities will have their particu lar area and the presidents of these housing units will receive a notice of these accommodations before the Convention. Finally, Chairman Criswcll said that all dormitories, fraternities, and sororities arc urged to have as large a delegation as possible at the convention in order to get the full representation of the cam pus. All delegations and students who plan to gain the nomination of the U.P. at the convention thould turn in their names and the position they are seeking to Mrs. Eam- brough at the G.M. Information Desk or to the U.P. Office on the second floor of Graham Memorial. Hall
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 19, 1961, edition 1
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