Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 3, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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Box 870 Chaps! Hill, M.C. Passivity and Neutralism See Edits, Page Two Weather Some cloudiness and warmer. High in the mid 60s. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1961 Complete UP! Wire Service Offices in Graham Memorial Air-Angel Initiate On Monday i Honorary AFROTC Units Combining For 7 P.M. Ceremony The Jesse J. Moorhead Squad ron of Arnold Air Society and the Angel Flight, honorary AFROTC societies, will hold a joint initia tion ceremony in Carroll Hall Monday at 7 p.m. New Arnold Air Society mem bers are: Cadet Staff Sgt. Edward N. Booker, Jr., Cadet Staff Sgt. Joseph R. McDonald, Cadet Staff Set. Mark C. Schnitzer, Cadet A 2C William H. Holderness, Cadet A2C George D. Lynn, Jr., Cadet A2C Henry E. Poole, Cadet A2C James R. Poole III, and Cadet Staff Sgt. Perino M. Dearing Jr. New Angel Flight members are: Judy Tyson, Kathie Law, Sandy Frye, Nancy Tillman, Judy Foster, Lynn Logan, Elaine Morrison, Marsha Barrow, Gail Robinson, Gail Crockett, Becky Proffitt, Dol ly Isom, Linda Pearce, Muff Greason, Linda Laughter, Julie Worth, Margot Hall, Mary Ann Noble, Betsy Whitaker. Arnold Air Society is an honorary AFROTC society which offers membership to those cadets who have "exhibited an outstanding in terest" in the AFROTC program and in becoming Air Force offi cers. The Angel Flight is an hono rary composed of coeds who act as hostesses for receptions ana other social functions held by the AFROTC Cadet Corps. XMAS XPRESS Beginning Tuesday, the Daily Tar Heel will publish a list of rides and riders for the Christ mas holidays. Students desiring either should bring a type-written or printed note with their name,, telephone number and destination by the DTH offices, second floor GM any afternoon except Sunday. lves lanning azaar Stuffed toys, bouffant aprons, fancy Christmas trees, holiday goodies, gift boxes .... you name it, it'll be at the UNC Student Wiv es Christmas Bazaar! The group will hold its second annual bazaar Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the Main Assembly Room of the University Library. All student wives are urged to par ticipate, especially those who have attended Student Wives meeting this year. Each girl is asked to bring some item preferably the result of her own imagination and handiwork to donate for sale. The money will be used for a club project during next semester. Prices of the items will be low, with an eye on the budget of an average student wife. There will also be a display table for those things the wives have made but do not want to sell. Some gift made for Christmas giving may inspire another wife. Interested wives who have nev er attended Student Wives Club are asked to contact an officer, so that arrangements can be made for plenty of refreshments. Num bers to call are 942-2712, 967-228, 967-3203. Oscar-Winning Michelangelo Film Wednesday "The Titan," an award-winning film on Michelangelo, will be pre sented at Carroll Hal Wednesday night, December 6, at 8 p.m. The pubic is invited and there will be no charge for admission. Directed and photographed by Curt Oertel and narrated by Fred eric March, the film was awarded an "Oscar" by the Academy of Arts and Sciences for "best fea ture documentary film." Owned by the North Carolina Museum of Art, its presentation in Chapel Hill is sponsored by the University Art Department. W P B Carolina 24 Virginia 0 y , . - - Ward Mar "A" :::::::;::::x::; tiiiilliiilirj-'-J- ' ,:'""v - " - - - ir rr-nn "L" "r-"" ' ....j-, i r-iTiiaiiWini'iiiiiiiiiinMniiMMmiiiiiii.. m niiiniiiiiiiii i nimm niinnaiiiiinmiK McSiveeney And Katz Battle Over 500 Students Deferred Twelve active reservists who are students were ordered to report to active military duty but got de ferments until February, reports Gen. F. C. Shepard, UNC adviser to veterans. "If the semester's work can be completed within 90 days," defer ment is granted," Gen. Shepard explained. " Over 500 University students arc members of the ready reserve," he estimated. Ready reservists arc ex-servicemen who have been out of the service less " than three years. Maintain Rank Draft or selective service rare ly affects university students, Gen. Shepard noted. A man is not draft ed unless he is the oldest man in his country who hasn't been called. To qualify for draft exemp. tion a student must carry five courses and maintain a rank in a STAFF MEMBERS Any student interested in becoming a staff member of the Daily Tar Heel is invited to come by the DTH office, 2nd floor GM, any afternoon except Sunday. There are presently open ings in all departments, espe cially news. Students need not be journalism majors or necessarily experienced in newspaper work. T welve UNC i - f t .s--f-:?:v.:-:r slender Tackled "Ar In Ready Reserve . -i, .i ..4.. ; i , eservists Until February certain upper percentage of his class. Freshmen must rank in the up per half of their class; sophomores in the upper two-thirds; juniors in the upper three-fourths; seniors desiring to go to graduate school in the upper one-fourth; graduate students in the upper one-fourth; Parisian Speaks On Middle Ages At Ackland Mon. Mademoiselle Marie T. D'Alver ny of Paris will speak on "The Representation of Wisdom in the Middle Ages" Monday night at 8 at the Ackland Art Center. Her talk will be illustrated with selections from medieval manu scripts, especially of medieval con. ceptions of "Saplenta." Described as "an eminent me dievalist mademoiselle from Paris." she is a conservateur of the collection of the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris and secretary of the International Union of the His tory and Philosophy of Science. Presently she is a visiting scholar at Princeton University. The public is invited. 4 fill filiilxlllll ' 1 After Pttss 'A 'A tlliliSMilllliQIll For Rebound medical and dental students in the upper one-half; and law students in the upper three-fourths. Central Records Office ack nowledges four withdrawals from the University attributed to armed service calls. Shepard says these students did not ask for defer ments. LONDON (UPD Nicholas Mon sarratt, 51, author of "The Cruel Sea," . will marry Ann Griffiths, 24, of London, the Daily Express reported Saturday. Monsarrat was quoted as saying he an his bride will make their home on his St. Lawrence River island. MOSCOW (UPD Moscow radio said Saturday Japanese Premier Hayato Ikeda's recent Southeast Asian tour "failed to justify the expense." It said India, Burma and other Asian countries would not make their independence the object of political haggling "either with U.S. imperialists or their agents in , the form of Japanese tourists." ...... .T . HOLLANDIA, New Guinea fUPD The government said Saturday the murder of a Dutch official and two Papuan policemen last month in the remote village of Djadam was committed by villagers protesting an order to demolish slum dwel Are lings. V-fc-.a- ' CAFE OWNER'S SON At Delegates Urge UNC Host Congress Regional NS A Delegates Meet In Greensboro By BILL, HOBBS Special to the DTH GREENSBORO Student dele gates from 23 colleges and univer sities from North Carolina and Virginia yesterday urged that the 15th National Student Congress be held at UNC. : Meeting at the. Woman's College of the Consolidated University, the delegates of the Fall Regional Con ference of the Carolinas-Virginia region of the National Student As sociation resolved that this 'would "provide a much needed stimulus to student thought and action in this region." The conference also ratified a new constitution drafted by the UNC campus NSA committee. Both measures passed by unani mous vote of. the delegates. Emergent Areas The conference, whose theme was "the importance of the university in emergency areas," heard a telegramed message from Gov. Terry Sanford, praising NSA's role in "alerting the entire Ameri can student body to the challenges which await their attention in the areas of educational, political, so cial, and cultural affairs and inter national . as well as national scene." ' Attending the conference as of ficial delegates from UNC were Dwight Whelcss, Robin Britt.j Scotk-Summersi- "Bill Hobbs, Bill Straughn and Tim Tetlow. Also attending from UNC as un official delegates, NSA regional officers or panel . members were ! Bill .Harrissi Hank Patterson, Yoshid Teshima, John Brent, John Randall and Norman Smith. The NSA congress, which the conference urged be held at UNC, is the annual national meeting of delegates from . all NSA mem ber schools which can send repre sentatives. ' The 1961 ' congress was held at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, Wise. Inexpensive Facilities The resolution urging that the 1962 congress be held at Carolina cited the inexpensive facilities at the University and the support of state and University officials. Friday night, the conference heard John Thompson of the World Confederation of Teaching Profes sion, with an address on the role of higher education in the emerg ing countries. College Roundup (Note: Following are news items from leading college news papers from across the coun try, as received at the DTH of fice.) PHYS ED MADISON, Wise The Board of Regents of the University of Wis consin has proposed a reduced compulosry physical education program. Under the new system students will be required to take only six weeks of physical educa tion if they can pass skill tests. The University faculty recom mended an enlarged compulsory program, but was overruled. RED FLAG MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. The campus Young Americans for Freedom organization held a rally this week protesting the Russian flag flying over the University of Minnesota student union. The flag is display- in connection with a Soviet medical exhibit cur rently being displayed in the union. According to the Minnesota DAILY, a U.S. flag flies over an American transportation exhibit in Moscow. GUS HALL TTWArA N V. Gns Hall. -sen era! secretary of the American "At Castro H e's Communist HAVANA (UPD Premier Fidel Castro settled once and for all Saturday the question of his poli tics: He is dedicated to the prin ciples of communism and has been since his college days. "I'm a Marxist-Leninist and I'll remain one till I die," he shouted during a five-hour television ad dress early Saturday in which he announced the merging of his 26th of July movement with the Com munist Party. . Castro explained he had hidden his belief in communism from the Cuban people and his American friends for years "because other wise we might have alienated the bourgeoise and other forces which we knew we would eventually have to fight." His speech stripping away the last veneer of democratic trap pings were in sharp contrast to his statement he made six months after he overthrew dictator Ful gencio Batista on Jan. 1, 1959: "Ours is not a Communist revolu tion." Television Marathon Saturday in his . post-midnight television marathon he said that when his tiny band of rebels made its first abortive attack on the Moncardo barracks at Santiago on July 26, 1953, "the revolutionary thinking was completely formed." Castccv,ioll0wed - .Soviet - -Premier Nikita Khrushchev . in rejecting the idea of the cult of the personality WORLD NEW S BRIEFS By United Press International SANTO DOMINGO Armed forces chief denies possibility mili tary will seize control in strike-torn nation. BERLIN -East Germans reject Kennedy plan to internationalize control routes, order U. S. army to stop convoys. BALTIMORE Negro pickets from New York, Connecticut, Wash ington demonstrate against segregated restaurants in Baltimore. LEOPOLDVILLE Central Congolese government resumes diplo matic ties with Russia, Czechoslovakia and Poland after 15 months break. WASHINGTON Stevenson reports he has besn asked to run for Senate by Illinois political leader. KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C Bullet-pierced bodies of two men with their hands stuffed in their pockets found near state line. Communist Party, will speak at Cornell University .Thursday. The sneech is "Dart of a series of ad dresses by leading proponents of the dominant ideologies m Amer ica." Barry Goldwater will be the next speaker on the program. m DRAFT POLICY MORGANTOWN, W. Va. If a University of West Virginia stu dent is called to military duty be fore a semester is three-fourths over, he will be granted full re fund of fees but no credit, accord ing to a recent Board of Gover nors ruling. If a student is drafted after that, full credit will be given to those who have passing grades at the time of their departure. DEMONSTRATIONS NEW YORK, N. Y. The NA TIONAL GUARDIAN reported last week that demonstrations against speaker bans were con tinuing at New York municipal colleges. In the past year college trus tees have banned the following -A Admits and said he had discarded the probability of himself becoming a "caudillo" boss . . . "for which renunciation I congratulate my--elf." The premier said he was "po litically illiterate" when he at tended high school "but today I'm a convinced revolutionary." "In college I had my first con tacts with . bourgeois economic policies and right then I began to dissent," he said. "Thereafter I read the Communist Manifesto and other Marixist books." Castro said his 26th of July movement and the Popular So cialist Communist Party would be fused into the "integrated revolu tionary organization" to be known as "the united party of Cuba's so cialist revolution." One Party He said the one party would have a Marxist-Leninist platform adjusted to the conditions of the Cuban revolution and those of the Cuban nation. "Every honest Cuban will have a place, in its rank and file," he said. He emphasized that the most important thing were the schools for Marxist training now operat ing in Cuba. Castro traced the process of the Cuban .revolution . and encouraged other Latin American , nations to follow his example. Cvi Hcjl GMAB Schedule 1:30-5:00 P.M.: A K PSI RP L, 2, 3 3:00 P.M.: Christmas Party, G.M. M L 3:30-5:30: C. C. F. Grail RODING, England (UPD Part time fireman Michael Cater, 13, admitted in court Friday he set three small fires because he was short of money and needed the extra fireman's pay. PARIS (UPD The body of slain Dominican Republic dictator Ra fael Tru.iillo was taken from Orly Airport Friday night to Paris Pere Lachaise Cemetery to await bur ial. Dominican sources said Ra fael, Jr., would erect a monument to mark the grave. speakers: Benjamin Davis, na tional secretary of the Communist Party; William F. Buckley, editor of the right-wing NATIONAL RE VIEW; Malcolm X, a leader of the Black Muslins; and New York State Assemblyman and "freedom rider" Mark Lane. , 1 l - -I jf I BMW SHOT -A -A Man Is Held On 1st Degree Murder Rap Bobby Lee (Lucky) Moore was charged with first degree mur der Saturday in the death of Wil liam Ellis, son of the owners of the Village Cafeteria. Bill Ellis was fataly shot at 12:30 a.m. dur ing a card game in the cafeteria. According to Ruffin Harvile and Graham Cotton, who claim to have seen the shooting, Ellis was con fronted by Bobby Lee (Lucky) Moore of Carrboro. Moore alleged, ly asked Ellis what he intended to do about a $1000 debt he owed Moore. Ellis threw up his hands and said, "Do what you are going to do." Moore shot him near the base of the neck with a .32 caliber pis tol, said the reputed witnesses. Ellis, according to Harville and Cotton, jumped to his feet and staggered out the back door of the restaurant. Left By Doors Moore and his wife left the cafe teria by one door, and Harville went out by another to look for Ellis. Harville says he found Ellis ly ing on the brick terrace in back of the Ackland Art Museum. Ellis still had a weak pulse, but he made no other response. Harville called the police and sent for an ambulance. Ellis was reportedly already dead by the time the ambulance arrived. Minutes later, Moore was ar rested at his home in Carrboro. He was taken to the Chapel Hill jail. ' ' " Looked By Ellis According to a statement Moore's wife gave to Chapel Hill police she and her husband looked for Ellis in his car to see if they could help him. They then got into Moore's pick up and drove home. She said that she did not see her husband get rid of the pistol. Harville said that he was look ing for Ellis at 10 o'clock. He and Ellis had been classmates in high school. Harville saw Ellis' car parked by the restaurant. He found Elis inside playing cards with Graham Cotton, a Negro whom Ellis had met through his furniture business in Carrboro. Moore was sitting at the table with them. Moore had his head in his hands and was not playing cards. Reportedly he had been drinking heavily. Shortly before midnight Moore called his wife to come and get him. According to witnesses Moore shot Ellis short ly after her arrival at 12:15. Ellis was not married. He is sur. vived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James R. Ellis, and his sister, Mrs. Stanley Peele. Cumpu Briefs "Cyrano de Bergerac" is to night's Free Flick. Showings are at 7:30 and 9:30 in Carroll Hall. The Department of Radio, Tele vision, and Motion Pictures has announced that television sets will be made available Sunday night for students viewing of the first presentation of "An Age of Kings" on Channel four. All interested students are invit ed to see this first of fifteen tele vision broadcasts of Shakespearean Pageantry to be presented by WUNC-TV each Friday and Sun day nights. The television sets will be located in studio "A" of Swain Hall, at the back entrance of Swain Hall. The YW-YMCA Orphanage Com mittee will leave from Y-Court at 2 p.m. Sunday. All those interest ed in making the trip to Raleigh are asked to be present by co chairmen Betti Brown and Bruce Cooper. The committee will re turn by 5:30. All students who have not picked up their Yack proofs, do so im mediately. Anyone desiring pic tures taken by Yack photograph ers, leave name, address, and pic tures desired at the Yack office.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1961, edition 1
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