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Serials Dopt,
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Chapel Hill, N. C.
Tar Heel Football
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Weather
Mostly fair and warmer.
Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom
Officers in Graham Memorial
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1962
Complete UPI Wire Servir
Frats At Brown
Told To Improve
Or Lose Houses
From DTII Wire Reports
Brown University's 17 social fra
ternities have been ordered to ex
pand, improve and align themselves
with the "central purposes" of the
university community or lose their
houses.
The order came from the Brown
University Corporation after a joint
faculty-corporation report on hous
ing. Here are some of the recommen
dations: Jiach f aternity wishing to retain
its present special living and din
ing quarters at Brown must, with
in four years, increase its member
ship to approximately 50 students,
maintain an academic average
which does not in any 4 consecutive
semesters , fall more than two
tenths of a point below the all-college
average, and "maintain a gen
eral program of activities con
sonant with the central purposes of
the University."
The committee, which has been
at work for more than a year study
ing the total environment of the
undergraduates and the ways in
which it contributes to the shaping
of student culture, delivered a
sweeping set of recommendations,
touching upon all aspects df the
ways in which students live and eat
on campus.
ierce
By OSCAR FRALEY
UPI Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO Little Billy
Pierce fired a brilliant three-hit
riow-or-never 5-2 victory for the1
San Francisco Giants Monday to
square the World Series and keep
them alive tor a seventh and final
game , against the New York Yan
kees. . .
The 35-year-old Pierce, an Amer
ican fugitive with a squeaky voice
and a fading fast ball, hand-cuffed
the mighty Yankees while his
mates handed Whitey Ford a record-tying
fifth ' World Series de
feat and evened the, classic at
three victories j,each. '.
It was a "must" victory for
those Cinderella Giants and, as
they had done so often before
this longest of all seasons, they
bounced back from the brink of
extinction on one of the wierdest
days in series history.
The series had been postponed
three straight days because of a
gale-whipped storm and. before
they could go at it this time, three
helicopters hovered over the sog
Gov.
Fine
NEW ORLEANS (UPD The Jus
tice Department Monday asked a
federal court to slap at least a
$100,800 fine on Mississippi Gov.
Ross Barnett for contempt of court.
Attorneys for Negro James Mere
dith recommended that both Bar
nett and his lieutenant governor
be held in federal custody. Attorn
eys for Barnett and Lt. Gov. Paul
Johnson planned to file their own
briefs with the U. S. Fifth Circuit
Court of Appeals. They contended
that the two state officials have
Khrushchev Hints
New Berlin Cri&is
WASHINGTON (UPI) Soviet
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has
indicated he may try to stir up a
"first class" Berlin crisis by
Christmas, a high Kennedy admin
istration official said Monday. The
remark set the tone for talks now
in their second day here between
Secretary of State Dean Kusk and
West German Foreign Minister
Gehard Schreeder on Berlin strate
gy. '
Other administration officials in
cluding Defense Secretary Kobert
S. McNamara, Atty. Gen. Robert
F. Kennedy, and : President Ken
nedy himself have all in recent
weeks called increasing attention to
the possibility of serious trouble
over Berlin in the coming months.
Several hundred editors and
broadcasters, attending a back
ground conference on foreign pol
icy here, were told Monday that
Khrushchev has -indicated ; he ex
pects to take u? th 55$Es cries
tij VvMis$y" &ter Nov.
eteeticas -a this 'fieuao?.
H i m If' -.
ft I - :V i.js ' rf
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J?
FACULTY FOR HONORS FRESHMEN' Five
facult3r members of the University of North Caro
lina who are instructors in the Freshman Honors
program greeted the first-year students at the
Carolina Inn this week. Left to right: Prof. E. A.
Deciding Game To
Masters
gy outfield in an attempt to make
it playable.
The Giants were accused dur
ing the regular season of wetting
their basepaths against the Dod
gers to cut down' on the running
speed of, the .Los Angelines.. And
the wet footing came to their aid
again Monday even if they didn t
order it as they sprayed' the
spongy, deep-grassed outfield with
hits which the Yankee outfielders
couldn't cover.
But Pierce who had won 12
games in Candlestick Park this
season without absorbing a single
defeat was their man of the
hour before a roaring crowd of
43,948 partisan fans, who scream
ed for them to square up this se
ries at three games each.
Obtained from the White Sox
this year, and apparently well
over the baseball hill, Pierce had
that left-handed magic which had
beaten the Yankees 25 times dur
ing his 15 years in the American
League.
The Giants gave him three runs,
in the fourth, an explosion deto
nated on Ford's own errant throw
Burnett Faces
Court Charm
purged themselves of any contempt
now that Meredith actually is a
student of the University of Mis
sissippi. The court, composed entirely of
federal judges, first must rule
on whether it has jurisdiction in
the case before it reaches any
decision on the contempt charges.
Barnett has been found guilty
of contempt twice in refusing
Meredith admission to OleVMiss.
Johnson was cited once for the
same thing.
In its brief, the Justice Depart
ment asked that Barnett be fined
an additional $10,000 per day until
he takes action to purge himself
The $100,000 fine would cover the
period between 6ct. 2 and Oct. 12
at $10,000 ner day.
The Justice Department did not
mentinn .Tnhnsnn in its brief. It
specified that it was not asking
for jail for Barnett since that
would serve no "remedial" or use
ful purpose.
But the Justice Department
said, it did not rule out the pos
sibility that imprisonment "may"
be necessary on crirninal contempt
charges. .
It said: "Law and order at the
university and the personal pro
tection of Mr. Meredith axe still
being achieved through a force cf
federal troops- The government is
presently unable: tn advise the
court when this wiU cease to be
necessary." '
Ths ovmment said . the court
would have: been justified in hand
ing down a prison sentence to
Barnett if he had not stopped in
terference with the court order to
3dm;t Mereith ta Cle T.tiss. Mere
ith eitered the , school 30,
SSd feas Wss evtr t&ce.
i 1
I, it f
an -
f t&vt 1
i f
Be Played Today
an
on an attempted plckoff play. And
it wasn't until the fifth that Pierce
Save the Yankees their first hit.
That one was a dandy a tower
ing home run by ' slugging Roger
Maris. - , - . -
But' the Giants got two more
back for Pierce ' in. their half of
the fifth as a four-hit assault '
routed Ford. And while Pierce
gave up those other two hits for
one run in the eighth, he went
all the way to force, a seventh
and absolutely final game Tues
day. It was a pitching masterpiece
under tremendous pressure, Pierce
allowing only three hits ' and two
walks one of these intentional
and winding it up on the final out
of the game by striking out Ma
ris, the man who had touched him
for the home run.
The Giants threatened to break
through in both the first and sec
ond innings but each time Ford
was bailed out by a double play.
But then in the fourth, Ford put
himself in a hole with that wild
pickoff throw as the Giants ran
up three runs.
One man was out when Felipe
Alou singled sharply off Cletis
Boyer's outstretched glove. Wil
lie Mays walked and then, with
Cepeda up. Ford wheeled and
tried to pick Alou off second. The
throw was 20 feet wide of the bag
and sailed into short right field.
The Yankee outfielders were
playing deep on Cepeda and
when the wet grass stopped the
ball, Maris had to make a long
run to retrieve it. By the time
he did, Alou had raced all . the
way home and Mays was on
third.
Cepeda, who had been hitless
in 12 trips to the plate before
bouncing a single over Tony .Ku
bek's head in the second inning,
really broke out of his slump with
a double to right center, which
sent Mays loping home. Jim Dav
enport then singled to that grass
clutching outfield, Cepeda com
ing home from second with the
third run.
Maris delivered his fourth
World series homer and the first
hit off Pierce in the top of the
fifth, banging the ball high over
the right field fence.
But the Giants weren't long get
ting it back, and with interest, as
they routed Ford in the fifth with
two more runs for a 5-1 lead.
Again there was one out when
Harvey Kuenn, hitless in 10 pre
vious appearances at bat, singled
to left. Chuclc Hiller moved him
all the way to third on a grass
stopped single to center and Fe
hpe Alou's single to center scored
Kuenn as Hiller pulled up at sec
ond. New it T33 Cepeda again and
tha powerful Ftierto Fican
smashed his slump wide opes
with a single which scored Hil
ler szi yrciad A!oa cn third.
Ti.it yas-it fo? Fcrd !&st?a is
iserfte ftit Uib Erst CSe
I
Cameron, mathematics; Ancel Mewborn, mathe
matics; Frank Ryan, modern civilization; Weldon
Thorton, English; Paul Pinckney, modern civili
zation. Photo by Bill Brinkhous
5
Oct. 5, 1958 as Jim Coates
came on to get those Giants out.
That home run blow by Maris
had been the only Yankee hit when
Boyer slashed a . double down the
left field line with .one out in the
eighth. . Pierce got pinch-hitter
Hector Lopes on a fly to right
and then Tony Kubek singled to
center to send Boyer flying home
with the second Yankee run.
But that was all for the Yankees.
Pierce induced Bobby Richard
son to fly to left for the third
out and then going out there in
the top of the ninth he set the
Yankees down in order to bring
those ' Giants back to life once
again.
Pierce's pitching and that op
portunistic hitting not only squar
ed the series but it also meant
that this would match the longest
seven-game series in history.
Back in 1911 the New York Gi
ants and the Philadelphia Athe
letics met in a series which re
quired 13 days because of one
six-day span of rain. This was
the 12th day of this series, which
has had a total of four postpone
ments because of rain, two days
off for travel and a delay of a day
because of the National League
pennant playoff.
Tuesday will be the 13th day
and unlucky for one team.
The Yankees will shoot for
their 20th world championship
in that windup game with Ralph
Terry, who broke a four-game
losing streak in series play by
winning the fifth game of this
prolonged duel.
For the Giants it will be stocky
Jack Sanford, who also is one-and
one in this go-round and now faces
what is a day of. reckoning for
both clubs. .
Requirements
For Profs Are
Hard"G6drey
University methods of hiring pro
fessors are very thorough. Dean
of the Faculty James Godfrey said
recently. He. was questioned in con
nection with- Chancellor Jycock's
statement that the University does
not "knowingly" hire Communists
as faculty members.
. UNC requires the schoc!-records
of teachers as far back as ihe. first
grade. Recommendations v and in
terviews are also necessary,
There are no affidavit.
which require the applicant to deny
Communist affiliation. Godfrey aid
they were ineffective because vmany
Communists would ncChsjt2t'to
sign these jn crier to Jkeep- .ieir
mersbfcrship secret -
New Left Names
Adviser, Gains
Recognition
The New Left Club is now offic
ially recognized as a campus orga
nization, Charles Henderson, dean
of student affairs, said yesterday.
John Schopler, asst. professor of
psychology, has been named facul
ty adviser for the discussion group.
A New Left spokesman said news
stories which had identified the
purpose of the group an education
in Marxism was incorrect. Only
tiie Marxist seminar of the New
Left is engaged in Marxist educa
tion, he said.
. Another allegation which the
spokesman sought to answer was
that the New Left was "controlled"
by the Progressive Labor Club. On
ly one of the six-person executive
committee of the New Left is a
Labor club member, he said.
Fall Election
Will Be Held
November 6
Fall Elections for officers of the
Freshman, Sohpomore and Junior
classes will be held Tuesday, . Nov.
6. Vacant seats on the Women's
Council and Men's Council will also
be filled.
Campus political parties will hold
conventions to nominate candidates
for president, vice-president, secre
tary, treasurer and social chairman
of the classes in the near future.
The fall convention of the Uni
versity Party will be held Tuesday,
Oct. 23 in Carroll Hall at 7 p.m. to
nominate candidates or all of
fices. Interviews will be held Thurs
day and Friday from 2:30 to 5:30
$:m. in the Grail Room for Vacan
cies in the legislative seats.
. The University Party will also
meet on Oct. 17 at 8 p.m. at Ger
rard Hall to elect the party chair
man and other executive officers.
The Student Party will meet
Monday, Oct. 22 to nominate can
didates for Fall Elections. They
will also fill vacancies for legis
lative seats and elect a vice-chairman
and treasurer. A time and
place have not been set for the
meeting.
Any student of the University
may become a candidate in Fall
lections by submitting to the
Elections Board a petition signed
by 25 qualified voters and by him
self.
All nominations must be made
m writing and presented to the
Elections Board no later than
Thursday, Oct. 25.
Peace Corps
Trainees Nix
Exemption
Military exemption and the prime
purpose of the Peace Corps were
the main interest items on a Sun
day night panel discussion between
four Peace Corps trainees and
three UNC students. Mike Lawler
was the moderator.
Trainees George Gedda, Bernard
Finfter, Anita Ruthling, and Sally
Smith, who are preparing for two
years teaching in Venezuela, said
they are opposed to the feace
Corps serving as a military exemp
tion.
' "Making the Peace Corps an ex
emption attracts people who do not
aspire to the high objectives of the
voluntary members," was the gen
eral agreement
Jim Kweder, one of the student
panelists, is a recruiter for the
Corps, but has not been exempted
from military duty.
He and the other two panelists
Marie Ogleby and Harry Delung
also-questioned the trainees on the
v.icfi-i.c ami the Dumose of the
Peace Corps.
"The, main function of the pro
gram is the building of a good im
age of America abroad," said Ber
nard Finfter. - L '
Sally Smith . added, "There are
nree" ain objectives why I join
ed the Corps: building Am
prestige, .helping the people of the
forein country, and .the personal
satisfaction cf putting, my ideals
to practical application.
The panel GscaJ
-ij .-vi fv"-and the Student
party.-it was he! CarroU HaJ.
Russian Rocket Trials,
American Nuclear Test
: Both Planned For Today
V - ' ' ' '' '
-lit -V:
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mMiiMnMMiiiiiiiiwriii-ririri!Miliiinimii
PETER, PAUL AND MARY,
morial Hall tonight for two performances at 7 and 9 o'clock. The
first concert is sold out and only
V l&flViflTL
X JL .
Ben Bella, who spent six years in
French prisons before emerging to
take over power in Algeria, came
to Washington Monday for a first
hand look at American democracy.
. He was greeted by President
Kennedy, a 21-gun salute and Caro
line Kennedy's play school. In ad
dition there was the speaker's chair
in " the House of Representatives,
the Lincoln Memorial and the Get
tysburg Address, and a group of
American school children who
wanted his autograph. The premier,
who smiles rarely, obviously felt
happy and flattered as he wrote
his name on tourist guides, the
backs of envelopes and notebooks.
It was just another incident in a
colorful and often wacky day. i
A joint communique issued after
the meeting said that after outlin
ing their respective foreign policies,
"President Kennedy and the prime
minister stated their hopes for a
close and continuing friendship be
tween the two countries."
New Technique Used
To welcome Ben Bella, the State
Department tried a new technique.
Instead of holding the ceremonies
at the airport, it staged them at
the White House. For the first time,
the 21-gun salute was fired from
the nearby ellipse. The traditional
ruffles and flourishes were played
by trumpeters on the lirst-tioor
balcony of the executive mansion.
The unscheduled attraction was
Caroline Kennedy and her 20 play
school and kindergarten playmates.
While the military review was un
der way, the sound of childish
Korean Junta Evicts
Former Prime Minister
SEOUL, Korea (UPD The mili
tary junta Monday evicted former
Prime Minister John M. Chang
from prison when he refused to
accept a clemency order.
Chang last month began serving
a 10-year sentence after a mili
tary court convicted him of con
tributing $770 to help carry out a
projected coup against the mili
tary regime.
Chang had rejected the clemen
cy order so as not to waive his
ripht tn acoeal. statins he wanted
to clear his name completely. He
r ... i t t i
was freed with tne ngnt to appeal
inyolate after the convicting mili
tary tribunal ordered mm released
on compulsory oan. nss &
bail was feed at exactly 770.
He has until Friday to avveal.
Army crue: or stair, en. ra
Cheng Oh said Mcnday that if he
does appeal, he will risk receiving
a stiff er sentence than the original
10 ; years.
Chans would net say whether he
still plans to appeal
pictured above, will appear in Me-
300 tickets remain for the second.
Pl(i m VQV
- V v 9ym
W1of thrust, which is not considered
sufficient to send a man to the
moon. Experts of the U. S. Nation-
from the third floor. .
In a voice that reverberated from
the mansion as the military review
was going on, a little boy shouted
'attention! forward march!" .
Kennedy, with a serious expres
sion on his face, kept looking to
ward the room.
Greets John, Jr.
Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, holding
John Jr., watched the ceremony
from the edge of the Rose Garden.
Afterward she was introduced to
Ben Bella, and the Algerian leader
pinched the boy's cheek.
Aside from the byplay, there
were serious talks at the White
House. The keynote of the visit was
sounded by Kennedy, who as a Sen
ator, in 1957 made a controversial
speech in favor of Algerian inde
pendence. "I am sure," Kennedy told Ben
Bella in his welcoming remarks,
"that Algeria will have a great
place in the affairs of North Africa
and the world. I am saluting in
you a strong patriot who has prov
ed his patriotic feelings in the most
trying circumstances.
Ben Bella, in reply, paid trib
ute to the- "lucid, clear and cour:
ageous" position that then Sen.
Kennedy had taken in his 1957
speech. He added: "I am certain
that you will continue to be the
artisan of the friendship between
our two peoples."
Federal Officers Question
Exiles About Raid On Cuba
MIAMI (UPI Federal officers
Monday were reported questioning
six Cuban exiles about a pre-dawn
sea rai don Cuba Saturday in
which they sank a Castro gunboat
and took prisoner two wounded
militia crewmen.
Newsmen were barred from the
nearby OPA-Locka immigration de
tention camp outside Miami where
the six men are held. U. S. auth
orities declined to identify the men
held, but exile sources said they
were Manolo Quiza, Manola Cas
sanova, Juan Espinesa, Jorge Rod
riguez, Roberto Parson and Eddie
Moore. All are of Cuban nation
ality. The two wounded militiamen
whom the raiders plucked from the
sea when their patrol boat sank
were undergoing treatment in Mi
ami's Jackson Memorial Hospital.
They were identified as Sgt. Fili
berto Suarez Lima and Cpl. Migu
el Cao Mandmo. Authorities said
Suarez asked for political asylum.
Cae was reported severely injur
ed and unable to talk. Both suf
fered bullet wounds in the -legs
Soviets Warn
Outsiders To
Avoid Areas
MOSCOW (UPI) The Soviet
Union Monday announced a new
series of tests of muli-stgae car
rier rockets in the central Pacific
starting Tuesday, the same day the
United States plans a high altitude
nuclear test at Johnston Island.
The tests, which will run through
Nov. 3, were called to perfect So
viet's space boosters. They will be
jarried out in two areas, one about
60 miles south of Johnston, and the
other GOO miles north of Midway
Island.
The Russians warned all air
planes and shipping to avoid the
areas.
Tass did not say where the rock
ets would be fired from, but in
two previous series of tests in 19G0
and 1961 the Soviets were reported
to have fired them from central
Russia on flights of approximately
7,500 miles.
Western experts said the rock
ets being tested without their last
stages may have significant mili
tary implications.
Witnesses Not Allowed
Iast Aueust. Mstislav Keldvsh.
Dresident o the u.S.S.S.R. Acad-
jemy of Sciences, said Western ob-
I servers could not be permitted to
witness Soviet space launchings be-
Soviet boosters are estimated to
produce about 1.2 milllion pounds
ax ypace Aariinjsrrauon jvash
ting man on the moon would re
quire 10 to 12 million pounds . of
thrust.
Western experts believed the So
viets also needed a more power
ful rockets to deliver a 100-megaton
bomb. Such a bomb has been cal
culated to weight about 10 times as
much as the space ship of a So
viet cosmonaut.
While the rocket launchings are
going on, it was believed the So
viets would still be testing nuclear
devices in the Nevaya Zemlya area
in the Arctic. The Soviet Union al
so has been holding prolonged mili
tary maneuvers in the Kara and
Barents Seas.
Ships In Area
Tass said special Russian ves
sels equipped with scientific Instru
ments will take up positions in the
target areas. In a previous test,
south of the Hawaiian Islands, the
U. S. Navy spotted a number of
Soviet vessels carrying extensive
electronic gear.
Several Russian scientific ves
sels have been reported in the
Johnston Island area in the past
week but Americans believed they
were there to check on American
high altitude nuclear test explo
sions. Previous tests were carried out
from the Soviet Union in January
and July, 1950, and in September
and October, 1961. These were be
lieved to have been the powerful
rockets which sent Soviet cosmo
nauts Yuri Gagarin and Tito Gher
man into their orbits of the earth.
and feet.
Although the Castro regime in
an official statement on the clash
accused the "pirate raiders" of
firing on an unarmed "pleasure
craft," Suarez confirmed it actual
ly was a government patrol boat
on a reconnaissance sweep.
The raid took place early Satur
day. The raiders, apparently using
a World WTar II-built torpedoboat,
managed to reach Cayo Sal, a
small British-owned islet 45 miles
off Cuba's north coast. The Bntkh
radioed for aid in getting them off
the island.
A U. S. Coast Guard beat took
the raiding party from Cayo Sal
to Key West, Fla. The wounded
men were flown here for emer
gency treatment.
The six exiles said they were
members of a 50-man anti-Castro
group not affiliated with any other
exile organization. Previous set
raids against Cuba have been car
ried out by the Montecristi organi
zation, the Student Revolutionary
Directorate and the so-called Alpha
65 group.