Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 14, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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TT.TT.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 a pal ffljsjjifoflffig, t See Edits, Page Two 7 Weather Partly Cloudy, not so cold. Offices in Graham Memorial SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service College Roundup Million Dollar Donor Want To Bar Reds From Berkeley s I Campus I I Briefs 1 i (Note: Following are news items from leading college news papers from across the country, as received at the DTH office. This column is run every Sunday.) $ MILLION FOR NO REDS' BERKELEY, Calif. An Oakland real estate man has promised to bequeath a $1 million student loan fund to the University of Califor nia if it will bar all "communistic speakers" from its campuses. Fred Reed, 82, said, "I want to see the University's red-blooded students organized against com munism." Since 1944 the University has had a policy forbidding members of the U.S. Communist Party from speak ing on campus. But Reed says he intends to investigate to make sure the rule is being observed, if his offer is accepted. CAR BAN RESCINDED NORMAN, Okla. The University of Oklahoma board of regents vot ed this week to rescind the no-car rule for freshmen passed the week before. Only five members of the board had been present at the previous meeting and a majority of the board voted to reconsider the pro posal and defeated it. A regents committee had recom mended that freshmen be forbid den to have cars. STIFFER LIBRARY FINES MADISON, Wise A drastic rise in library fines will go into effect at the University of Wisconsin at the beginning of its spring semes ter. There is to be a 10 cents daily fine on all overdue two-week books. The current fine is 2 cents a day. In addition, if a request is sub mitted for a two-week book that is out, but not overdue, the library will send a notice to the holder of the book specifying the date when that book must be returned. If it is not returned by the requested date, a fine of $1 a day will be imposed. , The rise in fines will also in clude a charge of $1 an hour for all overdue reserved books, with the penalty going up to $2 an hour for reserved books kept overdue on Saturdays and Sundays. DUKE PROPOSAL DOWNED DURHAM, N. C. The campus wide student government proposal passed in November by men's stu dent government of Duke Univer sity was killed last week when the women's organization defeated it. No votes were cast for the plan, which would bring together gradu ate and undergraduate represen tatives to deliberate on problems involving the student body as a whole. The women's group said ad hoc committees would be preferable to a full-time set-up. Few prob lems are shared jointly by the men's and women's campuses, said the group. PAID SG PRESD3ENT? NORMAN, Okla. A student con stitutional amendment for paying the student body president $40 per week was introduced in the Uni versity of Oklahoma student sen ate last week. The proposal must go through a 7-week period of consideration and pass the senate by a two-thirds vote to become part of the consti tution. Murray McRae of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics in Ottawa will speak on "Some Methods in In vestigating Economic Time Ser ies" at the Statistics Colloquium to be held at 4 p.m. next Monday in room 265 Phillips. The public is cordially and humbly invited. APARTMENT PERMISSION URGED MADISON, Wise Senior women The YW-YMCA Catholic Orphan age Commission's trip to the Ra leigh Orphanage will leave Y- Three Dealers i o Discti TTTV H U irroiDieim: Of R r p.m. . nnHpr 91 af thf TTnivprsitv nf Win mn.in shn,.M ho ai'nw.H tn iiv in Court at 2 p.m. today. All who are anflrtmpnts. with narrntal : nrrmis- interested are asked to be present. I sion and approval of the Dean of The Commission will return, by 6 Women, the women's student gov ernment urged last week. The women's eronn votpd down a motion that iiinior women should' Students interested in applying also be allowed to room off cam-,for the Goettincen. scholarship are j reminded to pick up their applica tions at any of these locations: Y- court, uerman Department, or tne pus. RIG BROTHER BALTIMORE, Md. George Or well's novel "1984" was selected as the Book-of-the-Month for Jan uary at Morgan State College, scene of recent "sit-in" and "free dom ride" activity. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By Uniitd Press International Da Skant Professor's Wife Receives Injury In Car Accident Mrs. James W. Dimmick, wife of a UNC Modern Civilization pro fessor, suffered a fractured ver tebrae Thursday evening when the car her husband was driving over turned on ice-covered Mann's Chapel Road. She is reported in fair condition in Memorial Hospital. Dimmick reported he was on the vay home when "something, I guess it could have been the ice, threw the car over the side of the road.M He was. not seriously injured. Another professor, John P. Dre- her, philosophy department, re ceived no injuries when his sedan Volkswagen overturned on icy Highway 54 Thursday morning. He was alone. Dreher had a safety belt in his car while Dimmick did not. "But we will from now on," he said. Dimmick said his late model auto- circulation desk in the library. "The Christian and Social Wel fare" will, be' the . topic of Dr Keith-Lucas' seminar to be held at 5:45 Sunday evening in the Brink ley Church House, 507 E. Frank lin St. The UNC Student Wives will meet Tuesday at 8 p.m. on the second floor of GM for an end of the Fall Semester Party. Fea tured will be bridge, entertain ment by members of the, club, plus twist and limbo lessons. Tau Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha has elected its officers for the spring semester. Jackie Lohr was r-elected President and, Fred Croom was elected Vice-President. Other officers are: Allen Horn thai, treasurer; Bill Craig, social chairman; and David Edwards, house manager. Adoula Orders Gisenga's Arrest LEOPOLDVILLE, The Congo Informed diplomatic sources said Saturday Central Congolese Premier Cyrille Adoula had ordered the arrest of his defiant Communist-leaning vice Premier Antoine Gizen ga. Adoula denied the report. Gizenga has defied a parliamentary order to return here from Stanleyville to answer charges of "secessionist activities." There have been demands that he be fired from the Cabinet, arrested, and put on trial. Acting U.N. Secretary General Thant issued an order in New York today to U.N. troops in the Congo to restore law and order in Stanleyville and "avert civil war there." U.S. Rejects Cuban " Coexistence" WASHINGTON The United States rejected Saturday a Brazilian proposal that the nations of the Western Hemisphere consider adopt ing a code of co-existance with Cuba. A State Department spokesman pointed out that the members of the Organization of American States OAS are bound by its charter and the treaty of Rio de Janiero to carry on "continued and positive resistance to any totalitarian ideology." Press officer Francis W. Tully Jr. said the United States would "naturally" give the proposal, made by Brazilian Foreign Minister Francisco Santiago Dantas, "carefully study." But he made it clear the United States was opposed. ATo Signs Of Ease9 On Berlin WASHINGTON The United States informed its principal allies Saturday that the Soviet Union still shows no signs of easing or dropping its harsh Berlin demands. ' The State Department said, however, that it intends to continue the Moscow talks in an attempt to find some tension-easing arrange ment which would lessen the danger of war by miscalculation. Foy D. Kohler, assistant secretary of state for European affairs, met for almost an hour with the representatives here of Britain, France, and West Germany. He gave them a summary of the Berlin talk in Moscow Friday between U. S. Ambassador Llewellyn E. Thompson and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. OAS Orders Food Hoarding ALGIERS, Algeria Housewives obeying an order by the Secret Army Organization OAS to hoard two months supply of food stripped Oran stores Saturday as the Algeria crisis apparently neared a de cisive point. An explosion followed by shots shook Oran's Jewish quarter shortly before noon. One Jew was wounded and within minutes hundreds of persons were out on the streets demonstrating. There also was viol ence in Algcris, Bone and Constantine. Despite the presence in Oran of French Defense Minister Pierre Messmer on a flying security visit, many stores reported bare shelves by midday. Wholesalers supplying the food stores also ran out. TRAFFIC DEATHS North Carolina traffic deaths in 1962 had killed twelve persons , as of last Monday, Jan. 8. Seventeen had been killed as of that date in 1961. mm V FLOYD McKISSICK, Negro NAACP lawyer who will be a mem ber of the three-man Carolina Symposium panel scheduled to discuss racial relations before UNC students next April. (Photo courtesy of Mr. McKissick) j SP Schedules Open Party Meeting ECONOMICS SEMINAR Donald W. Taylor,' Yale Univer sity psychology professor, will speak on "Problem Solving and Decision Making" at a UNC sem inar in economics and business at ace Relation Attorney McKissick In UNC Symposium A panel discussion on race rela-' discussion will be Floyd B. Mc- tions and problems will be the Kissick, a Negro NAACP lawyer, afternoon program of the Caro- Jack KilpatMck, editor of the lina Symposium scheduled to begin Richmond News Leader, and John on April 1. This panel will be one McNeill Smith, chairman of the of several to be held on various North Carolina advisory commit- problems of current interest to tee for the Civil Rights Commis students and the American public, sion. Participating in this seminar A native of Asheville, McKissick has four children, brought suit North Carolina College and UNC. Brought Suit McKissick, who is married and World University Body Starts Here A World University Service (WUS) campus committee is cur-Jtance was gained for Negroes to rently being formed at UNC. It attend the Undergraduate School, will seek to inform students onj On behalf of his daughter, he WUS, which receives funds from filed suit against the Durham has four children, brotught suit against the University and gained admittance in 1951. He was coun sel in the suit entitled "Frazier vs. U.N.C.," in which suit admit- Board of Education to gain admis sion to the Durham High School. He presently has one child in an the annual Campus Chest at Carolina. The members of the committee will be from the local chapters of .integrated school. the national WUS sponsors:. Unit- The recipient of a "Man of Year ed States National Student Asso-Award" in Durham for 1959 and ciation, National Student Councils I960, he has been engaged in his of the YMCA and YWCA, and the 'own law practice there since 1952 national Jewish. Catholic, and land has become well known lo- Protestant organizations. Other in terested students are welcome, ac cording to organizer Bill Bower man who can be contacted be tween 7 and 10 p.m. at 942-3688 for more information. Student-To-Student The World University Service is cally and nationally in the field of Civil Rights. He has participate1 in the sit-in action in the South and in the picketing of Chapel Hill theaters. "Smut Peddlers" Kilpatrick, the editor of The News Leader has recently re- The Student Party will hold a The Student Party News-Letter j sharing without regard for racial, meeting mesaay nignc at o in win oe cuscussca at me meeting' religious or political factors Roland Parker I-II, GM. by the co-editoirs, Anne Lupton , , and Charles Cooper. The News-Let- The Program Committee, under ter is pu51ished oenodicallv to the chairmanship of Bill Straughn, keep members well informed on all will present the first in a series phases of Student Government ac which will include the Honor Sys- tivities." tern. Executive Committees, the au persons, whether party af- an international mutual assistancejeeived publicity for his bootk "The program and is the only one which Smut Peddlers," a history of ob is "student-to-student." An asso- cenity censorship," published by ciation of university students and Doubleday in 1960. staff members in forty-one coun- He is also author of "The Sov tries, WUS attempts to promote ereign States" and co-editor of material, intellectual, and spiritual "The Lasting South." Born m Oklahoma City, he re ceived a degree of Bachelor of The common objective of all I ournalism from the University of projects and activities are listed Missouri. From the same Univer in the WUS "Program of Action' si ty, in 1953, he received honors i 1961-62" as to help meet the basic for his distinguished work in Jour- needs of universities . . . especial-nahsm because of a two-year edi ly through the development of neWjtorial campaign for the release 4 d m this Wednesday in the fac- Legislature, Orientation needs, and filiated or not, were invited to at mobile was probably damaged be-lulty seminar room on the third a history of campus political end by Party Chairman Jimmy yond market value. I floor of Carroll Hall. I parties. i Weeks. UNC Graduate Exhibiting Art Works In Harry's And Other Local Stores from prison of a Negro lifetermcr who had beenc onvicted of murder. Editor Since 1919 Before his position as editor, Kilpatrick worked on the Capitol techniques of corporate endeavor; to promote the sharing of knowl edge and experience in seeking so lutions to practical university problems; and to foster the de velopment of international under-.staff of The News Leader cover- standing and cooperation between ing the Governor's office, the Gcn- the university communities of all,eral Assembly, and the State. He nations." . Tokyo Libraries UtV-cullC tJUUUl III J.J'i.1. A former editor of The Daily The World University Service ,Tar Heel, McNeill Smith gradu- h; fnrarv1 in nrniprtc cur-H as pfpf! from TINT! in 10.T7 : C K J ' . u Sf: Vjh ' v-:- ' ''h - . ! ; ; !? .. t. -;.' ; I ' ' , '4v i ' . j r v- - : srs' i 1.' 'r'zAA ' - - - - . 1 J,' ,' 1 !; v y 1 - 'A - - - - i - ' s I - . W 1. A . . - . ' it V . i : ii inf inr - iinu nir i mn r --iiiii -(r r--u u i -- '-f -mi- , ffriMr i- j...jwi.a A 23-yar-old UNC graduate has ated from UNC in 1937. WThile at Chapel Hill, he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon restoring libraries in Tokyo after an earthquake in 1923, aiding Chi nese student victims of Japanese, and Phi Beta Kappa, and was returned to Chapel Hill after seven " v" u. vu scholarships in American colleges Fleece. His education continued at in 1956. It is now building student Columbia Law School from which dormitories m earthquake-struck , he received his LL.B. in 1941. years bringing exhibitions of her art work to Harry's, Kemp's and Eastgate Beauty Shop. Miss Betty Bell, born in Punx sutawney, Pa., presently has eight paintings displayed in Harry's Grill sporting such titles as "In trospection," "Communication," "Fear" and "Cocktail Party." Tail with dark Drown hair, Miss Bell says she gets "inspiration" for her oil and water color paint ings from oriental literature, phi-j losophy and art. For instance, explained Miss Bell, the painting, "Introspection," por trays a man looking so much into his inner world that his view of the outside world is completely obscured. Done in oil, the paint ing is for sale at $45. Graduate Work Following graduate study at New York University and Yale, she entered several contests, winning first prize in the 10th annual art contest at Pcnn State in 1953 and two first prizes in 1954 at the N.C. State Fair. That same year she also held a one-woman show at Limestone College, Gaffney, S. C. Another painting is "Cocktail Party," on sale for $35. Miss Bell painted this at Yale and it, she explained, represents her impres- l sions of "an objective wallflower at a cocktail party." Also in. oil, it is painted in scraffito design, that is, scratching through one layer of paint into the second. Forum Gallery In 1955, Miss Bell was invited as one of. nine young artists from NCU at a forum callery of the Gibbs Gallery in Charleston, S. C. She was art supervisor of the Thomasville City Schools in 1957 and taught at Durham Junior High school in 1959. Conception, Chile. WUS also sponsors projects which are self-help, with the area involved contributing toward the goal. Projects for next year in clude establishing cooperative cafeterias, dormitories, and book and printing shops in Southeast Asia, developing a student health service in Sudan, and establishing a hostel at Fiorina College in Greece. The United States is the biggest contributor to the WUS program, with a planned $1,879,230 of the 1961-1962 (two year) $4,638,076 total budget. Wall Street Lawyer After his graduation he accepted a position with a Wall Street law firm. His legal practice was in terrupted by World War II. Smith was selected by the Civil Rights Commission to act as chairman of an advisory commit tee being formed in North Caro lina during 1959. His belief is that: "every man charged with an of fense is entitled to a defense and the best defense his lawyer enn civc; the more serious the charge, the more serious the need." Smith is currently an attorney in Greensboro. Group To Consider Integration At WF The Wake Forest Board of Trus-j students have been admitted to tees voted unanimously Friday to summer school and night school 't !!n!u-ith the stipulation that credits icier iriu que&uuii ui di"ft . , . . ., , i,..,.,i tnus yameu tamiui graduation from Wake Forest. In a poll conducted by the stu dent newspaper, the "Gold and Black." the undergraduates voted "about 50-50." undergraduate Negroes at Wake Forest to its race relations com mittee, headed by L. Y. Ballentine, secretary of agriculture. This is the first action taken on the integration question since the Baptist State Convention called on Baptist colleges to "move as quick ly as possible" toward dropping racial bars. No other Baptist school in this: state has Negroes in its under- j graduate body although Mars Hillj matriculated one Negro girl earlier i this year. She is no longer in the j school. No Negroes have been admitted to Wake Forest althougn .Negro A CORRECTION Thursday's Tar Heel print ed that Edward Miller of 123 Daniels Road broke his arm in front of Murphcy Hall. This was not true. Actually Fdward Smith of 704 North Columbia Road broke his arm. The Daily Tar Heel re grets this mistake.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 14, 1962, edition 1
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