Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 13, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
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TJ.TT.C. Liorat- Serials Dept Box STO Chapel Hill, N.C. Merchants Association See Edits, Page Two Weather Clearing, windy and cold. Offices in Graham Memorial WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1961 Complete UPI Wire Servia NORTH CAROLINA NATIVE: Evangelist Billy Graham Sneaks Here On March 15 JL Evangelist Billy Graham will speak to the students of UNC on March 15 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. A native of North Carolina, Gra 3 I A VsW--qcOc.'W-JtJt- Xmas Xpress WANT RIDES J LITTLE ROCK, ARK. or 100 mile radius Jimmy Burke, 304 Connor Hall, 968-9154. PITTSBURGH December 16, Charles Doty, Mangum, 968-9110. WASHINGTON, D. C Decem ber 16, Thurman Smith, 320 Joy ner, 968-9185. WICHITA FALLS, TEX. or gen eral vicinity Charles H. Lincoln, 201 Avery, 968-9046, can leave De cember 16. Will share driving and expenses. NEW ROCHELLE OR NEW TORK CITY, N. Y. Rosalyn Post, December 16, 12 noon, 968-3886. WESTPORT, CONN, or vicinity Call Evan Harrar, 327 Avery, 968 9116. Would like to leave Friday, )ec. 15. ARLINGTON, Va. Leonard Rogers wants ride to Arlington, Washington, D. C. or near vicinity, leaving Dec. 16. Call 968-9093 or go by 218 Cobb. MIAMI, Fla. Ruth Lebar and Vicki Lebar, share expenses, 942- 6241. MIDWEST (Chicago, St. Louis, Omaha, Neb.) Sandy Hoffmaim, share expenses, Smith Dorm, third floor, 968-9133. DALLAS, TEX. L. W. Lau, 176 Phillips Hall or call Physics Dept., share expenses. NEW YORK CITY OR BROOK LYN, N. Y. Ronnie Gabriel, Noon Friday tJT later, 408 Cobb, 968-9097,iparfcer)- -no Mclver, 968-9143. share expenses ana arivmg. WASHINGTON, D. C. John Morene, December 16, share ex penses, 215 Parker, 968-9140. CINCINNATI, or Vicinity Want to leave Dec. 15 or 16. Will share expenses, driving. Harve Harris, 968-5266. ARLINGTON, VA. OR WASH INGTON, D. C. or Vicinity Leon ard Rogers, December 16, 218 Cobb, 968-9093. FT. MYERS, FLA. Tom Lean hardt, share expenses, 339 Cobb, 968-9145. PORT WASHINGTON, N. Y. or NEW YORK CITY Leaving Dec. 15. Call Ciaran Mercier, 207 Ay cock, 968-9158. ST. LOUIS, MO. or Vicinity Dec. 15, 16, 17. Bill Weems, 310 Avery, 963-9029, share driving and expenses. NEW YORK CITY Dec. 16, Amnon Rapoport, III, Conor, 968 9155, share expenses. NORFOLK, Va. Judy Gray wants ride, leaving either Friday or Saturday. Call 968-9010, Nurses Dorm. NEW MEXICO or Vicinity Jim Carpenter, Box 4725, Duke Sta tion, phone Durham 286-9230, wants a ride, leaving Dec. 20. AUBURN, Ala., ATLANTA, Ga. or COLUMBUS, Ga. Rick Ed wards, 308 Stacy Dorm, 968-9112, wants ride leaving after 12 noon Saturday. Will share driving, ex penses. CLEVELAND, Ohio Rudy Al bert wants ride. 232 Teague, 968- 9131, leaving after Saturday 1 p.m. WANTS RIDERS BACK FROM CHATTANOOGA, TENN. For two people after Christmas, Harry Batchelor, 942-1725. WANT RIDERS MERIDEN, Conn. Via NEW Art Lecture Thurs. "Edvard Munch as a Painter", the Ackland Art Center, will pre is the title of a discussion that sent the discussion and show col . T . ored slides of Edvard Munch s will be given in tne Lecture Hall work at Ackland Thursday at 8 p.m. The j An exhibition of the graphic art public has been invited. of Edvard Munch is now on view Dr. Harry Bergholz, Chief Bibli- at the Center. The gallery will be ographer. University Library, and open Thursday night so that those Dr. Joseph Sloane, Chairman, De- who attend the lecture may see the partment of Art and Director of eidiibition. ham is being sponsored by the Billy Graham Committee, a special com mittee working closely with the Religious Emphasis Committee of the YWCA. It is chaired by Mary YORK CITY, four riders, leaving Monday, December 18, call Peter Ford, 968-2441, 6-7 p.m., will divide expenses. ATLANTA Leaving December 16, call J. M. Womack, 325 Teague, 968-9157. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (and en Route Leaving December 15 or 16, contact Fran Stallings, 310 yOnnor or 23 New East Annex. AUGUSTA OR COLUMBUS, GA. One rider, leaving Thursday, De cember 14, Beverly Bernier, 968 9168, share expenses. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Need three riders. Call Howard Hol senbeck, 306 Stacey, 968-9112. Leaving Saturday, Dec. 16. CHICAGO or Vicinity Con tact Buddy Broome, 140 Cobb, 968-9092. ARLINGTON, Va. John Jenn-L , . , . . . . , , TI . ,Jfee and cider at a gathering of ich wants riders. He will leave, b b er ifi: will charge $4 oer triD. .the UNC folksmgers Thursday all Theta Chi house, 968-9123. STAMFORD, Conn. Mike Bell wants two riders, leaving Monday, Dec. 18. Call 968-9178, 220 Connor. tsittw vnrck- t; TpfW wnfclFranklin Street and at several ne rider, to pay $5 each way. Leaving noon Friday. Call 968- 2338. ATLANTA Leaving Dec. 16, contact Jeff Weadkins, 328 Phil lips Hall. ASHEVILLE One, two, or three riders on Dec. 16. Contact Betsy NEW YORK or BROOKLYN Leaving Dec. 15. Contact Gene Rice, 301 Aycock. DALLAS, TUCSON, or LOS AN GELES Want two riders, leaving Saturday, Dec. 16, after 3 p.m. Elliott Schneider, TEP House, 968-9007. UGLY MAN RESULTS Latest results in the Ugly Man voting are as follows: B i g Daddy DeBlasio, 1953; Jungle Jim, 1433; Eye of Newt, 826; M. T. Graves, 612; Rat, 119; Transformed Coed, 90. The contest closes Friday at 11 p.m. FEATURES THREE EXPERTS Africa An afternoon panel on African Affairs will be held next April as part of the 1962 Carolina Sym posium. It will follow Senator Gale McGee's evening address on world political revolutions. Participating in the discussions will be George M. Houser, Execu tive Director of the American Committee on Africa, Tartt Bell, Executive Secretary of the Ameri can Friends Service Committee, and Udo Oton, Information Offi cer of the Consulate General of Nigeria. All three men are experts in the field of African affairs who have spent much of their lives at tempting to interpret the rise of African nationalism to the world at large. George M. Houser has worked in race relations on both a na tional and an international level. In 1947 he was the organizer of the Journey of Reconciliation, a forerunner of today's Freedom Riders. This trip tested segrega Sue Simpson. Graham will only be able to make the one appearance. The commitee hopes that other ar rangements can be made so that more students will have a chance to hear him. The type of speech that he will give is not known but is not expected to be of the crusade variety. "Mr. Graham can speak on many different levels," said Miss Simpson. "The level he is mostly known for is that of about the eighth grade, but he is also very capable of talking on the college level as well. He has visited many campuses and has been very suc cessful. He is a very intelligent and dynamic person and I'm sure that Carolina students will enjoy hearing him talk." When Graham leaves he will then go to Wake Forest College for a speaking en gagement. Graham's last visit to Chapel Hill was ten years ago. GM Coffee Hour After Songfest The Order of the Grail and Gra ham Memorial will offer free cof- night at 9:30 in GM. The Carolers have invited the student body to join them earlier at 7:30 at GM to serenade along sororities and women's dorms. Religious Service In Gerrard Hall Tonight At 7 A special service emphasizing the true meaning of Christmas will be held tonight from 7-7:30 in Ger rard Hall. The service is the second in a series sponsored by the Religious Activities Committee of the YWCA to commemorate religious holidays during the school . year. Dr. Sam Hill, head of the UNC department of religion, will give a short talk on the meaning of Christmas. Special music will be provided for the service as well as student caroling. Affairs tion on interstate buses and trains in the Upper South. He has tra velled extensively on fact-finding trips in the Congo, Angola and the Union of South Africa. Mr. Houser is an author as well as an organ izer, having written "Erasing the ? - George Houser WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press International Soviet Charge 'Ludicrous WASHINGTON The State Department accused the Soviet Union Tuesday of trying to create disunity in the NATO alliance with its "crude and ludicrous' 'charge against West German Gen. Adolf Heusinger. Eichmann Goes 'Beyond Orders9 JERUSALEM, Israel An Israeli court found Tuesday that Adolf Eichmann sent 93 orphaned children to the martyred Czech town of Lidice to their deaths by handing them over to the Nazi Gestapo. The court, spelling out point-by-point its verdict of Eichmann's guilt, said he pressed his task of wiping out 6 million Jews so intently that he went beyond the orders of Adolph Hitler. France Vetoes East-West Talks PARIS France Tuesday vetoed Western Allied demands for pre liminary East-West talks with Russia on the Berlin crisis. The split forced the Big Four Western foreign ministers into an overtime night session and threatened the conference with failure. "k ic' ic JFK's Mail Favors Extremist Rap WASHINGTON President Kennedy's mail is running "well in fa vor" of his recent attack on so-called right wing extremists. White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said Tuesday. And he said the amount of mail on this subject has been reasonably heavy. . Reds Tell Japs Hands Off9 TOKYO Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev bluntly told Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda Tuesday that Japan has no claim to the Kurile Islands. Khrushchev said Japan had accepted the Potsdam declaration which limited this nation's sovereignty to the islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, Shikoku and a few small islands. UN Members Behind In Payments UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. The United Nations announced Tuesday that members are $103,852,015 behind in their payment of assessments. A report of collections as of Nov. 30 showed that the Congo opera tion is by far the biggest deficit item $55,497,890 since the operation began in July, 1960. Panel On Color Line" and "We Challenged Jim Crow." UN Staffer Udo Oton, serving on Nigeria's permanent United Nations staff, is a figure already known to some Carolina students. On the YMCA's 1 .WJ.llMJ(l.W U'r- : B. Winston Churchill United Nations trip last year he spoke at length to the Chapel Hill delegation and was very well re ceived. Considered by his col leagues to be an extremely intel ligent and competent man, he will present first-hand information on - ! - !WA1 - " " 1 '- yy'vyy.Z'-i 1 '4 -.it Tartt Bell '7 7 i .Reds Carolina Chorus Sings Thursday The University Chorus under the direction of Dr. Wilton Mason of the Music Department will pre sent its fall concert Thursday eve ning at 8 p.m. in Hill Music Hall. The first half of the program will consist of Christmas melodies of many lands written or arranged by contemporary composers such as Charles Gordon Rex, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, Lluis Romeu, Geoffrey Shaw, and Teresa del Riego. The second half of the program 400 Negroes Are Arrested In Ga. On Hymnal Trek ALBANY, Ga. ( UPI ) About 400 young hymn-singing Negro stu dents were herded off to jail on Tuesday when they staged a pro test march in this south Georgia city that hasn't budged an inch from its strict segregation stand. The march was timed to coin cide with the opening of the court trial for 11 "freedom riders," ar rested here Dec. 10 when they at tempted to use the "white" wait ing room at the train terminal. Most of the Negro youths taken into custody are students at Al bany State College, but some were of high school age, or younger. Witnesses said the first of the marchers started showing shortly before the hearing opened at 10 a.m. They strolled slowly past the courthouse in pairs, singing hymns as they walked. The numbers soon swelled into the hundreds variously estimated between 250 and 500. 4 Police cars with loudspeakers rushed to the scene and tcld the Negroes to disperse. Sarah Vaughn Cancelled The concert featuring Sarah Vaughn scheduled for to night in Durham has been cancelled. For ticket refunds contact S. B. McKissick at 213'a Main Street, Durham. ymposiirai the dramatic changes which the new African nations have caused in the U.N. African Student t Tartt Bell of High Point holds college degrees from Chicago and Columbia and is Associate Direc tor of the Quakers' United Nations program. He too has first-hand knowledge of Africa, having tra velled in Ghana, Nigeria and Ken ya. In addition to his concern with Africa, Mr. Bell has studied and written on race relations in the United States. He is the author of "Race and Conscience in Amer ica." The panel will discuss both the peaceful and violent revolutions which are rapidly changing Africa from a state of colonial dependen cy to a collection of free nations. Although it has previously been negligible politically, Africa's re sources and manpower indicate that her influence will be increas ingly important in years to come. The current crisis in the Congo has given a small example of the vast repercussions which African in ernal affairs can have in the world political situation. As Africa is now perhaps the most rapidly changing area on earth, it is particularly appropri ate that it be considered in the 1962 Symposium on "Today's Revolutions. Charge General Crimes In War will feature Ottorino Respighi's 'Laud to the Nativity." This will be the first North Carolina per formance of this work which is characterized by Dr. Mason as being one of the finest of twen tieth century choral compositions. The same program will be given by the group Wednesday, Decem ber 13 on the concert series of the State Art Museum in Raleigh. Soloists in the Respighi work are Rebecca Carnes and Helena Brig-.'nent man, sopranos, and James Gibbs,; tenor. The University Chorus is a group of mixed voices drawing its mem bership from students, employees, and other members of the large University family. In recent years he chorus has served as the basic choral unit in the first presenta tions on the UNC campus of the operas carmen ana L.a lravi- ata" given by the Department of Music. The public has been invited and admission is free. IDC, CWC Entertain Children IDC and CWC entertained over 30 Negro children yesterday with their annual Christmas party for the Carrboro Community Center. The party, planned by Susan Thorpe of Carolina Women's Coun cil and John Mitchener of Inter- dormitory Council, was held in the recreation room of the Nurses' Dorm. The children sang Christmas carols and played games. Several of the girls read Christmas stories before the highlight of the eve ning, Santa's visit. Reed Nelson, dressed as Santa Claus, distributed toy cars, foot balls, dolls, coloring books and, appropriately enough, nurses' kits to the children. The visit was topped off with rerfreshments of Christmas cookies, doughnut holes and cokes. The annual Christmas party is the main community service proj ect of the IDC and CWC, who ori ginated the idea last year. Campus Briefs i There will be a regular meeting of the National Student Associa tion tonight at 6:30 in the Roland Parker Lounge of Graham Memo rial. All members must be pres ent. Prof. Ernest Mackie of the Math Dept. requests that all those who have not picked up their Phi Beta Sappa keys do so as soon as pos sible in Room 76, Phillips Hall. Sophomore class projects com mittee will meet at 9 p.m. tonight at the Pika House. Infirmary Studens in the Infirmary yes terday included: Diana Dial, Phyllis Hale, John Boyce Fisher, Henry Wilson Fisher, Philip Ray Adams, Walter Whitaker Honour, Frank Harlowe Dunn, William Yates Dover, William Edward Lyons, Robert Lawrence Cowles, Stephen Keith Yates, Thomas At mar Hammond, John Colvin Small, John Morgan Frcas, Allen Benners Morgan, Catherine Lynn Johnson, Peter Irwin Goldberg, Samuel Campen Barfield, Bonn Arthur Gilbert and Robert Lee Deal. Demand Ouster From US MOSCOW (UPD The Soviet Union Tuesday accused West Ger man Gen. Adolf Heusinger of "war crimes and crimes against peace and humanity" and demand ed the United States extradite him to face an Adolf Eichmann-like trial. Heusinger, chairman of the NATO's Permanent Military Com mittee in Washington, was presid- mg over a meeting m uie rnid- i - . r 1 1 t, Military Committee at NATO headquarters m Paris wnen He heard the news. He refused com ment. In Washington the State Depart ment accused Russia of trjing to stir up dissension in NATO by making "crude and ludicrous propaganda" charges. U.S. offi cials said previously if Russia wanted to find war criminals it should look in its own files for the Russian-Nazi pact which led to World War II. It appeared the ex tradition request would be ignored. In Bonn, West Germany accused the Soviet Union of renewing an anti-Bonn slander campaign as a militaristic and revenge-seeking nation. A Foreign Ministry state ment said one proof of this was that Heusinger never occupied a troop command position during the war. , Heusinger, 64, was until July 20, 1944 the date of the ill-fated bomb plot against Adolf Hitler the operations chief in the Wehr macht's command. He was placed on inactive duty for the duration of the war for publicly defying Hitler at the time. The Soviet charges were con tained in a note delivered by tho foreign minister to U.S. Ambassa dor Llewellyn E. Thompson and publicly announced at a news con ference later. The charges against him were strikingly similar to tho counts against Eichmann. Mikhail Kharlamov, Foreign Ministry press chief, told news men the Soviet note demanded the United States arrest Heusinger and extradite him to the Soviet Union for trial. He said the charges were established by a Soviet commis sion investigating "crimes of tho German Fascist invaders." Recreation Kit Items Suggested For Bomb Shelter By LINDA BISER Active ingredients of a recrea tion kit for use in bomb shelters are suggested in an interview with Prof. Harold D. Meyer, chairman of the recreation curriculum. The kit should include tabic games such as checkers, cards and puzzles, books, simple arts and crafts materials, song sheets and bulletins with instructions for wholesome exercises and play ac tivities. Purpose: to maintain physical and mental health, and decrease tensions among people confined. Although Dr. Meyer personally opposes construction of individual family shelters and believes that, if built, they should be of neigh borhood construction, warn s, "Bomb shelter occupants better know some recreation pursuits or otherwise there will be severe ten sions." Prof. Meyer patterns the recrea tion kits after those used by people confined to shelters during World War II bombing raids. The North Carolina Recreation Commission might distribute pam phlets telling bomb shelter occu pants what recreation materials are considered best for bomb shel ter activities, he said. Dr. Meyer, who is interim chair man of the Recreation Committee of the United Nations' International Labor Office in Geneva, Switzer land, prefers to stress the more positive aspects of peace. For in ternational ails, he recommends persons of different nationalities enjoy more recreation togrthrr. This cultural exchange, providing more dancing and singing to gether for example might promote world peace and understanding.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 13, 1961, edition 1
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