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Peace Talks . . . .. - - To Continue With Algeria PARIS (UPPPresident Charles de Oaulle wiu Dem.ine nnai ana decisive phase of peace talks with the Algerian rebels "almost at once" despite right-wing extrem ist violence and Communist-backed strikes and riotsresponsible gov ernment sources said Saturday. The French Communist party, which spearheaded a bloody riot Thursday night to protest violence by the outlawed Secret Army Or ganization (OAS), defied De Gaulle further by calling for a series of strikes and demonstrations Mon day to protest "police violence." Fury Spurred The left-wing group's fury was spurred by the alleged OAS kid naping of 19-year-old MarcAndre Schwartz, son of a prominent left wing leader and a cousin of Pre mier Michel Debre. Young Schwartz turned up safe and sound Saturday and said he was kidnaped at gunpoint. The government was cracking down on both the right and the left. The Interior Ministry an nouneed it would ban all demon strations Monday and accused the Communists of throwing in 3,000 trained shock troops as a weapon of subversion. In Algiers, 5.000 French troops, gendarmes and police swarmed Through the European working district of Bab-el-Oued and arrest ed 21 suspects of the OAS and found 192 weapons. But elsewhere in Algeria OAS violence added to the death toll now approaching the 750 mark since Jan. 1. The French army in Algeria has battled the rebel liberation move ment for seven; long and costly years. De Gaulle is determined to end the war and build up France's continental armed might. TV Schedules WRAL, Raleigh Channel 5 I 9:00 Harvest of Hymns 9:30 The Fisher Family 10:00 Frontiers of Faith 10:30 The Big Picture lj:00-Ljght Unto My Path 12:00 American Newsreel 12 : 1 5 Social Security 12:30 Oral Roberts 1:00 Church of Our Fathers 1:30 Circuit Rider 2:00 M o v i e Matinee: "Vice Squad" and "Remember the Day" 4:30 Chet Huntley 5.00 Everett Case Show 5:30 Update 6:00 Communist Encirclement ! 6:30 Maverick ' 7:30 Broad way of Lerner and Lowe (color) ' ' ; 8:30 Car 54 Where Are You : 9:00 Bonanza (color) 10:00 Theatre 62 (color) 11:00 FCC Hearings 11:30 Sunday Late Show: "This Above All" T. Power, J. Fontaine, Thomas Mitchell WTVD, Durham Cahnnle 11 8:00 Bob Pool's Gospel Favorites Eat Sunday Dinner At the ZOOM-ZOOM Late Lunch Served 12 Noon Til 8 P.M. $1.19 SPECIALS Strip Steak Texas Roast Platter Spaghetti 1HZ P8on52IQNAL THE UdOPST THIN6 ABOUT CLEAN.' ft SV Jjf . Ik, - t .JIM HUDOCK seems to be wondering what to do as big Len Chappell and Bill Hull guard the Tar Heel center in yesterday's, game. Iludock Textiles WASHINGTON (UPD-The tex tile industry will resume next week its campaign to shrink the com petitive . advantage of foreign goods on U.S. store shelves The U.S. Tariff Commission is scheduled to begin Tuesday hear ings on a proposal calling for arj 8V2-cent-a-pound fee on the cotton 1 content of textile imports. 9:00 This Is the Life 9 : 30 International 9:45 The Living Word 10:00 Lamp Unto My Feet 10:30 Look Up and Live 11:00 Camera III 11:30 Hour of St. Francis 12:00 Big F. .cure 12:30 Washington Conversation 12:55 Nel Calmer and the News 1:00 Stories You May .Have Missed .1:30 The Answer 2:00 Royal Canadian Mounted Police 2:30 Sunday Sports Spectacular 4:00 Wonderful World of Golf 5:00 Lawrence Welk .6:00 Twentieth Century 6:30 Mr: Ed .7:00 Follow the Sun 8:00 Ed Sullivan 9:00 G. E. Theater 9:30 Jack Benny 10:00 Candid Camera 10:30 What's My Line? 11:00 Walter Gopkrite with the News 11:15 Star Theater: "My Man Godfrey" MS THAT IT WA5 1GO4mV fTI I yssrA tffTMAf WAS : 1 ' wm ... I t ifl ft ' 1 .If Will Fi glit Competition The fee would be roughly equi valent to the difference in prices paid for domestic cotton and that of foreign mills. The hearings have a strong po litical overtone. The latest effort of the textile industry to curb imports comes against a backdrop of apparently successful negotiations for a long- Best Seller Listings UPI (Compiled by Publishers' Weekly) Fiction FRANNY AND ZOOEY J. D. Salinger THE AGONY AND THE ECS TASY Irving Stone TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD Harper Lee A PROLOGUE TO LOVE Taylor Caldwell LITTLE ME Patrick Dennis DAUGHTER OF SILENCE Morris' West .SPIRIT LAKE MacKinley Kan tor CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD Edward Streeter THE IVY TREE Mary Stewart CAPTAIN , NEWMAN, M.D.-Leo Rosten KIRKLAND REVELS Victoria Holt THE CARPETBAGGERS Har old Robbins Non-Fiction MY LIFE IN COURT Louis Nier THE MAKING OF THE PRESI DENT, 1960 Theodore H. White LIVING TREE Joy Adamson A NATION OF SHEEP William Lederer Dr. William E. Beel pPTOMETRIST Above Ledbetter-Pickard Phone 942-5260 VISION ANALYSIS CONTACT LENS CLASSES FITTED NOW PLAYING 1 77 Features at: 1:19-3:16 V 5:13-7:10-9:07 YOU CU6WT tO HCPZ' T 'mi m and Larry Brown paced the Carolina scoring with 21 points each. Photo by Jim Wallace term agreement on textiles and heatedly-denied reports that the hearings would be a sham. , The White House announced Fri day a five-year agreement be tween 16 major cotton exporting and importing nations. It said the agreement would help safeguard the American cotton textile indus try against injury from imports. CALORIES DON'T COUNT Dr. Herman Teller THE RISE AND FALL OF THE THIRD REICH William Shirer CITIZEN EARST W. A. Swan- berg THE COMING FURY Bruce Catton MY SABER IS BENT Jack Paar ISHI IN TWO WORLDS Theo dora Koreber THE NEW ENGLISH BIBLE: THE NEV TESTAMENT , t"Mifit31iVfffflTih'(iuMji'!ia 1 1 oo& Jews STARTING MONDAY, the feature-case will be filled;, with books in Danish, Greek, Ger? man, French, Latin, Portuguese Spanish, Swedish and othec esot eric products of the Tower of Babel. Prices will be low, and contents scrambled. Linguists are invited to join the fun. COMING NEXT WEEK is an Outstanding collection - of books on ships and the sea. If you know any collector in this field, tell (hem about it. We'll guaran tee (his lot is worth, driving a couple of hundred miles to see. DRIBBLING DOWN are some Charming oddments of Ameri cana, and a small clump of limit ed diiions and first editions of authors of the first half of this century. OUR ANNUAL OLD BOOK CATALOGUE should be out sometime , in (he next three weeks, fleserve yur copy now. THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 119 East Franklin Street OPEN 'TIL 10 P.M. YOWtfi TlU fOR. AS0N THAT'S WORSE THAN EVER r THEY DIDN'T TA5TE V EITHER: 7 K - A A vr&w j vaiini w wim iwwi www in iw Romney GOP Candidate For Governor DEJROIT UPD George Rom fiey, president et Americsn Mo tors Corp. and prominently men tioned as a 1964 presidential dark horse. Saturday announced he is a Republican candidate for governor Of Michigan.' " Romney, who has already forced the state Republican Party to ac cept his terms after saying the party has been contrplled by "big business," said he . will ' launch 9 "citizen campaign to get Michigan rolling." . Boqrd to Meet Romney, 54, said he will meet with the board pf directors of American Motors Monday to ask for a leave of absence from his posts of AMC president and board chairman. He resigned, immediately after his announcement of candidacy, from the "Citizens for Michigan," the "third political force" organ ization which he formed three years ago to try to resolve the deadlock between Michigan Re publicans and Democrats oyer state money matters. Until less than a year ago, Rom ney had not made public his po litical party affiliation. Immediate Endorsement Romney was given immediate endorsements as the Kepublican candidate for governor by nation al and state GOP leaders. He has been mentioned by former Presi dent Eisenhower, by 1960 nominee Richard M. -Nixon and by Sen. Barry Goldwater, Republican con- -CLASSIFIED ADS AFTERNOON JOB OPEN. WE need a serious graduate or un dergraduate for afternoon work. He must plan to be in Chapel Hill this summer and next fall. IN TIMATE BOOKSHOP, one nine teen East Franklin Street. WANTED PART-TIME EVE ning waiter. Experience prefer red. Apply at Carolina Coffee Shop. 942-1175. 57 77 ; sz r tz -I -ill 61 St A JlM i2 ,: r.t t i J o. g2 e e i 4 4 it m jams-paid " eaiSueci 02 Euigxerti'GZ 5rEos 73 pu-eiiOH f saap-eax 7 -V9 SERVE VOITBSELI asmg i o rrr' JolaloitJAblMlflc F E f 5:30-7:30 at llio RAEJCS1 HOUSE u"" p lllMll.. 4 -the Recommended l Of I OPEN Duncan nines XVI I HICKORY and Gourmet Captain John C. Spencer, Commanding Officer NROTC Unit and Professor of Naval Science announced the commissioning of Charles M. Brown, Jerome D. Kasreil, and Harry V. Lynch as Ensigns, U. S. Navy, (shown left to right) fall "gfadutes "of UNC in January 1962. Ensigns Kasreil and Lynch vill go to Naval Supply School at Athens, Ga. and Ensign Brown will report to the USS Wyandott (AKA 92) in Norfolk, Va. Powers Is Released (Continued from Page V Last Wednesday Abel had been released from Atlanta last Wednesday and taken to New York. He was flown to Europe only after U. S. authorities had assurances that Powers defi nitely would be set free. The remarkable series of events that led to the trade began when Abel's wife sought clemency for his husband and wrote Kennedy before his inauguration. Negotia tions are conducted in large part by Abel's U. S.-appointed attor ney, James B. Donovan. Informed sources said the Presi dent had never discussed the case with any Soviet official. And there were no plans for him to interview Powers as he did when two RB47 pilots were set free by the Russians soon after his in auguration. RB47 Pilots The RB47 pilots were on a mil- aojoo pua errjdaj fSBiqurn 62 It'enha reqs '8S C&EXBAV33nvx "9S B.-zrno fia3 piaoAv iqurBH'6S qoio 'iz "UIOOUII B 3S0IOI5 480d) eoppioE '9 OSitH ootio ot ffO) dransx Atsoidxa 8i i'bonoo) f?Sop rjoH'SI OOTX9 v- ireras-,4 fJEA EVERY SUNDAY Can Eat CHARCOAL PIT BROILING All Von sow B3Wtl rinc..' 'rwEaLj-af Treat J . r ;. : 'fc. :v y 1 5 Soviets made no mention of Abel, who was considered a top spy. Powers' wife, Barbara, had been told previously - that her husband was about to be released. Actual news that he was free, she said, was "the greatest happiness I itary mission. Powers was not. Similarly, :in their announce ment on Powers' release, the PAJUOmZB YOUR ADVOfiTSSgRS Prog ressive Sunday Steaks - Seafood Dancing To a ! line The average diabetic can lead a normal, happy life with today's efficient drugs. Undiscovered, diabetics suffer needlessly and permit the condition to grow worse. The answer is fo find out. The test is simple, in expensive. See your doctor and follow his orders to the letter. IBiiiuiiiH .v.v-v...v.-.VAV.'.'.vAV.-..v.v.v..v.v.v..v.v-'.v. .v.v.v.-, sunons DRUG STORE S X (fe BE MY L'; f , iff . menus MORE when you say k with a box of Paogbfcr&'s Midc nod Honey Chocolates in beautiful heart packages ".Vmi inspked creation whos beauty ftod tasra ssaid) tbe aentimeiK of the day. ILICT fSOM OUR'BSma CANDY D:?Ar,T..ir sunorrs drug store Valentne Candy - Purchased Here .Controversial Questionnaire Is Discarded WASHINGTON (UPI) Senators conducting an inquiry into alleged military censorship discarded a controversial questionnaire on communism and may well aban don all such group testing, in formed sources said Saturday. They said the questionnaire, which created a furor after secret ly being given to some marines and airmen here, was useless be cause of the publicity it received. Opposed The questionnaire technique is also opposed by some participants in the study, they said. Members of the subcommittee are expected to meet next week to discuss the controversy created by the marine quiz and to docide where to go now. This is in light of President Kennedy's action in voking executive privilege and di recting state and defense depart ment reviewers not to answer cn specific speech deletions. Speech Review Undersecretary of State Geoigc Ball was said to be eager to ap pear before the subcommittee to outline the State Department's speech review policies. The De partment's role in censorship has been sharply attacked by Sen. Strom Thurmond, D.-S.C, who claims department speech change reflected a "no-win" policy in the cold war. Thurmond also wants the sub committee to continue with the military phase of the speech cen sorship inquiry. Several witnesses are still to be heard, including Gen. George H. Decker, army chief of staff. Uiglil Al 1 1K1 - Pizza - Spaghetti Live Music ib h 15 VALENTlNlT il Jazz j fi DTI o il I ii .i t ' J THE DAILY TAR HEEL Fage Thre3 H2y, February 11, 1962 m . r -sfiSi' -" .:,iffla'fc1Mi
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 11, 1962, edition 1
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