Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 7, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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7 Weather Decreasings cloudiness. High in the low 50s. Soft On Communism See Edits, Page Two Offices in Graham Memorial SUNDAY, JANUARY 7, 1962 . Complete UPI Wire Service College Roundup George Claims Professors Indoctrinate Integration (Note: Following are news items from leading college newspapers across the country, as reecived at the DTH office. The column is run every Sunday.) UNC "INDOCTRINATION" DURHAM, N. C. Dr. W George, professor emeritus C. of UNC, was quoted in a Duke Uni versity newspaper interview re cently that UNC students were being indoctrinated by integra tionist professors. He asked the interviewer if Duke students were being "in doctrinated." George said, "You can't go to Carolina any more without getting indoctrinated and I can imagine what's happening at Duke." George has been hired by Gov. John Patterson of the state of Alabama to scientifically prove Negroes inferior to white men. He claims integration will lead to "interbreeding" of whites and Ne groes which will rob Caucasions of their "creative genius." "Integration will cause the de cline of civilization," said the pro fessor. FOOTBALL FOR FORDHAM NEW YORK, N. Y. The Uni versity Student Council of Ford ham College voted unanimously last month to petition the Ad ministration for the return of "small time, non-scholarship foot ball" to Fordham. Intercollegiate football was stopped at the college in 1954 be cause "too much of the student's money was being poured down the drain," said Father Victor R. Yanitelli, Fordham's vice-president for student affairs. Father Yanitelli cautioned the Council that a coach would have little control over a non-scholarship team, and that "there is a difference between football sup porters and backers" among stu WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By United Press Inlernalional 'Only God Can Stop Indonesia PARE-PARE, Indonesia President Sukarno Saturday told a mass rally that only God could prevent Indonesia from "liberating" West Irian Dutch New Guinea before the end of 1962. Attending the rally were foreign ambassadors accompanying the Indonesian president on his tour of Indonesia with Soviet Astronaut Gherman Titov. Sukarno introduced Titov and the ambassadors before addressing the crowd in this town on Celebes Island. U. S. Ambassador How ard Jones shouted the word "merdeka" freedom into the microphone and the ambassadors from Japan and Czechoslovakia followed suit. Record Budget For Castro HAVANA A record Cuban budget was unvailed by the Fidel Cas tro government Saturday along with a new income tax increase to help pay for it. The total budget as approved by the council of ministers was announced at 1,953,500,000 pesos. Missing from the public account sheet was any mention of defense funds. The peso officially is pegged at a rate of one to the U. S. dollar. The actual exchange rate varies between four and five pesos to the U. S. dollar. It was described as the island's "first scientific budget." The government said it would involve "no deficit" and took a step to ward fulfilling this forecast by a new lax law which boils down more than 100 national taxes into 10 major categories. Walker Says 'iVo' On Governor AMARILLO, Tex. ( UPI ) Resigned Maj. Gen. Edwin Walker said Friday night a report that he is going to run for the Democratic nomination for governor in Texas was news to him. The Chicago Tribune said in a Washington dispatch signed by Walter Tronan: "He (Walker) had been expected to try for con gressman at large and then for the Senate, but has been urged to bid for the state's highest office." Walker has discussed the gubernatorial race with many Demo cratic leaders and other prominent Texans, the Tribune said. Walker, 52, was removed from command of the Army's 24th Division in Ger many for "participating in controversial activities," which were later disclosed to have included attempts to influence the votes of his troops in favor of candidates with ultra-conservative records. He later resigned his Army post. Reds Capture E. German Refugee BERLIN Communist border guards Saturday fired on and cap tured an East German trying to reach refuge in the American Sector of West Berlin but two other youths made it safely through the bar ricades and "death zone" dividing the city. On the French Sector border, workmen guarded by armed Vopos people's police and police dogs demolished cottages and one-family houses along Klemke Strasse to provide Communist border patrols with a wider range of fire to stop refugees. dents. FOOTBALL INTEGRATION LEXINGTON, Ky. Dr. Frank G. Dickey, University of Kentucky president, said recently it would be "just a matter of years" until Negroes begin . competing on Southeastern Conference athletic teams. "I hope the University can be one of the leaders in bringing this about," Dickey said. CHAPEL HILL PRAISED LOUISVILLE, Ky. The Decem ber issue of the SOUTHERN PA TRIOT devoted more than half its four pages to the First Amend ment conference held in Chapel Hill in November by the South ern Conference Education Fund. "Mention should be made of the Chapel Hill community atmos phere," said the PATRIOT, "which made such a conference possible. "As controversy has become taboo in many places, this town has maintained its long tradition of free speech and provides a set ting where emotion-charged sub jects can be discussed intelligent ly. "It is a community of which the South and America should be proud." ADMINISTRATION ATTACKED CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. The Student Council of the University of Virginia recently attacked Dean of the University B. F. D. Runk's action in placing six fraternities on social probation. The chief objection of the Coun cil was not that the fraternities had been disciplined for their be havior during a certain fraternity program but that Dean Runk had acted without conferring with the Interfraternity Council which "should enjoy original jurisdic- ys :: : . ter&!XMil& :-: : .-X ; f i; I 'Ai? Mr Drt Sukarn tion." The Council said it "strongly ob jects to any usurpation of the powers of the Interfraternity Coun cil or any other branch of student government by the Dean of the University." NSA "THREAT" CHANDLER, Ariz. Kay Won dcrlic, national chairman of Stu dents Committed to Accurate Na- tional Representation, recently I Y-Court at 2 p.m. today. . Inter charged the National Student As-!ested students have been invited sociation with anti-intellectualism and distorted standards of con- auct. NSA is "the most serious threat to the academic community in over two decades." she said. 'LOBO' CONTROVERSY ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. 'Lobo," the school newspaper of the University of New Mexico, is currently under attack as "leftist-oriented." The editor of the "Lobo" was arrested last month at his own request when he felt Albuquerque city police were "participating willfully in harrassment of a Ne gro tenant in an all-white neigh borhood, according to the Univer sity Press Service. A member of the University Board of Regents has called for a state investigation of the news paper, which has taken a con sistent pro-integration position. (Continued on Page 3) R econsideration Urged At A resolution was passsed urging the Board of Trustees of Emporia College (Kansas) to reconsider their recent dismissal of two ad ministration officials at the Dec ember meeting of the national exe cutive committee of the National Student Association. College presi dent Richard E. Hanna had resign ed when the Board of Trustees, headed by Elvin Perkins, fired faculty member David Butterfield. Professor Butterfield had written a letter to the school newspaper protesting the forced resignation of the Student Council President. The President of the Student Council had resigned as a result of being asked to testify in the trial of a student who was being dismissed for his part in an off campus beer party, which the president attended. Butterfield's letter, which was never published, was picked up by the newspaper advisor, who snowed it to her husband, the Dean of Students at Emporia. The editor of the paper was asked to withhold the letter from print until it could be showed to Presi dent Hanna. The faculty advisor at the College of Emporia has the power to veto any article submitted to the newspaper. This power was not used in this case. The firing of Rev. Butterfield followed with no formal charges or hearing allowed Alleged 'Fixer' Held In Wake County Jail Paul Walker, New York, de scribed by Raleigh District So licitor Lester Chalmers as a "bas ketball fixer," was placed in a Wake County jail Friday night. He is charged with conspiring with Joseph Green, convicted fixer, of bribing two members of the State College basketball team, to shave points in a game with Maryland on Feb. 13, 1960. Green was accused of giving Don Gallagher and Stan Nie wierowski $1,250 each for the game, which the Wolfpack won, 48-46. Walker, Chalmers said, was involved in the same deal. The arrest of Walker was ex pected to be the first of several that will be made in a continua tion of the sports bribery and con spiracy case handled by .Chalmers and the SBI. M Campus Briefs 9 The student chapter of the NAACP will meet Monday night at 9 in Gerrard Hall. Members have been urged to attend as this will be one of the last meetings until after final exams. "The Christian and His Poli tical Outlook" is the topic for the student supper-seminar at Bink ley Church house this evening at 5:45. The speaker will be Dr. Earl Wallace of - the political science department. The YW-YMCA Catholic Orphan age Committee's field trio to the I orphanage in Raleieh will leave to come. The committee will re- turn to the campus by 5:30 p.m. WUNC-TV is presently holding auditions for an on-camera TV newscaster. Interested students should contact Rocer Koontz at WUNC for an appointment. Alexander Heard, dean of the Graduate School, will be the luncheon speaker for the Univer sity's Faculty Club Luncheon, Tuesday at 1 p.m. in Faculty Club Building. The title of Dean Heard's ad dress is "The University, the Re gion, and the Nation." Dr. A. T. Miller, department of physiology, and Dr. E. D. Pal matier, physics department, will speak before a meeting of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at 205 Phil lips Hall. Dr. Miller will speak on "Medi cal Research and Education in Israel" and Dr. Palmatier will talk on "A Satellite Study of the Constitution of Cosmic Radiation." Emporia him. Later Reinstated President Hanna at first com plied with the instructions of the executive committee of the Board of Trustees to fire Butterfield, but later reinstated the professor and submitted his own resignation, in effect asking for a vote of confi dence on his right to hire and fire faculty members. Elvin Perkins, chairman of the Board of Trustees, accep ted Ilanna's resignation and confirmed the firing of professor Butterfield. In its December resolution, the executive committee of the NSA reaffirmed its stand "on academic freedom, the right to protest, and the right for a just hearing and formal charges presented. to any one dismissed from an educational institution." NSA Disagrees The NSA further declared that it "strongly disagrees with the method used in firing Rev. Butter field without' formal charges or hearing, and the dismissal, of President Hanna in carrying out his duties free from outside pres sure. In passing the resolution 25-0, the NSA quoted a front-page editorial which appeared in the city newspaper. The Emporia Gazette, on Dec. 13: "The issue here is sadly simple. An acting College President was fired because he refused, at the demand of the executive committee of the Board of Trustees, to fire a professor in the middle of the term, against whom no charges had been filed and to whom had been given no hearing, nor any chance to face his anonymous accusers." The NSA's declaration ended: "We urge the present administra tion and the Board of Trustees to reconsider this action and to give a fair hearing to the the above mentioned parties. We further hope that the administration at the college will realize the necessity to guarantee the freedoms and rights to faculty members as out lined by the American Association of University Professors and de plores the unethical principle of an advisor having the power to veto articles submitted to the college newspaper." RECEIVES LETTER LONDON (UPI) Hoarc's Bank in Fleet Street reported Friday it had received a letter addressed to its previous location in Cheapside. The bank moved from Cheapside in 1690. aristae OAS :lwJgfy::o::x::.-:.v:.:'- TRUDGING While the rain drench ed Chapel Hill yesterday, many students headed into the dorms and libraries in the beginning attack on books in pre paring for final exams. This student, seemingly fresh from a pool game in Graham Memorial heads for BattJe- Award-Winning 'Bicycle Theif Tonight's Flick "The Bicycle Thief," acclaimed by Time magazine as the "best film in 30 years," will be tonight's Free Flick. The film is shown at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. at Carroll Hall. Stu dents must show I.D. cards. The review of the New Yorker magazine called the movie "A masterpiece! None better ! A drama at once funny, appealing, exciting and sad. Director Vittorio De Sica is the peer of any movie maker in the world." The movie has won seven awards, including Grand Prix, Belgium World Film Festival; Best Film of the Year, National Board of Review; and Best For eign Film of the Year, by both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences and by the New York Film Critics. Ranks With Best Movie critic Bosloy Crowther called the film "One of the ten best films in 40 years. In its reve lation of the loneliness of man in a complex world it ranks for all around greatness with any picture made." The movie is about a man and his son who search through the streets of Rome for his bicycle, stolen just when he needs it for a long-sought job. This simple plot is so poignantly written and directed by the two leaders in the Italian Neo-Realist school that the personal experiences of the man and boy become a great human drama. The film shows life in Rome and in post-war Europe. It is directed by De Sica and stars Lamberto Maggiorani as the father and Enzo Staiola as the boy. Infir mary Students in the infirmary yes terday included Martha White, Donna Hunt, Robert Kearney, Morton Nibblet, Gayle Robinson, John Pettibone, Donald Buffloe, William Jlollificld, Berry Gary Johnson, Quinton Colter, Robert Ashby, Neil Clark, George Wynn, Winston Sanford Theodore Stein burg, James Silvers, Steven Den nis, David Wysong, William Tay lor and John Gentry. Reds rm en Tor -x-?- AND THE RAIN CAME DOW'N Bryn Mawr Opens New French School Bryn Mawr College is opening for the first time in June, a Sum mer Institute in Avignon, France, for undergraduate students who anticipate professional careers re quiring a knowledge of France, it was announced yesterday by Miss Katharine E. McBride, president of Bryn Mawr. A grant of $20,000 from the Car negie Corporation of New York has been made to Bryn Mawr to aid in the establishment of the program which will be under the direction of Dr. Michel Guggen h e i m, associate professor of French at the college. The Institute will be open to young men and women of high academic achievement and demon strated proficiency in French. Preference will be given students contemplating careers in which a knowledge of France and of the French language is basic, such as All Noicd Three Public Health Speakers Slated For Coming Months Three noted speakers in the field of public health have been sched uled by the School of Public Health within the next three months, the first to appear here on Jan. 15. Dr. L. S. Goerke, associate dean of the School of Public Health at the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak on Jan. 15. He and the other two speak ers will lecture at Student-Faculty Seminars which will be held at 3 p.m. in the Assembly Room of the Louis R. Wilson Library. Dr. Goerke will speak on "Medi cal Care. Southern California Variety." His appearance here is spoasored by the school's Depart ments of Epidemiology and Para sitology. Dr. Shops Dr. Cecil Shops will be guest speaker on Feb. 12. He is profes sor of medical and hospital ad ministration of the Graduate School of the University of Pitts CD 1L C j Vnnce-Pettigrew under one of the ubi quitous umbrellas one could see all over campus yesterday. The weather fore cast for tomorrow indicates a halt in the rain, but everyone knows about weather forecasts. (Photo by Zalk.) teaching, foreign or government service. French professors teaching in the United States and in France will constitute the faculty for the first session. Courses in the fields of French language and literature, history and art will be offered. Classes will begin on Monday, June 25. Applications for admis sion to the Institute must be re ceived at Bryn Mawr College be fore March 1, 1962. UP MEET SCHEDULED The University Party will hold an open meeting Mon day night at 7 at Gerrard Hall. Party Chairman Bill Criswell said the purpose of the meeting will be to discuss policy for the spring semes ter ard to air the financial issues which were brought out in the last open meeting. burgh. Dr. Shep's topic will be "Pio neering in Public Health's Medical Care Role." This lecture is spon sored by the school's Department of Public Health Administration. On March 5 the speaker will not be a public health educator, but instead, a man in public life, a member of Congress and a man who has been closely allied with important health legislation. lie is John E. Fogarty of Rhode Island. HEW Subcommittee The topic of Congressman Fo garty's lecture has not been an nounced. He is a member of the Appropriations Committee and a member of the subcommittee for the Department cf Health, Educa tion and Welfare as well as that of the Department of Labor. In the field of health affairs, the Congressman, along with Senator Lister Hill, introduced the Hill-Fo-garty "Health for Peace" bill. This H-PUAC Increased Force Of French Police Disperses Group PARIS (UPI) Communists demonstrated on the rain-soaked boulevard of downtown Paris Sat urday against the terror campaign of the Secret Army Organization (OAS) which demands a "French Algeria." There was no violence. About 4,000 to 5,000 men, wom en, and leather-jacketed youths paraded in response to a sum mons from Communist Party head quarters, but they dispersed when they encountered a well-drilled task force of armed riot police. A cordon of 1,000 mobile guards and city police blocked all access to the downtown Communist Party headquarters where the main demonstration was to have been, held. The Communist headquar ters was the target of a machine gun attack attributed to the OAS early Thursday. Forty police vans barricaded the six streets leading to the head quarters this morning, and after a half hour of noisy shouting "OAS-assassins" and "Peace in Algeria" the demonstrators dis persed. At the same time other groups marched along nearby boulevards, shouting and singing. None of the protests was directed against President Charles de Gaulle or the government, which has accused the Communists of using anti-OAS sentiment to whip up agitation against De Gaulle. About 5,000 additional riot police and mobile gendarmes had been rushed into Paris during the night, but they were not called out dur ing the demonstrations and they remained in their barracks in the suburbs. Assassins Shoot Algeria's Causse ALGIERS (UPI) Moslem ter rorists shot and killed the French born vice-president of the Algiers Superior Court Saturday only a hundred yards from the court building. The assassins victim was Charles Causse 41, one of Algeria's most prominent judges. He was the father of five children. Two police inspectors, who wit nessed the attack, said they saw two Moslems carrying pistols shoot the judge in the back of the neck. They fled with a third man who apparently had been their lookout. Causse was one of two Euro peans and three Moslems killed in Algeria Saturday as the wave of European-Moslem terrorism con tinued unabated. Since the first of the year 95 persons have been killed and 217 wounded in the outbursts throughout Algeria. Vio lence was reported Saturday in Algiers, Constantine, and Oran. establishes a National Institute for International Health and Medical Research. The Congressman also is the author of the Health Education Facilities Construction bill, which provides for a 10-year program of grants for the construction of medical, dental and public health schools. Cited By Congress In the field of health affairs he has been cited for outstanding work in Congress by the American Can cer Society. Welfare League for Retarded Children, United Cere bral Palsy Association. National Association for Retarded Children, American Dental Association, American Public Health Associa tion, National Tuberculosis Asso ciation and the World Health Or ganization of the United Nations just to name a few such honors. The public is invited to attend all of the lectures.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1962, edition 1
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