Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 8, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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tJUC Library Serials Dept. Bos 870 Chapsi Hill, II. C. Weather Pure, Simple Boredom See Edits, Page Two Fair and continued cool with high temperatures in the 50s. Offices in Graham Memorial FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servict WORLD MEWS BRIEFS By United Press International " if 7ti. r ' iieus utut neurit muii NEW DELHI Communist China Thursday accused Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of lying, lacking moral courage and "pur suing an unfriendly policy" in the Sino-Indian border dispute. The attack, one of the most bitter ever made by Peiping against any foreign leader, also accused India of preparing to "invade and occupy Chinese territory" along the border. In the past two days, Nehru twice has threatened to go to war as last 'resort to protect India's northern frontier from Chinese in cursions. - . The attack was broadcast abroad by Peipings New China news agency. "It quoted a Foreign (Ministry statement, a "'strong" protest note sent last month" to India and "the official newspaper People's Daily... it -it- it 300,000 Commie "Spies" NEW YORK Assistant FBI Director William C. Sullivan said J Thursday that the worldwide Communist spy network is manned by some 300,000 intelligence and undercover agents working through more than 37 secret organizations. One of the chief targets of this sprawling apparatus, Sullivan said, is American industries with classified government defense contracts. The FBI official told the National Association of Manufacturers' 66th annual congress of American industry that Communist espionage agents . obtained valuable intelligence data through attendance at scientific and industrial meetings, by the exploitation of published technical material and even from the government printing office. Unemployed Drop Sharply : WASHINGTON The nation's nagging unemployment problem im proved for the first time in a year last month when the seasonally adjusted, jobless arte dropped sharply, the Labor; Department an Thursday. .- Expressing administration elation, President Kennedy reported the figures to the AF-CIO convention in "Miami a few hours before the department announced the unemployment rate drop here. "And we're going to get it down lower," he told the cheering meeting. -'- The department's manpower expert, Raymond D. Larson, pre dicted that the rate would go down "moderately in the future." The number of Americans holding jobs stood at 7.3 million last month, a record for November but 500,000 less than in October. ' V Katangese Fire On U.S. Plane ELISABETHVILLE Heavy Katangese rifle and machinegune fire hit a U. S. Globemaster transport and set it on fire Thursday, and the U. S. Air Force abandoned its airlift of troops and supplies to the Elisabethville combat zone. The. gigantic plane landed safely with flames streaming from an engine when it received several hits in a gasoline tank and one engine as it circled low over the embattle city on a flight from Leopoldville with U. N. supplies. The 12 crewmen were uninjured. i Faculty News - Lucie Jessner, M.D., psychiatry professor, will chair a panel dis cussion section at the annual meeting ' of the American Psycho analytic Association, today through Sunday at the Biltmore Hotel in New York City. Dr. Jessner will head a discus sion entitled "Classical Forms of Neuroses in Infancy and Early Childhood." Other members of the Depart ment of Psychiatry attending the meeting are Professors Milton L. Miller, M.D., and D. Wilfred Abse, M.D.; Associate Professors John A. Ewing, M.D., and James T. Proctor, M.D.; Assistant Pro fessor David F. Freeman, M.D.; Clinical Instructor James Earl Somers, M.D.; Instructors Francis J. Kane Jr., M.D.; and Marianne S. Buslin, M.D., and Clinical Pro fessor David A. Young, M.D. Prof. Richard Jamerson of the Physical Education Department in the School of Liberal Arts will preside at the meeting of the State Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation being held today in Charlotte. Jamerson is the 1961 president of the association. Other UNC participants in the program will be Dr. Marvin Allen, Miss Frances Kellam and Dr. Ruth Fink. Topics include thera peutics, intramural and outdoor recreation, and the requirements of physical education in school curricular.- . The Book-of-the-Month Club of the McGraw-Hill Book Co. in New York has selected "Route Surveys and Design" by Kenan Professor Emeritus Thomas F. Hickerson as their book of the month. Dr. Hickerson's professional work in highway location and con struction has earned for him an international reputation. "Route Surveys and Design" re lates to highway construction, and is particularly valued by engi neers. - , i CM JL t8o!s Noted Jazz Artist Sarah Vaughan Billed In Durham Sarah Vaughan, jazz artict, will make her first appearance in Durham m concert at the North Carolina College gym next Wed nesday at :15 p.m. Miss Vaughan, coming direct from a brilliant six-week engage ment at the Flamingo in Las Vegas, will be backed by her own troupe of nine jazz instrumental ists. Tickets for the concert are priced at $1.50 for college stu dents. They can be obtained at Kemp's, or in Durham at the Covenant Book Room, the Record Bar. Eckerd's, Biltmore Drug Store, Parker Drug Store, and Col lege Inn. Musical Excitement The singer has attracted the ex citement of the musical world from the time of her first appearance as an amateur in a talent show in Harlem's Apollo Theater, at the age of sixteen. She was hired immediately by bandleader Earl Hines as his vocalist and pianist. and served a brief apprenticeship in the next three years with the bands of Billy Eckstine and John Kirby. Training in timing, technique, and showmanship made Sarah Vaughan "top star material," and sales of her first record, Its Magic," shot over the two mil lion mark. She was an established record ing artist and turned out such hits as "Poor Butterfly," "Don't Blame Me," "Body and Soul," "I've Got a Crush on You," and "I Cover the Waterfront." Her albums have been stamped as classics by critics and collec tors from their first appearance. "Sarah Vaughan at Mister Kel- ley's," "No Count Sarah," and others capture the genius of phras ing and sense of rapport with the consistent winner" of popularity polls as the nation's top feminine vocalist. Recently married to former pro fessional football player Clyde At kins, Miss Vaughan will be ac companied to Durham by her hus band. Professor Calls Many Students 'Unteachables' Ten per cen of all the students at Carolina are unteachables, a University professor said here Tuesday. "At the age of eighteen hey are rigid and inflexible and already have a closed mind." Assistant Professor of English Donald K. Springen made the re mark while addressing 100 men and women on the problem of oral communications, at the third an n u a 1 Hospital-Executive Develop ment Institute meeting here. "Argument thrives on advo cacy," Mr. Springen said. "A per son has already made up his mind and is now ready to persuade oth ers that his system, is the - right system. "If you really - want to under stand another person's point, you must be humble-minded, have a respect for human personality, overcome the conviction that you know best, and rid yourself of all irritations at another's manner or approach. This works, he said, whether the argument is between two people or over the Berlin wall. Dr. William J. Daniel. UNC pro fessor of psychology, addressing an afternoon session of the Hospital Institute, defined the advent of machine education as the most revolutionary change in education since tne rotary press. Some teachers are ODDosed to the program, he said, because they are afraid they will be replaced. Any teacher who can be replaced ought to be," he said. "Actually, a system of programmed instruc tion (machine instruction) would leave them free to do what thev rarely do now teach!" Prof. Daniel said that most teach ers now, especially in grammar schools, were simply "drill-ser geants." "Education is the only commo dity that a student pays for that he wants as little of as possible," the psychologist said. "What we da to stifle and kill and misdirect the resources we all have in our pub lis schools is phenomenal. No good business would stand for the kinds of things that our schools insist on. Ford, Taylor Stars In Two Weekend Flicks Tonight's free flick will be "It Started with a Kiss," starring Debbie Reynolds, Glenn Ford and Eva Gabor. The comedy portrays an Air Force sergeant who finds that his bride is endangering his career and his sanity. It is a "zany romp through the foibles of military and newly-wedded life off-post in Spain." Saturday night academy award winner Elizabeth Taylor will star in "The Last Time I Saw Paris." one of her earliest movies. Flicks will be shown at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall and ID cards are required. ' " Carolina Quarterly Out Tomorrow; Each Issue Has Individual Cover l J. 'mJt: QUARTERLY editor, Jerome Stern yesterday announced that the Carolina Quarterly will go on sale tomorrow. The literary magazine boasts a "broad range of fiction and poetry," and will be on sale at many campus locations. ""fx c ; Y!! , - - . V . w f y :;' J' "i HONOR LECTURES Jey Deifell, left, and George Campbell, chairman of the. Honor Council, discuss plans for the current series of talks on the honor system. Deifell heads the committee which is explaining the honor system to fraternity, sorority and dormitory groups on campus. Photo by Mangum. ..V YM- YWCA Host ToN.C. Orphans By MARTIN KRUMING On Sunday afternoon at ap proximately 2:00 a busload of twenty boys and twenty girls, ranging in age from eleven to thirteen, from the State Catholic Orphanage in Raleigh will arrive on the Carolina campus as guests of the YMCA and the YWCA. Betti Brown and Bruce Cooper, co-chairmen of the YWCA and the YMCA Orphanage Committee, will serve as hosts for the two groups. After their arrival at the Tin Can,-the girls will be shown the Ackland Art Center, the More head Planetarium, the Arboretum, and other points of interest on campus. For the boys, Cooper has a spe cial treat in store. They will be escorted to one of the athletic fields where quarterback Ray Farris and other members of the varsity football team will conduct a special football clinic. Although the lads are a little young, they will be given tutoring in the art of passing, blocking, punting, and pass catching. Towards the end of the after noon, the youngsters will be taken to Graham Memorial where they will have a delicious dinner of fried chicken, sandwiches,' and cokes and a Christmas party fea turing the popular Mexican game in which all the children dance around a large bag filled with treasures and try to break it. At five-thirty all this will come to an PLEAD GUILTY LONDON (UPD Two teen-age brothers who claim membership in Britain's ban-the-bomb nuclear movement, pleaded guilty Wednes day to manslaughter charges for exploding a home-made bomb which killed a man. They will be sen tenced later. Their ames were not disclosed. The Carolina Quarterly's winter issue comes out tomorrow boasting 64 pages, of stimulating short stor ies and poetry by well-known writ ers, plus an editorial on the im pact of politics on public univer sities. The Quarterly covers, each of which has a separate design, have had an enthusiastic response from two art professors, who called them "strikingly original with wonderful color," and "very good prints." Art instructor Robert Barnard and his art 45 class print ed the 700 covers by hand from linoleum blocks. The editorial, "Politics and Pub lic Campuses," attacks the "ivory-tower-nose-in- the-air attitude" of both students and faculties, while revealing the relationship of poli ticians and pedagogues. Fiction . includes "The Photo graph," by Guy Owen, a UNC graduate, whose novel "Season of Fear" was well received last year. Although Owen has national promi nence, his story is regional in N 4 !?( end when the children board their bus in the Planetarium parking lot and return home. Commenting on this special event, Cooper emphasized that "the committee members should get to know the kids and make them feel at home." Also, he men tioned that "the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity pledge class devised the idea, but it is strictly a YMCA YWCA affair." Infirmary. Students in the Infirmary Thurs day were Mary Jo Bender, Jacque line Beza, Sharon Weeldreyer, James Roark, James Eller, John Kimblle, Walter Honour, Frank Dunn, William Dover, William Spencer, Gloria Alphin, Leila Major, Julia Humphreys, Helen Palmatier, Suzanne Luter, John Fisher, Litchfield Huie, Richard Edwards, Julian Bradley, Phillip Adams, John Jennings, Robert Hinnant, Robert Singletary, Oscar Harriss, Mrs. Agnes Little, Helen Martin, Catherine Johnson, Sam Barfield, Bonn Gilbert, Roger Bisson, William Garrard, Robert Deal, Theodore Bobbitt. PLANNING VISIT NEW YORK (UPI) U.S. and Mexican officials are discussing arrangements for a visit by Presi dent Kennedy to Mexico in the latter part of January, White House officials said Wednesday. Planning for the visit, first dis closed earlier this week in con nection with the President's De cember trip to Colombia and Venezuela, has not reached the stage of setting a firm date, the officials said. flavor and considered by some universal in significance. "The God Stone" explores the conscious through the subcon scious with lucidness. Its author, Hugh MacEachern, is taking Jesse Rehder's honors course in writ ing. Fleece Soul "This challenging experimental story," said Jerome Stern, Quar terly editor, "explores the differ ent ways man attempts to flee his own soul." "The Roses Are Dying" is a cal culating story of personal involve ments in an academic community. A- Farrell Borenstein of Baton Rouge, La., depicts the academic world. Gary Elder's "Lady Fogelsang's Passage," story of two boys and a horse, is described by Stern as "richly and sensitively told in an immediate style." John Gutknecht, studying for a Ph.D. in zoology, the author of many articles on radioactivity's effect on salt water and an ex .Higl XMAS XPRESS RIDES MERIDEN, Conn. Via NEW YORK CITY, four riders, leaving Monday, December 18, call Peter Ford, 968-2441, 6-7 p.m., will divide expenses. NEW YORK CITY Two riders, leaving 8 p.m., Wednesday, De cember 20, call Louise or Glenn Colby, 942-4717, after 5:30. ATLANTA Leaving December 16, call J. M. Womack, 325 Teague, 968-9157. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (and en oute) Leaving December 15 or 6, contact Fran Stallings, 310 Connor or 23 New East Annex. NEW YORK CITY AND BROOK LYN, N. Y Four riders, leaving Friday, December 15, 12-1 p.m., share expenses. Call Ron Orovan, 303 Ruffin, 968-9182. PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y. or NEW YORK CITY Leaving Dec. 15th. Call Ciaran Mercier, 207 Ay cock, 968-9158. AUGUSTA OR COLUMBUS, GA. One rider, leaving Thursday, De cember 14, Beverly Bernier, 968 9168, share expenses. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY or vi. cinity Mark Greenberg, leaving noon Friday, December 15, 122 Cobb. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Need three riders. Call Howard Hol senbeck, 306 Stacey, 968-9112. Leaving Saturday, Dec. 16. (Continued on Page 3) Action Needed On National Defense Education Loans Harold Weaver, manager of student loan funds, yesterday an nounced that all students indebted to the National Defense Loan funds or the University Loan Funds must complete necessary forms before they leave the Uni versity. "The responsibility for this re quirement," said Weaver, "is that of the borrowing student only and is a basic requirement in the terms and conditions of the Na tional Defense Loan agreement." Failure on the part of a stu dent to check with the manager of the Loan Funds office in per son before his separation, places him "in neglect of the require ments and may seriously jeopar dize any benefits, rights, or privi leges he may be entitled to under the terms of the Act for repay ment." Weaver said that all students, indebted to the Loan Funds, and who plan to leave the University this semester, should call him at 301 Bynum Hall. perienced trackman, has written an autobiographical account of his feelings and thoughts during a long distance race. "The Invisible Thread" is a different type of sports story. Surprising Maturity Dudley Carroll and Kenneth Karcher's poems show surprising maturity for undergraduates, Stern said. "Lee Jacobus, Fred Moeckel and George Cuonio have been widely published in other maga zines," he added. Fo rrange of sub jects and maturity, "the dozen or so poems are the finest collection in the Quarterly for years," he said. "I think that with such a broad range of fiction and fine poetry, we'll surely sell out the entire issue," said Stern. Our subscrip tion drive has been very successful-totaling more than 300 and campus response to the Quarterly is on the upswing. I'm astounded at the show of interest by so many people. Our efforts have really paid off." i Court Action Apply Here W.B. Aycock Says University Is OK By TOM LEONHARDT . . Chancellor William B. Aycock said yesterday that the Supreme Court ruling that the Constitution requires a hearing before stu- Noted Speaker To Keynote Meet Of Tagore Group Dr. Amiya Chakrabarty, noted interpreter of East-West relations, will be the main speaker at a meet ing of the Tagore Society in the Assembly Room of Louis R. Wilson Library tonight at 8 p.m. His speech, 'The International Significance of Tagore's works and Ideas," will be in commemora tion of the birth of Rabindra Nath Tagore in 1861. Tagore was an Indian philosoph er whose ideas helped shape mod ern thought. He was a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize for Litera ture, and the Centennial of his birth is being celebrated world wide this year. B. U. Professor Dr. Chakrabarty is presently teaching Comparative Oriental reli gions anr literature at Boston Uni versity. He is the author of num erous literary books, the most re cent one being the "Tagore Read er." He has been Adviser to the Indian Delegation at the U.N.O., and a Delegate to many UNESCO con ferences. In 1958 he was one of two participants from the United States at the South-East Asian Round Table Conference held in Bangkok. Dr. Chakrabarty has traveled extensively throughout the world, with Dr. Tagore, meeting the top national leaders everywhere. In lec turing and teaching in America, Dr. Chakrabarty is making a con tribution to our efforts at world peace. The tack of interpreting Indian and Asian democracy to the West, he feels, is an urgent one. Students, Faculty To Read Papers AtChem. Meet Eighteen faculty members and students from the Department of Chemistry at the University here presented eleven papers at the an nual Southeast and Southwest regional meeting of the American Chemical Society, held jointly at the Jung Hotel in New Orleans December 7-9. Eleven UNC teachers and one graduate student attended the three-day meeting. University faculty members at tending include Prof. Horace D. Crockford, chairman of the UNC Chemistry Department; Sheppard Tyree Jr., Professor of Chemistry; Edwin C. iMarkham, Smith Profes sor of Chemistry; William F. Lit tle, assistant professor and As sistant to the Dean of the Gradu ate School for Research Adminis tration; Royce W. Murray, assis tant professor; Richard G. His key, assistant professor; James L. Coke, instructor; and Kenan Professor Oscar K. Rice. Research Associates attending include Drs. Harry B. Mark Jr.; D. A. Aikens and Sammy M. Harn cr. James Long, a graduate stu dent, will also attend. Highlight of the ACS meeting was the presentation of the Southern Chemist Award. The award, granted yearly to an in dividual for outstanding work in chemistry teaching or industrial chemical work, is on of the most significant of its kind. Dr. Crockford served as chair man of the Nominating Committee for the meeting. UNC Chemistry professors sub mitting papers include Drs. Mark, Murray, Aikens, Tyree, Little, His key, Jung, Charles N. Rilly, D. W. Rogers J. P. Collman, and J. A. Montgomery dents may' be . expelled from a tax-supported college for miscon duct will effect the University, "Not at all." Monday, the Supreme Court up held the decision handed down by the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on August 4 concerning the expulsion of six students from Alabama State College, a Negro institution in Montgomery. The siv, St. John Dexon, Ber nard Lee, Marzette Watts, Ed ward English Jones, Joseph Peter son and Elroy Embry, were ex pelled on March 4, 1960 for their alleged participation and leader ship in a sit-in and other mass demonstrations at Montgomery and Tuskegee, Alabama. Letter From President A letter to the students from the college president, H. Councill Trenholm, cited the college's right to expel students "for conduct prejudicial to the school" and "unbecoming a student or future teacher in schools of Alabama, for insubordination and insurrec tion, or for inciting other pupils to like conduct." Federal Judge Frank M. John son Jr. of Montgomery upheld the expulsion . but the Appeals Court reversed him on a divided vote. Witnesses' Names According to the Appeals Court, each student of a tax-supported college or university should be given the names of witnetsses against him, a report on, the facts to which each witness testified, and a chance to present his defense. Chancellor Aycock said that UNC will not be affected at' all because no Carolina student is ever denied the due processes of law. Confronted with the Doug Mcc "question" the Chancellor made it quite clear that after the Men's Honor Council ruled Moe's case out of their bounds Moe was given further opportunity for review and appeal but respectfully declined. FREEMAN TO SPEAK CHICAGO (UPI) Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman will be the featured speaker next Tues day at the annual meeting of the American Farm Bureau Federa tion here. The farm organization meet ing will start next Sunday and will run through Thursday. Some 5,000 delegates and guests are ex pected to attend. a ipus iefs All students who have not picked up their Yack proofs should do so immediately. Anyone desiring pic tures taken by Yack photographers should leave his name, address, and a description of the pictures wanted at the Yack office. The Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society will meet at 265 Phillips Hall, Tuesday, Dec. 12. Professor Eugene R. Long will talk on schedule control of operant beha vior in children, and Professor Halbert B. Robinson will talk on concept formation. A collection of the graphic art cf Edvard Munch is now being shown in the Ackland Art Museum. The Carolina Forum committee meets Friday at 3. p.m. in Ro land Parker I, GM. James Holmes, graduate scholar in the Department of Music, will present an - organ recital Sunday at 4 p.m. in Hill Hall. The Alliance Francaise of Chapel (Continued on Page 3)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 8, 1961, edition 1
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