Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 11, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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SsriaLs Dapt. Bax CTO Warning From Chaps l Hill, H..f 1 r inland See Edits, Page Two Weather Partly cloudy and mild. Offices in Graham Memorial SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servicf Indents or UN Seminar Group To Study Neutralist Role In UN Over-Thanksgiving Holiday The Collegiate Council on the ! United Nations has completed its selections of UNC students to at tend the YM-YWCA Thanksgiving seminar to New York. Those who will take the trip to study the role of the neutralist nations in the U.N. are Lynne Bartlett, Hassan Bahloul, Garry Blanchard, Pat Browder, Betti Brown, Page Bradham. Jan Bry ant, Sarah Cullen, Ilze Daiga, Charla Duncan, David L. Edwards Politicos Cry For Dorm Group The lower quad rang last night with politicians and their support ers crying "We want dormitory representation. We want Randy Gilliam." Trie rallv. be2innuiff at 1U:30. V J ' followed the Homecomng Pep Rally. About 40 boys milled around the speakers while more than 100 leaned out of the windows of Lewis, Graham, Aycock, Stacy and Everett to listen. Some of Gilliam's supporters carried torches of newspaper and kero sene. The crowds gradually broke up just before 11 p.m. when the first shout for panties was heard. The politicians left. Dormitory advisors were min gling through the crowd watching closely for further demonstrations. They were so prominent that a few got more cheers than the politicians. Gilliam's speech emphasized the "crying need for social life in the dormitories." One of ..bis supporters Joe Masi, said, "This is the year the dormitories can make a choice." He said the fra ternity freshmen represented only one-ninth of the freshman class. "Let's march on the madras draped parthenons." Mike Putzel also spoke, men tioning his recent fight with the University Party. He claimed that a vote for the independent, Gil liam, was a vote for the dorms. CHEWS UP ADDRESS BARNSLEY, England (UPD A dog was sent to the Humane So ciety shelter here Monday because he chewed up all of his address ticket except the part that reads "Ba" while on a train. Officials now are checking towns whose names begin Ba. NEXT TUESDAY Some lucky Carolina coed will be chosen Queen of the Dook parade Tuesday night. Final entries for the contest will be taken until Monday night by Fuller Honeycutt or Jackie Lahr of Phi Kappa Alpha fraternity. The PiKAs have traditionally spon sored the Beat Dook activities each year. Winner of the contest will be announced Friday when the Beat Dook parade of at least 50 floats will swing onto Chapel Hill's main street. Groups interested in en tering floats in the parade have been asked to also contact Lahr or Honeycutt before Monday. Five trophies will be presented by the PiKA's for the floats: best all-around entry, best sorority entry, best fraternity, best wom en's dorm entry and best men's dorm entry. This year's parade will include floats and cars filled with beauty queens, drill units from the Naval and Air Force ROTC, color guards, majorettes, the University band and a number of high school bands. Formation of the parade will begin Friday at 2:15 p.m. on the intramural field of Woollen Gym. The parade will leave at 3:15 p.m., moving to lower quad to Spencer dorm, where it will turn left on E. Franklin St. to Sloan's Drug Store. From there the parade will Beat D Selected Jr., Judy Fisher; Ann Flournoy, Jacques Ginesta, Mary Anne Johnson, Bob Kepner, Carol Krapf, Dolly Linker, Dieter Mahncke, Lann A. Malesky, Phill R. Matthews, Pat Harrison Miller, Sylvia Mullins, Julia Mullis, An tonio Munoz, Marie Overby; . Margaret Ann Rhymes, Chan ning Richards, Robert Richardson, Subir Roy, William Senkus, Robert Serrett, Ronald Southerland, Clare Stoddard, Yoshia Tashima, Cath erine Thomas, June Todd, William Wells, Ralph Whisnant and Mary Woolman. The first briefing seminar for the students will be held Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the "Y," when the students will present their slips stating their intention to at tend the seminar. At the second briefing session Wednesday eve ning, Tartt Bell of the American Friends' Service Committee will speak on the "Role of the Afro- Asian Nations in the U.N." In New York briefing sessions have already been scheduled with the Cuban and U.S.S.R. delega tions. The UNC seminar will join with a similar seminar group from Duke at . the U.S. mission for a briefing on the . American stand on nuclear testing. In addition, other briefings are being scheduled with delegations from the various neutralist na tions. Cadets Attending Game En Masse The AFROTC Cadet Corps here will pay tribute to Veterans Day, today, by attending the LSU-UNC football., game , in unity. The . 221 cadets will sit in a special section reserved for them and their dates in observance of this occasion. Veterans Day was established by Congress in 1954 in honor of serv icemen and women who have served their country in the military forces. Prior to liA Veterans Day was officially designated Armistice Day. IN CLOSE VOTE SMITHFIELD (UPD A two- part educational program costing $1.4 million was defeated by a close margin in Johnston County Tuesday. The vote was 2,264 for and 2,613 against a proposal to build ' classroom improvements, a county maintenance shop and establish a school district consoli dation reserve fund. ook Queen turn left down fraternity row to the Carolina Inn. After another r 4 i ark BEAT DOOK PARADE Phi Kappa Alpha will present these five trophies to the best floats in the Beat Dook Parade Friday after noon. Float entries and entries for the Queen should be turned into Jackie Lahr (left) or Fuller Honeycutt (right) at the Pika house before Monday night. Janice Haley, center, was last year's Beat Dook chapter queen. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press International Molotov Expelled From Party VIENNA Former Soviet Foreign Minister Vyacheslav M. Molotov, under bitter attack from Premier Nikita Khrushchev has been expelled from the Communist party and ousted from his Soviet government post here, it was reliably reported Friday. Laotian Prince Asks Cooperation KHANG KHAY, Laos Neutralist Prince Souvanna Phouma said Friday he would abandon his efforts to form a coalition government in Laos if he does not get more cooperation and that renewed civil war would follow. , Red Police Attack 5 Americans BERLIN A Communist policeman attacked five uniformed Ameri can officers with a tear gas grenade at Berlin's dividing wall Friday. The resentment shown against U. S. soldiers was in sharp contrast to the unhindered movement of an infantry company through East Germany to West Berlin Friday. U.S. 'Anxious To Help9 S. Viet Nam TOKYO U. S. Undersecretary of State Chester Bowles Friday said the United States was "anxious to help" South Viet Nam stand against Communist aggression but it mainly was up to the South Vietnamese to defend themselves.- - .. -. Congolese Troops Enter Katanga LEOPOLD VILLE, The Congo Central Congolese troops have en tered the Katanga town of Albertville and Katanga officials are flee ing in defiance of President Moise Tshombe's orders to stay and face death, it was reported Friday. "Katanga is finished in Albertville, an official of the Belgian Sa bena Airlines said in Elisabethville. Sabena sent a plane to Albert ville, important Lake Tanganyika port and northwest Katanga's larg est town, to remove refugees. The World Cannot Withoui UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (UPI) Indian Prime Minister Jawah arlal Nehru, warning that the. world "cannot continue for long without ' disarmament," appealed to the major powers today to re sume negotiations toward ending the cold war immediately. He also told the United Nations General Assembly he was optimis tic the problems of Berlin, Ger many and southeast Asia which he discussed with President Kennedy in Washington "are capable of solution if approached honorably and without attempts to bring dis credit to any party." Nehru branded the resumption of nu clear testing "a great misfor tune." He dismissed as "basically Selected left, it will continue past South Building and return to the Gym. I ''if J ? " V 1 i if , y& 1 h i t, H 3 , 4 - ' f , -' ? 7 ? $ -XT' t r 1? .. v - I ; f ' f" ' N.hro t Disarming- were continuing to agitate the evil" the question of whether one nation has or can get an advan tage in nuclear weapons over an other country. "I am convinced that the modern world cannot continue for long without disarmament," the 71-year-old neutralist leader declared. "It is important that we should approach the question with speed and deliberation and determination to solve it rather than merely show the other party to be wrong." He said "those great countries which have the greatest respon sibility because they possess the biggest weapons should address themselves again and again to ne gotiations." He also proposed that the General Assembly "appoint a committee" to show how interna tional cooperation that already is taking place in trade, scientific and other areas "can be extended ... to lessen distrust and con flict." Nehru's 38-minute speech to the assembly also touched on colo nialism denouncing Portugal as a hold-out colonial power and warn 'Beggar's Opera' Sets Extra Shows Two extra performances of "The Beggar's Opera" will be given be cause of the heavy demand for tickets, Carolina Playmakers Busi ness Manager John W. Parker an nounced here yesterday. There will be a Sunday matinee Nov. 19 at 2:30 p.m. and another perform ance Tuesday, Nov. 21, at 3:30 p.m. Originally scheduled to run Nov. 15-19, tickets for the Friday, Sat urday and Sunday evening per formances are already sold out. Parker urged those; wanting tickets for the remaining and holdover performances Come by early to in sure good seating. Tickets for "The Beggar's Opera" are available at the Play makers Business Office. 214 Aber nethy Hall (next to the Scuttle butt) and at Ledbetter-Pickard, both in Chapel Hill. All seats are reserved at $2.00 each. Canadians On Carolina Exchange A busload of Canadian students from, the University of Toronto ar rived here yesterday for the an nual weekend exchange trip. ' The " students, who attended the Germans concert last night, are staying with student hosts in apartments, dormitories, fraterni ties and sororities. This year's hosts, headed by co-chairmen Linda Richert and Pat Morgan, are: . . ; Walter Dellinger, Robin Faw sett, Wayne Foushee, Bobby Fox worth, James Gaulden, : Wade Hargrove, David Moore, Joe Op- penheimer, Mickey Simmons, Pete Thompson, Ronny Tygart, Betti Brown, Judy Clark, Martha Doughton, Emily England, Jan McCloskey, Karen Nelson, Pam Parker, Fatma Ramazanoglu, Elizabeth Reed, Lila Smith and Margaret Ann Wilson. The weekend schedule for the Canadian students includes a re ception at . Chancellor Ay cock's home, a party at Lakewood" Es tates; lunch at sorority houses, the LSU-UNC homecoming game and- afterwards a hay ride and picnic at Hogan's Lake. , Several discussions will also be held for the students about race relations in the South and the dif ferences1 in student life at the' two universities.' SCHOOLS REMAIN SEPARATE SANFORD (UPD Lee County and .Sanford school facilities .will remain separate after a consoli dation move was. defeated at the polls Tuesday.' A proposal ' to merge the two' systems into one administrative unit was e f eated 5,754-2,040. Continue i ing. that "external interventions" Congo crisis. Nehru was - known to have tried to persuade . Kennedy to drop any possible plans to 1 send American troops, to fight Com munist guerrillas in southeast Asia. He also sought, unsuc cessfully, to get Kennedy to agree to another voluntary moratorium on U.S. nuclear testing without trying to match Russia's multi-megaton explo sions in the atmosphere. Kennedy stuck to his announced position that U.S. tests in the at mosphere would be resumed "if necessary" to national security. Nehru OR SO IT SEEMS Maple's fy, y. ' y y i y 'i Red Cedar's papa was a maple or so it seems. This little 11" red cedar has sprung up in the crook of a low limb on a maple tree beside Carr dorm. Dr. C. R. Bell of the botany department explained that leaves and other organic material must have gathered in the hollow allowing the red cedar seed to plant its roots. The tree may live until it has exhausted the minerals in the material, he said. Photo by Wallace 2 .- - '- it - - y " ' s I N I 1 1 1 " - 1,' . ; tx. ' - y i ? 5 i ' i ' -'' ' , I i i , ' ' ' S t A rr . f f 1 r K - v i L;:l-a,...,,nr1--lniir,--B n-rmrn- rr-iii urn ii.iiii nl " li " ..i.. . 4-.... (,....,m..... "TORONTONIANS" Chancellor WiUiam Ay : cock, second from left, and his wife, . second from . right, welcome three ; of . the - Canadian students visiting UNC from the University of Toronto on For Defeated Bond Issues W ill. Bo Tl ids ' By DRENA EDWARDS v Next ' year the Consolidated Uni versity will present a budget re quest to the Advisory Commission that will include i the capital im provements defeated in Tuesday's bond election. , v " . . CU- President William ! Friday said Thursday . "We believe that these programs are" so vitally es sential to the ' strength and de velopment of the university that we shall have to ask for their ap proval again.". If the Advisory -Budget Commis sion approves the .requests , they will be sent to the 1963 General Assembly for action. By 1963 the Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yes terday were Tommie Fulk, Dale Herrmann, James McLamb, James Rose, Glenn Spell, Tom Ford, Clyde Grigg, Charles Mettels, Phil lip Poovey, Walter Harris, Jim Crutchfield, Andrea Lundeberg, Bill Caperton, and Robert Deal. Offspring , ' ' ' , ' , , 4 ' , ' , 7. ' ' , " 'iy i ' ' v ' ' ' ' 'i s t . & . ' ' y . is ' , ' A yv M ' ' , '.,' A y t .j4 y, fj. " 'y ; y'y - X ' ' y "Xr t , yr -'', " . " v f , w5- '-y.-. .-.'. : : : . :; f - y y " i '' y y y 4 "y ' y . , 'y. '. yti y ' y ' t "y. ' st : ?' ," , y y - i ' 'i y - y ' ' y, " yy '', ' ' ' i , ty.y I M. or Money CU's long-range capital improve ment program will be two years behind schedule. Friday estimated that even if the legislature acts favorably, it would probably be 1965 before any of the capital improvements were completed. The defeated bonds would have meant $13.5 million to the CU Friday said ' that matching funds from the federal government and student fees would have brought the total to $18 million. Meanwhile Friday added, the CU "will have to slow down some." Enrollment, research and extension services will feel this pinch he said. CU Meets Friday The CU officials who met with Friday in his office on Thursday were Chancellor William Aycock of UNC, Chancellor Fred Cald well of State College, CU. Secre tary Fred Weaver, CU. Treasurer A. H. Shepard and Claude Teague, a consultant to Friday. Chancellor Aycock yesterday said that "At UNC we are going Coeds Register For Dorm Rooms Acting Dean of Women JVIrs. 'Martha DeBerry yesterday asked all women students desiring dor mitory space for the spring se mester to sign up their dorms be fore Thursday, Nov. 16. A $25 room deposit and a room reservation card are required to reserve a room, she said. 'Failure to sign up for a room during this period means the student may not be able to live in the room of her choice," Mrs. DeBerry said. She also said that women stu dents who have been living in town who wish to move into a dorm for' the spring, should come by her office, 202 South Building, be fore Thursday. VERY EMBARRASSING LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPD The Credit Bureau of Greater Little Rock, Inc., apparently was so busy looking for deadbeats it forgot to pay its own bills. Gen. Mgr. John R. Nesbitt said "this is very em barrassing" Monday when county officials notified the company it failed to pay $234.63 in personal property taxes. DEMOCRATS, OF COURSE POINT PLEASANT, N. J. (UPI) John Kennedy and Woodrow Wil son are running for City Council seats today in New Jersey elec tions. John P. Kennedy, a retired pos tal worker, is a candidate here. Woodrow P. Wilson is seeking of fice in Ship Bottom, N. J. Both are Democrats, of course. the annual exchange trip. The Canadians are Al len Buch, left; Carol Wells, center; and Bob Fish er, right. Photo by Wallace enew to do as many makeshift things as possible within our resources." More specifically he said "We are planning to go ahead with renovating Cobb Dorm for wom en. We will explore the possibili ties of additional reading room space at least on a temporary basis. Perhaps we can expand the eating facilities in the new Craige and Ehringhaus dorms." Aycock said that while the Uni versity will try to make do with these temporary setups, "we will be looking for more permanent solutions." LIVE AND LEARN EVANSTON, 111. (UPI) You don't have to tell oil deliveryman Richard Reith not to believe every thing he reads. Reith looked at the gauge on the storage tank in the basement of a variety store which showed a 1,000 gallon capacity. He pumped 1,000 gallons into the 500-gallon tank and it took fire men an hour to clean up the mess. SINGLE DOGHOUSES ONLY CHICAGO (UPI) Police Supt. Orlando W. Wilson was in trouble with the law today because of his Canine Corps training grounds. Mayor Richard Daley reminded the county board Monday that the area where the 40-acre dog farm is located is zoned for single fam ily dwellings. Openings & Interviews The University Placement Serv ice has asked all senior and grad uate students to pick up their free copies of the "12 College Place ment Annual'' and "Career: for the College .Man," now available in 204 Gardner. The two publications contain in formation about jobs in business, industry and government. The Placement Service has also announced that the following com panies will recruit on campus next week: Monday: Texaco Inc., Union Carbide Corp., Sea-Land Service, S. D. Leidsdorf & Co., and Elec tric. Tuesday: Union Carbide Corp , Texaco Inc., Springs Cotton Mills, and First Union National Bank. Wednesday: Central Intelligence Agency, Brunswick Corp., Arm strong Cork Co., Haskins & Sells, Merck & Co., and FMC (Food, Machinery, Chemical Corp.). Friday: Armstrong Cork Co., Marbon Chemical, Bureau of the Budget and Chas. Pfizer & Co. I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 11, 1961, edition 1
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