Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 28, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
33 Sartals Espt Box 870 Chajal Hllg. Cfnd Tufkey See Edits, Page Two Weather Mostly fair, cloudy in after noon. High in the 60ss. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service cey Duo ID rm Victors ace Edge o M c D isarming, Communication Top Goals, Speakers Agree V MIKIFOR LEVCHENKO, Second Secretary of the Russian Em bassy, as he spoke at a United World Federalists meeting on "Peace, Disarmament and the UN" in Hill Hall Friday night. Photo by Ivan Wallace Student Draws Gun After Cuba -Debate A law student pulled a .38 cali ber pistol on another student after an argument about Cuba Thursday night, according to campus police chief Arthur Beaumont. The students involved were iden tified by Beaumont as Al Warren, law student who lives in Victory Village, and Evans Hemsath, a senior from New Jersey. . Chanel Hill police were called after Warren reportedly pulled the gun during an . argument which followed the panel discussion on Cuba in Carroll Hall. Acording to reports, the incident occurred near Parker Dorm where nemsain uves, "From what I could gather," said Beaumont, "a lot of beer was being drunk at the time." Chapel Hill police filed no char DISARMAMENT SEMINAR There will be a seminar and dis cussion at 7:30 Tuesday night in Roland Parker Lounge, Room III, on disarmament. Sponsor for the discussion will be the New Left Club. YM-YWCA The Catholic Orphanage Com mittee will make its first trip to Raleigh today. The time of depart ure is 3:00 p.m. LOST One brown wallet has been lost bv Thomas Settlemyer, 224 Joyner The finder may keep the money and return the wallet. UN SEMINAR All students interested in attend in 2 the UN Semniar to New York axe to be interviewed Monday-Wed nesday from 2-4 in Anne Queen's office in the Y. UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CHURCH - Dr. Douglas Selloms of the So ciology department, will speak in "The Problem of Increased Leisure Times in America" at 5:43 at the University Baptist Church. YACK PICTURES Yack "pictures "are scheduled for this week for fraternities, sorori 7 ''44' 1 ges against Warren. Beaumont said he turned the case over to Dean of Men William Long, who will presumably pass it on to the law school honor court. . Chapel Hill policeman Lt. G. R. Creel told Beaumont he was shown the gun and a box of .38 bullets in the car being driven by War ren. Beaumont said there was no further incident when Lt. Creel arrived. When contacted by the DTH, Hemsath said he had no comment, and preferred that the matter be dropped. Warren is a 1953 graduate of UNC. according to Beaumont, and a veteran of military service. He was not available for comment Saturday night. Campus Briefs ties, German Club and the Dance Committee. STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM Dr. Richard F. Patthoff , research associate in the department of Sta tistics, will address the Statistics Colloquim on Monday, Oct. 29, at 4 p.m. in room 265 Phillips Hall on "Some Wilcaxon-type Tests for Some Two-Sample Problems with Heteroscedasticity." COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will meet todav at 4 in the Roland ParKer Lounse to elect this year's officers. There will be cultural and social en tertainment following the elections NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club will have its annual Halloween Party tonight at 7:00 p.m. at the Catholic Student Center at 213 Pittsboro Street. LUTHERAN SERVICES Dr. Hans J. Hillerbrand, will speak tonight at 7 p.m. in toe Holy Trinity Lutheran Church. A coffee hour will be held in the parish hall following the service. STATE STUDENT LEGISLATURE Interviews for delegates to the state Student Legislature will be held Mon., Tues. and ' Wed. from 2:30 to 4:40 in Roland Parker By PETER WALES Representatives of both the Soviet Union and the United States agreed on the need for disarmament and better communications between governments and people in a pane discussion Friday night. "The future of the nations de pends largely on disarmament.' said Nikifor Levchenko, second sec retary of the Soviet embassy. is the supreme duty of states to reach agreement." (Both sides are "engaged in an arms race," said Robert Madison senior adviser of the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. "This can only lead to mankind's fina! war." Levchenko explained the Soviet draft treaty for disarmament pre sented to the United Nations in Dec ember, 1961. tl was "a treaty for complete disarmament" over term of four years." Since then a new Soviet proposal has lengthened this period to five years. Madison cited three points of dis agreement between the U. S. and the present Soviet plan. He said that there are "differences , over verification," disagreement on peace agreements disarmaments, and disagreement on the "transi tion stages of the disarament pro gram. Questions from the audience ex pressed concern over the differen ces on verification. Mr. Levchenko said the Soviets favored inspection of the destruction of nuclear arms. Madison pointed out that this did not allow. for inspection of further arms not destroyed. Madison drew laughter when he said, "When Levchenko puts his I money out on the table, we want to know what he has in his poc kets." - - - , - On understanding between the two nations Madison added, "So viet attitudes will slowly change" through "further liberalizing trends within the Soviet Union." He felt that time would helo "a world seriously divided in ideology." He added that increased commu nication between governments and more visitor exchange would de crease tension. Levenchenko said after the meet ing that he too favored "more ex changes" and had come to Chapel Hill "to meet people." He added that the UN is the "only hope" for world peace and is a strong advocate of peaceful com petition and coexistence. A reception was held in Graham Memorial after the discussion. - ii 111. TO GTVE LECTURE Dr. Benjamin E. Mayes, presi dent of Morehouse College, Atlan ta, Ga., will lecture in Gerrard Hall at 8:00 p.m. Monday and Tues day night this week. - - Scientist Speaks Here On Radiation "Radiation Research" will be the topic of a speech here Friday by a California scientist who. is an expert in the field of radiology and radioactive isotopes. Dr. William Ward Wainwright director of biology and nuclear science for George M. Hollenbeck Research Associates at Encino, Calif. will speak in the Health Affairs Auditorium at Memorial Hospital, 8 o'clock Friday eve ning. Dr. Wainwright's appearance is being sponsored by the School f Dentistry at the University of North Carolina. Infirmary Students in the infirmary yester day were: Francis Goins, Sondra Childress, Vicki Anderson, George Ingram, Charles Reeves, Donald Drapalik, Walter Doughton, David Roll,- Wil liam Sullivan, Vance Barron, Peter Gonzalez, John Morisey, James Ray, Andrew Augustine and Chris topher Jones. k k fr it k k k I .x----"'- , f r . t I- i M Iff . 4 1 Si ? f !" -, v !- . yp .vj f , ..-. -r.'J ?...).J& -s,:.. :--.r..-:r. .cz...a. 'S..'. ?. V-..J ... WAKE FOREST'S Brian Piccolo drives up. the middle for a 17 yard gain, and a first down on the Carolina 28. yard line during the third quarter of yesterday's game. Piccolo was stopped by Joe J WASHINGTON ( UPI ) President Kennedy Saturday quickly rejected a proposal by Soviet President Ni kita Khrushchev to trade Soviet missile bases in Cuba for NATO bases, in Turkey. . He fired- back a counter demand that Cuban mis sile sites be dismantled at once under. United Nations inspection. At the same time the President eft the door . open to "properly inspected arms limitation" if con struction halts on new Russian missile sites in Cuba, if those al ready there are rendered inoper able, and if Soviet bloc arms ship ments to Communist puppet Fidel Casto. are halted. Without waiting for formal re ceipt of Khrushchev's Cuba-Turkey deal, the President turned it down on grounds "no sensible ne gotiations" could proceed as long as the Western Hemisphere was threatened by Russian offensive rocket bases in Cuba. Both the White House and De fense Department declared that work was proceeding at a fast pace on Cuban launching pads for 2,200-mile intermediate range mis Reviewer Clark Reports 6 Guys And Dolls' Lacked Pep By NEIL CLARK REVIEW: GUYS AND DOLLS, Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Bur rows Words and music by Frank Loesser, based on a story by Da mon Runyon. Directed by Kai Jur genson, choregraphy by Foster Fitz- Simons, Musical Director Charles Horton Setting by Tommy Rezzuto, Costumes by Irene Smart Raines, Lighting by Russell B. Graves. Playmaker Theatre, Sunday 8:30 P.!M. - Returning to the tradition of "Oklahoma", "Carrousel", and "South. Pacific", (broken unsuc cessfully last year with "The Beg gar's Opera") the Carolina Play- makers opened the season with a mediocre production of a "Big Musical." The failure was immi nent from the overture, when two pianists and a drummer walked in, composing the "orchestra". One had uneasy feelings that he was in for an evening . of, "Ferrante and Teicher Play Guys and Dolls", which, considering the outcome, wouldn't have been a bad idea. Exploiting the meaning cf the word "Guys and Dolls" needed TBrass." Except for a few bright spots the evening was a pretty dreary .affair Brightest of all was Contance Clos es. Her portrayal of Adelaide, Broadway "chanteusy" who "was still losing a 14 year battle to get crapshooter Nathan .Detroit to the altar, was- completely credible, pro fessionally deft, and at times' up roariously funny. Her mastery of dialect, her subtlety of expression, and her excellent sense of tiniing reveal th latent a fm9 - . I iww fc- M i W r - - enne. :C Refuse; siles to bolster already existing sites for 1,200-mile missiles. No Choice Administration officials said the President had no choice but to reject Khrushchevsvp Trp 6 sal which was set forth in a letter to the President and broadcast by Moscow Radio before the message was received at the White House These officials asserted that ac ceptance of the deal would have struct the heart of the North At lantic Treaty NATO defensive al liance and shaken Allied confi dence in the United States around the world. Turkey warned in the wake of Khrushchev's proposal that it would be foolhardy for the United States to abandon the 30 odd bases it set up in that country under the NATO pact. For the moment at least, the President's rejection left the ex plosive U.S.-Russian crisis over Cuba just where it was with the next move up to Khrushchev. Kennedy was standing firmly by his position laid down in his Mon day night nationwide radio-television speech announcing the nav For those who have not seen the play or the movie the story is bas ed upon Damon Runyon s The Idyll of Miss Sarah Brown," in which Miss Brown, (Sister Sarah of the Salvation Army) becomes in volved in a scheme to provide the use of Joey Biltmore's garage to one Nathan Detroit, proprietor of "the oldest established permanent floating crapgame in New York." In order to obtain the one thou sand clams with which it is neces sary to procure the use of Mr. Bilt more's establishment Mr. Detroit enters into a friendly wager with the notorious and well-known "Sky" Masterson, who, being a cultured and cultivated (not to mention handsome . and debonair) denizen of the city, is confident in his abili ty to persuade any doll whom Mr. Detroit should choose to care to name to accompany him to the city of Havana, which is in Cuba. The Sky, out of the kindness of his heart and the fact that the Save-a-Soul Mission is about to be closed, offers to Sister Sarah his marker (which, of course, is known and accepted all over New York) for twelve genuine sinners in ex change for the pleasure of her love w rnmr-anv at dinner with him, which arrangement she reluctantly asrees to. One small fact which the Skv has neglected to in form her of which is that the din ner is to be consumed in tne cixy nf Havana. In' Havana, Sister Sarah is taken under the influence of alcholic beverages and aiso De rfnmk at which time she realizes that she has. feelings for i.!up RVv that Sisters in the Salva . H v - I tion Army are not usuany eas&r u McLamb, Eddie Kesler and Frank ssile al blockade of Cuba that the So- viet bases must go before there can be negotiations of any kind. A White House statement an nouncing presidential rebuff of the Khrushchev deal pointedly empha sized that the Cuban crisis arose from Soviet penetration of the Western Hemisphere and could not be solved by tearing down purely defensive alliances like NATO. "People here think the Cuban crisis will get worse before it gets better," UNC student BiU Cris well said from the United Nations in New York yesterday. Criswell told the DTH in a tele phone interview, that most re porters and observers at the UN think there will be a major new break in the crisis within the next two days. This attitude is wholly different from the comparative easy feel ing Friday, said Criswell, UNC student body treasurer. He said all U. S. press con ferences held in the past two days have emphasized that mis sile base construction, is contin- admit that they have for someone such as The Sky, who is, himself, somewhat of a similar persuasion. In losing the wager to Sky, Mr. Detroit, (known as good ol' reliable Nathan) is forced to resort to the tactics of having the game in an underground system of pipes which runs underneath the city and which is also known as the sewer. Mean while Sister Sarah has discovered that in her absence a crapgame has been held in the Mission for which act she blames Sky, who had not at all been responsible for the act at all. In order to make good his marker, The Sky joins the game in the sewer and wins the souls of all the participants who are participating in the game, in cluding the famous Big Jule of Chicago, who has just succeeded in winning the dough with which Nathan was going to wed the well know as Miss Adelaide, which occasion was brought on by the sudden appearance of one Lieuten ant Brannigan of the local gen darmes. At the appointed hour which is midnight they all arrive at the Mis sion, which fact greatly impresses General Cartwright, who is the dame w-ho was for the closing of the mission, and persuades same that said mission should not be closed, but on the contrary should remain open. The Sky, after mak ing good his marker, had announced his intention to cut out to the west coast, which fact, in the light of re cent developments greatly disturbs Sister Sarah who in a quite mov ing and touching duet with that well-known singer, Miss Adelaide, (Continued cn Page 3) . . Gallagher. Photo, by Jim Wallace i Deal uing in Cuba and that the United States will not allow it to continue for long. V Heart Of Position Heart of the U. S. position was contained in the- final paragraph of the White House statement is tnn advisrc hH rficw? rh. .uu, i i i Moscow Radio -and before the Khrushchev letter reached the Whit Honsf As an urgent preliminary to consideration of any proposals," the statement said, "work on the Cuban bases must be stopped, of fensive weapons rendered inoper able, and further shipment of of fensive weapons to Cuba must cease all under effective interna tional verification." Khrushchev had proposed that U.N. inspection teams visit both Cuba and Turkey to verify simul taneous missile withdrawals. He also called for negotiations on the base trade under U.N. auspices, with a settlement to be reached swiftly, perhaps within a few weeks. He also pledged that Russia would not attack Turkey, a long time target of Russian expansion toward the mid-East's vastly rich oil fields, if the United States did not invade Cuba. He said this could be a step toward a nuclear test ban, on which "your stand and our stand are very near." Involve Security The President replied sharply that Khrushchev's proposal invol ved the security of nations out side the Western Hemisphere, but that it was Western Hemis phere nations that were confront ed by the present threat Rus sia's action "in secretly intro ducing offensive weapons into Cuba." On this point, U. S. officials said there was nothing secret about establishment of the NATO bases in Turkey. They contrast ed this with Russia's undercover base construction in Cuba which finally was revealed in full detail by U. S. reconnaissance planes. The White House statement then hammered home the point that "work on these offensive weapons is still proceeding at a rapid pace." "The first imperative must be to dea! with this immediate threat, under which no sensible negotiation can proceed," it added. The President then opened the door a crack to disarmament talks. He said: "As to proposals concerning the security of nations outside this hemisphere, the United States and its Allies have long taken the lead in seeking properly inspected arms limitations on both sides. These efforts can continue as soon as the present Soviet-created threat is ended." Kennedy laid down his terms. He said the Cuban missile bases must be "ren dered inoperable." Jackson Gels Two TD's Against WF By HARRY W. LLOYD North Carolina chopped through Wake Forest with a razor sharp Edge here yesterday, felling the Deacons for the fifth time this season, 23-14. Sure-fingered Bob Lacey grab bed eight passes from quarter back Junior Edge. Five of them came in the second half when the Tar Heels surged from seven points behind to score a pair of touchdowns. UNC First Downs 11 Yards Rushing 116 Passes Att. 17 Passes Comp. 8 Passing Yrs. 137 Interceptions 4 Punts 8 Punt Avg. 35.8 Yds. Pen. 96 Fumbles Lost 2 WF 16 91 32 12 139 0 6 31.5 65 1 823 014 UNC 0 7 Wake Forest 7 7 3 Lacey was the only Carolina man to receive a pass from scrim mage, and Edge was the only man to throw to him. Their aerial tricks piled up 137 yards for UNC, or more than half of the team's total offense. After Ronnie Jackson, the bun ny rabbit in Jim Ilickey's back field, scored twice to put the Tar Heels ahead by 15-14, the Edge-Lacey combo accounted for the third score and a two-point conversion. Wake Forest, -which came into the game winless this season, scor ed first in the opening period alter taking a "short UNC quick kick. The sophomore passing combina tion of quarterback Brandewiede to halfback Sam Green got this 67 yard drive started with a 10- Ivard sain and also gained the fee with a 14-yard play. Mickey I . , ',. w no De,a,1 iir e wnn a iieia goal last year, kickuu trie point ana me ueacons iea with 2:53 to go in the quarter, 7-0. After receiving the kick, North Carolina was still plagued with the penalty-fever that hurt them the first time they had the ball. On the first UNC series, Ken Wil Iard had broken off right tackle twice for two 10-yard-plus gains, only to have both of them called back for petty five yard penalties. On the first play of the second series, after the Wake TD, Wil lard again blasted for a first down, only to have the gain nulli fied because of an infraction. But on third down, the Edge-to-Lacey weapon struck for the first time, and the Tar Heels were off and running with a 17 yard gain. Two plays later, Edge threw deep and Lacey nabbed it near the left sideline for a 3S-yard gain, carrying to the WF 13. Wil lard carried eight yards on the following play, but was injured and forced out of the game until the second half. After a pair of penalties pushed the Heels away from the goal line, a running play by Edge when he couldn't find a receiver gained the first down on the three. Eddie Kesler carried to the two, from which Jackson slipped into the end zone. Dave Braine's kick tied the score at 7-7 with 14:03 left in the second quarter. A goal lire stand, spearheaded by three consecutive great defen sive performances by linebacker Joe Craver, stopped one potential Wake Forest score. The Deacons moved from the 50 to the five, mainly on the passing of Brar.de weide, before the Carolina defense buckled down. On second down, Craver met Donnie Frederick head-on at the one and drove him out of bounds after a 3-yard gain. He then rack ed up Wayne Welborn at the line of scrimmage and stopped a sneak attempt by quarterback Wally Eridwell, and Carolina took over at the one. Frederick returned Wally Dun ham's 29-yard punt to the UNC 24, and six plays later the Dea cons pushed over their second score. A 13-yard pass from Eran deweide to 'Henry Newton, and a pass interference call against UNC accounted for most of the distance. Fullback Brian Piccolo went over left guard for the score from two yards out. Mickey Walker's kick made it 14-7 with 1:23 to be play ed in the half. Both teams were stymied early in the third quarter. On its first series, Carolina had a third and 21 situation when Edge hit Lacey (Continued cn Pass 4)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 28, 1962, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75