Newspapers / The daily Tar Heel. / Nov. 16, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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Aerials Sept. Bcr 070 Cfeapol Hill, II. C, Weather Desegregation ? See Edits, Page Two Mostly cloudy and mild with widely scattered showers. Offices in Graham Memorial THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servici CTa Gizenga Opens Revolt Rebels Force UN Members To Flee LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo (UPD Vice Premier Antoine Giz enga, political heir to the slain Pa trice Lumumba, was reported to day to have opened a rebel move ment against the government of The Congo whose troops have mu tinied in two cities. Rebellious Congolese soldiers forced members of a United Na tions delegation to flee for their lives from Kindu in Kivu Pro vince shortly after Gizenga ar rived there from his Stanleyville stronghold, diplomatic sources said. The diplomatic reports came the day after a United Nations investi gating committee announced at U. N. headquarters that Lumumba was murdered early this year with Katanga Premier Moise Tshombe as a probable witness. Gizenga was a staunch supporter and lieu tenant of Lumumba. Troops of Rampage In another outburst of violence mutinous Congo troops went on a rampage of robbery in the North Katanga city of AlbertviUe. The reported threat from Gizenga ap parently was one of the most seri ous faced by the central govern ment in recent weeks. Informed sources said the government was preparing a communique announ cing how it intended to deal with it. One government source said Giz enga is "in open rebellion against the government." WORLD MEWS BRIEFS f " By United Press International Nhrw Campus Briefs TODAY 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Subscriptions for the Carolina Quarterly will be sold at Y Court through Friday. 4 p.m. The YWCA Orphanage Committee will meet at the Y. 6 p.m. American Field Service Students will meet upstairs in Len oir Hall. 7 p.m. UNC Cardboard Club will meet in Roland Parker I to have Yack picture taken and to discuss awards. 8 p.m. The Graduate History Wives Clio Club will meet at the Victory Village Day Care Center to exchange Christmas decorating ideas. FRIDAY 11 a.m. Harvey S. Perloff, di rector, Program of Regional Stu dies, Resources for the Future, Inc., will address the Planners' Forum in, Morehead Faculty Lounge. His topic will be "Eco nomic Foundations for Urbanism and the Implications for Planning." The public is invited. j 6 p.m. The American Rocket Societv will have a dinner meet ing in Raleigh at the Holiday Inn. The keynote speaker will be G. Harry Stine, Assistant Director of Research of the Huyck Corpora tion of New York City. His talk will be on Microrocketry. The meeting is open to all interested persons. 7:30 p.m. The English Club will meet in the Library Assembly Room to hear Professor Arlin Turner, of the Duke English de partment speak on "The Hazards of Authorship in the South Follow ing the Civil War." 8 p.m. BEAT DOOK pep rally at Emerson Field. Payment for organizational space in the Yack is now due. All juniors who have not picked up their Yack proofs should do so immediately. GM MASTER SLATE November 16, 1961 Time & Event Location 4:00 VP of Women's Dorms R P 2 4:00 Campus Affairs WDHSE 4:00 Symposium GRAIL 5:00 Rules Committee R P 1 6:45 S. P. GRAIL 7:00 U. P. WDHSE 7:00 Cardboard R P 1 7:00 Bridge Lessons R P 2, 3 7:30 NOMIC GRAIL Russia Proposes Disarmament Treaty UNITED NATIONS Russia proposed Wednesday that a treaty on general and complete disarmament be drafted and submitted to a special session of the General Assembly by next June. - But an exchange between Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Valerian A. Zorin and U. S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson at the opening of the assembly's main political committee debate on disarmament made it clear that there was little prospect in agreement soon on the problem of control or even on the forum in which negotiations should be renewed. Finland Prepares For Elections HELSINKI Finland calmly prepared Wednesday for parliamentary elections it hopes will give the country an "ideal" coalition govern-'' ment that will show Russia this country presents no threat to its big neighbor. Political observers said that unless Finland is able to win this trust from the Soviet Union it might well be subjected to the kind of pressures that would turn the country into an unwilling satellite. Red China May Have 1st Bomb LONDON The Chinese Communists are reported rushing an in dependent nuclear project that may result in explosion of Red China's first atomic bomb by mid-1962. Diplomatic reports based on information filtering out from com munist nations indicates that Chinese communists are developing their own nuclear project now without Soviet help. U. S. Sends Convoy Through Germany BERLIN The U. S. Army announced Wednesday it will send an other convoy of combat troops 110 miles through Communist terri tory Thursday as part of the campaign to stress Western rights of access to Berlin. About 200 infantrymen will make the trip to a British army training ground near Hildesheim, West Germany, passing through Soviet checkpoints at each end of the Berlin-Helmstedt Autobahn super highway. The 20-truck convoy will make the return trip Sunday. Garcia Apparently Loses Election MANILA Liberal Vice President Diosdado Macapagal rolled up a commanding lead over incumbent Carlos P. Garcia in the Philippines presidential election returns last night, and his campaign manager claimed victory. 6No Sympathy For Defeatists9 DALLAS, Tex. -Attorney General Robert Kennedy said Wednes day he has no sympathy with right-wing groups, defeatists and those who would rather be "Red than dead:" .Recount Cli&iises IE ection O mteeinm Johnsye . Massenburg, UP can didate for Freshman Class Secre tary, defeated Frieda Collins, SP candidate for the same post, by 12 votes, according to Elections Board Chairman Dave. Buxton. A recount of the votes was made yesterday and a mistake was dis covered in the recording of the votes from Winston dormitory. The 33 votes for Massenburg had been counted as 13. Dave Buxton said that it was regrettable that the error had not been discovered before the results were made pub lic. Because of a lack of vote counters' a recount could not be made Tuesday night. A recount was also made of the votes for Dolly Isom, SP candid ate for Freshman - Social Chair man, and Jane Hanson, UP can-1 didate for the same office. The official totals are now 580 votes for Dolly Isom and 564 votes for Jane Hanson. Returns on the honor council elections are as follows: Women's Council, Judicial Dis trict I (2 seats), Bryant 176, Mur phy 158, Taylor 72, Lloyd 38. r Women's Council, Judicial Dis trict II (2 seats), Haynes 235, Mar tin 233, Webster 74, MacArthur 60, Eagles (Ind.) 41, Deane 37. i Men's Council, Judicial District I (2 seats), Critz 553, Simpson 474, Brandt (Ind.) 332. Men's Council, - Judicial District II (2 seats), Wales 425, McConnel 337, Spear (Ind.) 215, Morphis (Ind.) 175. Men's Council, Judicial District III (2 seats), Bensch 236, Crudup 207, Bogache 169. Men's Council, Judicial District IV (3 seats) Battle 182, Lewis 137, Remsburg 117, Turner 95, Bridges 50, Schlater 43. Results for the amendments to the constitution are as follows: Amendm't 1: for 2,094; against 368. Amendm't 2: for 2,046; against 398. Amendm't 3: for 2,054; against 409. Amendm't 4: for 2,055; against 398. 'Die Cast Last Spring9 . . . UP By Drena Edwards "The die was cast last spring when the Student Party empha- :v &. . - .. . -: $4 rt - ? I i V 4 sized the University Party as the fraternity party," said UP Chair man Bill Criswell yesterday as he analysed his party's defeat in Tuesday's elections. As an illustration of his point he said the clocest split between the parties was among the freshman class. "Those are the people who were n't here last spring," he said, "so they weren't under the influence of that campaign." Criswell rejected the claim that the fraternities and sororities are organizd as a UP block. Fallacy of Tag "The fact that only 30 to 40 per cent of them voted, I think, shows a lack of interest and indicates the fallacy of the fraternity party tag," maintained Criswell. Evidently, he said, the dorms felt "compelled" to vote against the fraternities; but the fraterni ties "didn't care enough to sup port or refute the idea." Criswell said the reason all of the UP candidates were fraternity or sorority members was that 700 of the 750 people at the nominat ing convention were from those groups. "Imagine what one dorm, say Joyner, could do if it turned out as a whole at the nominating con vention," he added. (Continued on Page 3) B To F OMF Confer PEACE CORPSMEN Ruth Hagey, left, pro ducer and moderator of "College News Confer ence," talks with two student, reporters and three Peace Corpsmen, now stationed in Colum bia, South America. The Peace Corps "Con ference" program Sunday at 5:30 on Channel 4 WUNC-TV will mark the beginning of the series's tenth year. Peace Corps entrance examinations will be given Nov. 28 and 29 at the Durham post office at 8:30 a.m. 13(0) A iCres jroir New Arboret: mm JUonatec NO SLEEP-TIME GAL WOBURN, Mass. (UPD While celebrating her 105th birthday, Miss Bridget Riley was asked if she took a nap each day. "Heavens, no!" she replied. "Do you think I want to sleep my whole life away?" - JFK Creates Job Committee For U.S. Youth WASHINGTON (UPD President Kennedy Wednesday created a White House committe on youth employment to help find jobs for nearly one million boys and girls under 21 who have left school. Kennedy named Labor Secretary Arthur J. Goldberg to head the 23 man committee which includes cabinet members, business leaders, union officials and civic leaders. "Our youth are our greatest re source." Kennedy said in a state ment. ....... "The social and economic impli cations of protracted unemploy ment among the one million young job seekers today and the many millions who will enter the labor force in the next few years de mand immediate attention and ac tion," he added. " Film Society Showing Phantom Here Mon. Embassy Man To Speak On Polish Policy Dr. Marian Dobrosiclski of the Polish Embassy in Washington, will speak on "Polish Foreign Policy Today" tonight at 8 in CarroU Hall. The speech, sponsored by the YM-YWCA Public Affairs Com mittee, is open to the public. There will be a question period after the talk. Dobrosiflski is expected to cov er political, economic and other aspects of Poland's foreign re lations. He was a member of the philo sophy department of the Univcr. sity of Warsaw and the Institute of Philosophy of the Polish Acad emy of Sciences from 1353 to 1957. In 1955 he was elected secre tary of the Polish Philosophy Society. "Phantom of the Opera," starr ing Lon Chaney, will be a special offering of the UNC-Chapel Hill Film Society's fall-winter series Monday night at 8 in Carroll Hall. Mary Philbin is starred as the Opera's brilliant young singer who befriends . Erik, the grotesque "Phantom." Norman Kerry plays Miss Philbrin's lover. Rupert Julian directed the film, and Carl Laemmle produced it. Chaney was considered by many to be the greatest makeup man of movie history. He was played by James Cagney in the production of "The Man With A Thousand Faces." The film, produced in 1925 by Universal, is a melo-dramatic hor ror film, reaching a climax when the heroes are trapped in torture chambers, their fates in the hands of the heroine. A short, "City of the Stars," featuring a tour of Universal Stu dios in 1925, will also be shown. it it "A" 'v ,i - - ; , - - . ' - , ' v . ,1 i 't'' , , , y, - ' ' - i ' ' A gift to the University of 130 acres of land along Morgan Creek in Orange County was announced yesterday by Chancellor William B. Ay cock. To be named the "William Lanier Hunt Arboretum," the property is a major portion of a large botani cal garden encompassing 240 acres. Plans for a horticulture show- place and laboratory of potential international stature for teaching and research in botany are en visioned. It will be the first major botani cal garden and arboretum connect ed with a state university in the southeast. Part of it will resemble the 5.5 acres Coker Arboretum but will be from 75 to 100 times larger and more varied and ex tensive. 24.5 Acres Two separate land gifts were an nounced: (1). William L. Hunt, specialist in southern gardening and civic beautification, gave UNC 24.5 acres along Morgan Creek just outside the town limits and adjacent to the Mason Farm own ed by the University. He also con tracted to give an additional 100 acres over a period of years. (2) An additional eight acres of land in the same vicinity was giv en by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gray. Gray is a local banker. Both properties are along Mor gan Creek and include the place known as Laurel Hill which was "discovered" in the last century by President Kemp Plummer Battle. The Hunt property is con tiguous with approximately 80 acres of land which has been used by the University for the past nine years as an experiment al botanical garden. BSU Here Against Capita I Punishment The UNC Baptist Student Union is taking "a similar position" to that of the student: delegation which Tuesday asked the Baptist State Convention to go on record supporting the' abolition of capital punishment in North Carolina. The convention, now meeting in Greensboro, has referred to com mittee the resolution proposed by Wake Forest College delegates and action is expected to be taken to day. Bill Price, director of the local BSU, stated that although his or ganization has only one .represen tative at the convention, it is plan ning study groups to discuss the issue, and that the question will be resolved at the BSU convention! next spring. - ; "Segregation Sinful" Price also said that the union is in general agreement with the plea by the Rev. Wilburg Honeycutt at the State Convention that "Segre gation at any level is exceedingly sinful." He pointed out that the BSU here has taken the position that eating, entertainment and edu cational facilities should be inte grated, and he noted that the local Union is an integrated group. Price emphasized that the union's position on integration - has been taken in light of the present .situa tion in Chapel Hill, and he referred to the segregation policy of a group of local business establishments. WASHINGTON The Western Big Four The United States, Britain, Fran ce and West Germany agreed Wednesday to hold a foreign ministers meeting on the Berlin situation, probab ly in Paris next month. State Department announcement of the meeting came after Secre tary of State Dean Rusk confer red here with French Ambassador Herve Alphand and British Em bassy Minister Viscount Hood, on the Communist threat to Berlin, the Far East and other areas. The department also announced that Gen. Lucius D. Clay, Presi dent Kennedy's special representa tive in Berlin, was returning here for consultations this weekend. He will be accompanied by Walter C, Dowling, U. S. Ambassador to West Berlin. State Department press officer Lincoln White said they were call ed home to help prepare for the visit of West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who arrives Sunday night. To Meet Adenauer will meet with Presi dent Kennedy and other U. S. of ficials m a move to map Allied policy toward Communist-encircled Berlin a problem that will be fur ther explored at the forthcoming foreign ministers meeting. At present, the Western Allies ap pear to have agreed to sit tight on tne Berlin situation pending some indication that the Russians are mterstea m East-West nego tiations. There has been some disagreement in the past on pro cedural questions. An exact date for the foreign ministers conference has not yet been set, but a State Department spokesman said it probably would be held about the time of the NATO ministerial meeting in Paris Dec. 13-15. Has Been Agreed "It has been agreed to take ad vantage of meetings at which the four foreign ministers will be pres ent to enable them to get together on problems of common interest," the spokesman said. The French ambassador indicated after Wednesday's conference with Rusk that the conference might be held just before Dec. 13. Ministers of state, defense and finance for the 15 NATO countries will be in Paris for the NATO meeting. This is one of two NATO ministerial meetings held annually. The other is a regular foreign ministers meeting each spring . GM Bills Josh White On Dec. 1 Folk singer Josh White will per form on a Graham Memorial sponsored program in Memorial Hall Dec. 1 at 8 p.m. Admission is $1. He is known for his unique guitar style and interpretation of ballads, blues, work songs and spirituals. . In recent years he has perform ed in the United States and abroad in concert halls, night clubs, on radio and TV. Some critics say Josh White is a man who sings with the strength of one who has lived the songs he sings. From the time he was 7 years old and began leading singers like Blind Blake and Blind Lemon Jef ferson through the South, he has known the songs of the chain gangs. "We'd walk from city to city we rarely could take a train and we'd hear the road gangs and swampers, the ones who had to clean out the swamps. Some times when we'd stop to play in a town, we heard stories from men who had been on the gangs. Some had escaped, some had made their time." His records include "The Ballad of John Henry," "Every Time I Feel the Spirit," "Nine Foot Shov el" and "Going Home." Library Schedule Fololwing is the University Library schedule during the Thanks giving holidays: Wednesday, Nov. 22 7:45 a m.-5 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 23 CLOSED Friday, Nov. 24 : 9 a.m. -5 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 25 9 a.m.-l p.m. Sunday, Nov. 26 CLOSED Monday, Nov. 27 Regular Schedule Says U. Of Chicago Profess sor 'Students Should Be P alclP Lon Chaney NOW YOU KNOW The Liberty Bell in Philadelphia weighs 2,080 pounds. From Wire Reports Students should be paid to go to college, suggested University of Chicago economist Prof. H. W. Schultz Tuesday. He told the American Associa tion of Land Grant Colleges and State Universities in Kansas City that this was one possible method for reducing the waste of college student's time and for accomplish ing basic reforms in higher educa tion. Schultz feels that colleges ' and universities seriously under-estim. ate the value cf the time students spend at college. The 'opportunity cost' to the students for the years they spend going to school, the loss of the money that they would otherwise be earning is greater than many people think, said the professor. Earnings Lost The economist illustrated this with figures showing that in 1356 the total school cost of higher edu cation in the United States was $3.5 billion. The total earnings foregone by college and university students last year was $5.8 billion. "But colleges go merrily on," he said, "treating the time of the students as if it were a free re source. Instead of rationing ad missions and economizing on the time of students, one way would be to recruit and pay each student the earnings he will forego while attending college." "I venture," he added, "such a procedure, impractical as it may appear, would bring about basic reforms in the use of school facili ties libraries, laboratories and classrooms in the use of faculty time, and above all a reform in curricula."
Nov. 16, 1961, edition 1
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