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TMt.C Library Serials Pept. 870 Quest- Goal .Reached So Far t, Jlt.f rfl. !. diMM "anon i jiri irtin n ; """" i Upper House? See Edits, Page Two Warmer and clearing Offices in Graham Memorial SUNDAY, MARCH 11, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service $) Ml 1 1 fr N.C. Youn For N ixty Attend Bert Bennett, Graham Talk To Delegates By BILL WUAMETT The College Young Democrats of North Carolina voted here yester day at a rally to affiliate with the national College Federation of Young Democrats and drafted a federation constitution that will be presented to the individual clubs for ratification. UNC-YDC President T. L. Odem said that the national affiliation would supplement the state organi zation and would not give suprem acy to the national organization. The action came at the last ses sion of the two-day meeting in which the delegates heard talks by YDC National Committeeman Al House, state party chairman Bert Bennett and state YDC Presi dent "Dub" Graham. At the general session yesterday morning Graham attacked the tendency of many people to vote for individual candidates without regard to party affiliation. j Calling for party loyalty, the Charlotte attorney , said the "two party system had served Ihe -country well. 1 Those .-who jump "from party to party and from individual to individual," he stated, are helping to contribute to the break down of the party system." Such a breakdown, he said, would lead to an unstable govern ment such as was recently endured by the French. After his attack on unaffiliated voters, Graham reminded the dele gates that "the real important thing is how many democrats vote on voting days." After Graham's speech, the dele gates attended two seminars on the Peace Corps and Operation Sup port, a grassroots campaign to raise money for the 1962 campaign. Cindy Poole of State College was elected president of the newly formed State of North Carolina Federation of Young Democrats that will join the national federa tion. Ann Francis Allen of East Carolina College was picked as secretary and Ken Bode of UNC was elected treasurer. Campus Briefs- ClieSt Solicitors To Meet: Peace Study Group Convenes More Campus Chest All solicitors for the Campus Chest will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Gerrard Hall. Peace Study The newly organized Chapel Hill Peace Study Committee will hold its first meeting tomorrow night at 8 in the Pioneer Room of the Presbyterian Church. Everyone is invited. The Committee is devoted to clarifying and evaluating Ameri ca's nuclear age commitments and responsibilities. NEA A panel discussion concerning the problems and critical aspects of student teaching will be presented at the regular meeting of the Frank Porter Graham Chapter of the Student NEA, Tuesday night, March 13, at 7:30. The meeting will be held in 08 Peabody Hall. Students who have completed their practice teaching will make up the panel, and questions will be invited .from the audience. The election of officers for the local group for the coming year will al so be held at this meeting. All members and interested persons are welcome to attend. Senior Cabinet There will be a meeting , of the Senior class cabinet Monday at 7 p.m. in Roland Parker II in Gra ham Memorial. Chairman will ex plain to their committees what work they will be in charge of. y g B ational Affiliation; Rally H F ! . -A 4 I v. DONNA BAILEY YWCA Elects Donna Bailey As President Donna Bailey, UNC junior from Coffeeville, Miss., was elected president of the YWCA Executive cabinet Thursday night in a wom en's campus-wide election. A member of two YWCA com mittees this year, Donna has also served on a similar "Y" executive committee at the University of Mississippi, from where she trans ferred last year. Hoping to introduce some of the best aspects of the "Y" at Ole Miss into the UNC program, Don na's goal for next year is to "pro mote greater unity of efiort and coordination of the activities of the various 'Y committees." Serving next year as vice-presi dent of the Executive committee will be Judy Brown, a transfer from Emory University in Atlanta Nancy DuPuy, a transfer from Agnes Scott, was elected executive secretary. Stuart Austin, a former Saint Mary's student, will serve as treas urer, while Susie Mitener, a trans fer from Sullens will be member ship chairman. The new program chairman will be June Todd, a former Women's College student. Sarah Cullen, a transfer from the University of Georgia, was elected religious em phasis chairman. Found A 1955 Harry P. Harding High School ring with the initials KRM has been found and may be claim ed at 301 Cobb. Peace Corps Tickets for the Peace Corps luncheon on Saturday, March 17, will be sold in the YMCA building from Monday through Thursday from 2 to 5 p.m. Tickets are still available at $2. More Peace Corps The Peace Corps will administer the official entrance test on Satur day afternoon, March 17 2:30 p.m. in rooms 200 and 208 Gardner Hall. The deadline for applicants is Tues day March 13. All students inter ested in taking the test are to see Anne Queen in the YMCA building before Tuesday. YM-YWCA The YW-YMCA Catholic Orphan age Committee will leave Y-Court at 2:00 Sunday for Raleigh. All those interested are invited to come. Anyone who has a car will be appreciated. They shall return to campus by 5:30. BSU Work Service The Baptist Student Union has announced a work service for the community that will continue for the rest of the semester. Students will do any sort of work and their pay will co to LISTEN, a student missionary appeal. For babysit ters, call Dot Denton at 968-9142. For house or yard work, call BSU Center. 942-4266. , emocrats Vote ere Indian Visits UNC On Tour Of Colleges J A well-known educator who once was once. a page to the late Ma hatma Ghandi is now visiting UNC as ' part of his tour of American state universities. Arthur D. Lazarus, principal of Sastri College, a technical High school for Indian students located in Durban, South Africa, is touring American state universities and studying the relationships between the administrative officials and the political power of the states. Lazarus has found that American pressure groups figure prominent ly in maintaining academic free dom of university faculty members and officials. He said that the South African government policy does not admit this freedom and that, generally, ail residents of South Africa are "walking on a mine field." A native of South- Africa, Lazar us' boyhood village was a main stopping point for Ghandi's first passive resistance exhibition. Ghan di and his followers stopped in Lazarus' village. Lazarus .then 11 years old, served as Ghandi's page and served Ghandi his morning meal, Ghandi's one meal of the day. The meal consisted of a fruit dish and milk. Lazarus said that when Ghandi learned that there were children going without milk, he stopped drinking it. For the vear 1961-62, Lazarus has been t pointed as a visiting scholar sponsored under the U. S. Government Educational 'Ex change program. During the first semester of the academic year, Lazarus was affiliated with the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, D. C, and was the faculty associate of Dr. Vernon McKay, professor of African stu dies. Lazarus is well-versed on South African topics concerning culture, education, (with particular refer ence to education for Indians), Hindu manners and customs, race attitudes in South Africa, and South African political affairs. The Apartheid policy of South Africa is contributing to a rise in left wing thinking in that area, he said. He said that the future for the state did not look good. Lazarus attended Yale Univer sity where he received a M.A. de gree in education. He has served as president of the National Indian Teacher's Society for 10 years, and is influential in Indian educa tion in South Africa. Solicitations Chairman Charges Duke Gives More To Charities Than UNC By JEM WALLACE The Duke University Campus the UNC Campus Chest, solicita- VAN OATTS . . . Co-Chairman r - " 3 : 5 A - i .'ji'.-. '"'.:::-:::::-'-: v :,r. w ' , 'It 'i - - - I I ' . , Phillips Says Teacher Image Is Unfocused Guy B. Phillips, member of the State Board of Education and a former Dean of the School of Edu cation at UNC, challenged the Statewide Conference on Teacher Education, to consider the char acteristics and competencies of the qualified teacher as basic to pro posed plans for preparation. He recognized the need for and urged the Conference to provide freedom in planning along with essential guidelines and erstraints designed to protect the teacher, the child, and the citizen. The image of the teacher which he presented calls for five basic senses of leadership. The sense of perspective is es sential if the teacher is to make the maximum contribution. A wide perspective is made possible when the individual has a strong general education, a wide range of person al experiences and contact with the society, and arg understanding ox wona conauions. bucn an over view prepares the individual for the creative task of awakening within the student an interest in and respect for knowledge. In stitutions of higher learning must provide the broad perspective in curriculum, facilities and leader ship to challenge students to growth. The sense of direction is the second basic need to be met. The selection of a specific target and concentration upon its accomplish ment becomes a constructive step toward success. Thorough prepar ation in particular areas of know ledge is important for successful teaching. It is the road map to somewhere. The individual with the sense of perspective and direction must have a sense of responsibility. De cision making is one of, the most important elements of leadership and is the foundation for progress. It tends to destroy conformity to accepted patterns and tradition which has been one of the most serious complaints against the profession. Another necessary competency is a sense of confidence and security. Children respond to confident and enthusiastic leaders. The final sense of humility com pletes the five basic foundations for success in leadership. Peace Corps Tests Must Be Applied For By Noon Tues, North Carolinians wishing to take the official Peace Corps entrance test on Saturday, March 17, must have their applications in by noon, Tuesday, it has been announced by Miss Anne Queen, co-ordinator, of the University's Peace Corps Com mittee. The examination will be held at 2:30 p.m., March 17, in 200 Gard ner Hall. Applications to take the test should be addressed to the Cam p u s Peace Corps Committee, YWCA, University of North Caro lina. All qualified U.S. citizens, eighteen years of age or over, who are interested in volunteering for the Peace Corps are eligible to Chest collects more money than tions committee chairmen Van Oatts and Grant Wheeler said yes terday. Last year Duke students ave $4,350 while Carolina . collected $1,200, or only 18 cents per stu dent. Beginning Tuesday, the Solicita tions Committee here will launch a program in hopes of outdoing the Blue Devils in the field of charity. Oatts and Wheeler announced that in order to make it easier to donate, collectors -will be calling on each dorm and fraternity iouse. "We hope the students realize that this drive comes only once a year and is UNC's only charity drive," the co-chairmen said. "We are asking for a dollar per student, not just a dollar for the week but a dollar for the year," Wheeler said. "Being a member of the student body here at Caro lina means more than going to classes. Each student has numer ous responsibilities to the jml- versity one oi which is a jnatureJ Nine Receive Wilson Award For Next Year Nine UNC students have been awarded Woodrow Wilson Fellow ships for one year of graduate study, it has been announced by the fellowship foundation head quarters in Princeton, N. J. UNC senior students who were awarded the fellowships are: Maurice V. Barnhill of Wilming ton, a physics major; Johnson B. Clinard of Winston-Salem, a clas sics major; Mrs. Nancy N. de Grummond of Lake Charles, La., a classics major; Stephen E. Kes ler of Kings Mtn., a geology major; Dieter M. Mahncke of At lanta, Ga., an international rela tions major; Nicholas D.. Reppucci of Hollywood, Fla., a psychology major; William M. Richardson of Raleigh, an anthropology major; John B. Wagoner of Jacksonville, Fla., a mathematics major: and David S. Walker of China Grove, a French major. Frank M. Duffy, professor, De partment of Romance Languages, is the UNC Woodrow Wilson Na tional Fellowship Foundation's campus representative. A total of 24 holders of previous fellowship awards are attending UNC at present. A total of 1,058 students from colleges and universities in the 46 of the United States, eight prov inces in Canada, Puerto Rico, Panama, and the Canal Zone have been awarded such grants. The fellowships are awarded to students who expect to make their careers in college teaching. Each fellowship covers a full year's tuition and fees at a graduate school of the fellow's choice plus a living allowance of $1,500. Candidates accepting the fellow ships assume a moral obligation to complete at least one year of graduate studies and to give ser ious thought to a career, in col lege teaching. The fellowships may be held at any graduate school in the United States or Canada ad mitting the fellows. The fellows are encouraged to pursue graduate work at institutions other than those where they took their under graduate work. Each candidate for a fellowship is nominated by a faculty mem ber. Out of every 100 college sen iors throughout the United States and Canada only one or two are nominated. take the test. Application questionnaire forms for Peace Corps assignments will be available in Gardner Hall when the test is given on March 17. There are openings for qualified students and persons with aca demic, practical or technical ex perience in several fields to serve in countries where the Peace Corps is already in operation or will be in future months. Especially needed are teachers, doctors, nurses, health specialists and educators, home economists, agricultural extension workers, land and road surveyors, archi tects, construction workers, li brarians, statisticians, skilled craftsmen and technicians. and generous attitude toward worthy charities which the Cam pus Chest aids." GRANT WHEELER . ... Co-Chairman .-. :-; --;?-:- : - - ' - i- ' . . ' i ' : -'' 2 iJ Gromyko To Warn rime Short For D McNamara Will Not Allow B70 To Be Pushed WASHINGTON ( UPI ) Defense Secretary .Robert S. McNamara was described Saturday as deter mined not to yield an inch to pow erful congressmen who want the 2,000-mile-an-hour B 7 0 bomber started on the high road toward a multibillion dollar production goal. The defense chief, who usually wins congressional contests while juggling a dozen other military problems, attaches such impor tance to stopping the B70 move ment that he plans to devote the next two weeks almost daily to the task. Passions are running high in the battle of the B70 the only air plane in the world apparently that would fly three times the speed of sound and time will tell whether the tough-minded McNa mara can win another one by overwhelming the opposition with facts and logic. His facts are that American technelogy does not yet know how to provide the complicated radar and computing devices the B70 needs for reconnaissance and mis sile firing at triplq-sonic speed, and-that by the time it-can be done the plane may not be needed. Facts Disputed His facts and concepts are dis puted by other experts with pre sumably equal credentials. His chief antagonist is Chairman Carl Vinson (D.-Ga.), of the House Armed Services Committee, which supports Vinson to a man. Vinson has been in Congress two years longer than the 45-year-old Mc Namara has been alive and has won many a defense battle with the executive branch. Seldom has he thrown himself into a conflict with such fervor. Like many another member of Congress and like the famed bom bardment expert, Gen. Curtis E. Lemay who is chief of the Air Force, Vinson fears McNamara and the young engineers on his staff will put America "out of the bomber business." They are not persuaded by anything they have seen so far that missiles are that good. As the battle heads into its third week, this is the situation: The Air Force, with Defense De partment encouragement, has changed the primary mission of the B70 from bomber to a recon-naissance-strike plan which could ferret out hard-to-find targets and pummel them with missiles and bombs. It is now called the RS70. Its basic structure and aerody namics are the same but its elec tronics would be vastly more ad vanced. "Only with wholehearted sup port from Carolina's student body will the Campus Chest be able to support five charities this year," Miss Oatts pointed out. "We do care and only through our sincere and ; generous support can we be of assistance to these deserving organizations," she said. Dean Perry Named Dean Arnold Perry of the UNC School of Education has been ap pointed chairman of a team to appraise the College of Education at the University of South Caro lina. ' - :: - The team will observe USC s work and confer with its faculty and students on March 5-7. A re port will be sent to the National Commission on Accreditation of Teacher Education in Washington, D. C, who appointed the team members, for use in accrediting USCs education program for teach ers, supervisors and administrat ors on both undergraduate "and graduate levels. Arrives Western :.::;:::;'.:::;:;:: , f lit w "; ' v . S PETER MAUPIN Maupin Named To Serve In Peace Corps Peter Maupin, a UNC junior from Wake Forest, will begin training on March 25 for a Peace Corps project in Arequipa, . Peru. Maupin received a wire on Wed nesday from Peace Corps Director R. Sargent Shriver notifying him of his selection.. Details of the project were mailed later. Arequipa, a city of 200,000, is located in the Peruvian Andes. Maupin's Peace Corps group will work in depressed sections called "barriadas" which surround the city. About 60,000 refugees from the earthquakes of 1953 and 1960 live there in temporary housing and without adequate food or health facilities. Maupin, an education major at UNC, is to serve as a health edu cator. He has held a variety of jobs, ranging from social worker to electrician's apprentice, which he believes may prove helpful in his Peace Corps work. Maupin plans to finish college after two years' service in the Corps. Next week end Maupin will join students from across the state in a college Peace Corps conference to be held in Chapel Hill. Maupin is the fifth UNC student to be selected for the Peace Corps. Sea Captain Johnson Here For Lecture Captain Irving Johnson will give a talk illustrated with a film en titled "Trade Wind Islands: Pit- cairn to Zanzibar," Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Ad mission price is $1.00 and anyone may attend. Captain Johnson was born in Hadley, Massachusetts. He has been sailing since he was 17. He began sailing small boats along the New England Coast, graduated to professional sailing on yachts during the summertime and tramp steamers in the winter. In 1929 he sailed around the Horn in a square rigger, tne t'eking, bound for Chile for a haul of ni trate. He began taking pictures on this trip. A year later he sailed the America Cup challenger. Shamrock V through a hurricane while returning it to England. Captain Johnson made a business out of taking amateur sailors around the world on his boats and by lecturing. During World War II he was chosen by the Navy De partment to help plan bases in the South Seas. He spent a great deal of the war sailing aboard the U.S.S. Sumner charting ocean cur rents, blasting reefs, etc. The Johnsons have recently completed their seventh eighteen- month voyage around the world. In the summers in the United States between voyages they have taken over 2.000 Girl Scout Mariners on short cruises along the New Eng land coast. Their next cruise will take them to North Africa and Eu rope in a new fcetch, the Yankee. In Vienna Nations isarmin; French Minister Missing From Delegates GENEVA (UPI) Soviet For eign Minister Andrei Gromyko flew in Saturday for cold war and disarmament talks with the American and British foreign ministers. He served a grim warn ing that time was running out in the effort to halt the mushroom ing nuclear arms race. Secretary of State Dean Rusk was due later Saturday night from Washington where he left with a promise "to do everything we can do on our side" to halt the arms and reduce tension. He said "we can make some real headway" if Gromyko has the same attitude. If there is progress a Summit conference coul follow this spring. British Foreign Secretary Lord Home was flying in Sunday from London. He had a final briefing from Prime Minister Harold Mac- millan Friday night and they were believed to have discussed some Anglo-American differences on the approach to a nuclear test ban. France is boycotting the dis armament talks starting here Wed nesday and French Foreign Minis ter Maurice Couve de Murville was missing from the foreign mini sters conference. France was not even reperesented by an observ er. Disarmament First The big three ministers planned to hold their first meeting on disarmament and possibly other major issues such as Berlin at a dinner meeting Sunday night with Rusk as host. The British-Russian-American talks, which will continue Monday and Tuesday, are a prelude to the formal opening of the general dis arament conference Wednesday at which 17 nations will be represent ed. The pre-conference meeting of the three foreign ministers were grudgingly agreed to by Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev after President Kennedy and Macmillan rejected his demands for a sum mit meeting to open the arms talks. The Anglo-American leaders promised Khrushchev a possible summit in late April or May if the disarmament talks show "sub stantial progress" or if, in Ken nedys' words, a "major crisis de velops." In addition, Kennedy has offered to call off the proposed new series of U. S. nuclear tests in the at mosphere if Khrushchev signs a foolproof pact, with inspection and control provisions outlawing such experiments. But there were no in dications the Soviet leader has any intentions of doing this. Jackie Visits Pope, Misses Press Meet By WILLIAM F. SUNDERLAND (United Press International) ROME Mrs. Jacqueline Ken nedy, dazzling in a white silk coat and diamonds, attended a brief and unofficial visit to Rome that included an audience Sunday with Pope John XXIII. The American first lady flew into this rain-drenched city from New York and took advantage of a Roman custom to rest up for the dinner by taking a siesta. She was smiling on arrival but ihe appeared tired by the flight from New York. Disappointed newsmen, photog raphers and a small crowd gath ered outside the four-story renais sance palace residence of Harvard- educated Count Fernande "Dino" Pecci Blunt a classmate of the President got only a glimpse as her chauffeur-driven limousine swept through the 15-foot-high wooden doors into the palace courtyard.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 11, 1962, edition 1
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