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.!.C. Library srials Dspt, ox 870 7 India-China Weather hapel Hill, N,C. See Edits, Page Two Mostly fair, cloudy in after noon. High in the 60ss. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service ce Mission .ban esmunes econnai O R Cm 3 gsan i State SL Members Chosen Twenty-one students: have been selected as Carolina's official dele gates and alternates to . the State Student . Legislature. - The group chosen by competitive testing and interviews , by. the SSL committee of.UNC's student government, con tains leaders in many fields of stu aent government. The .14 official delegates to SSL are Henry Mayer, chairman of the Carolina Forum: Rufus Edmisten majority floor-leader of the legis lature; Gil Stallings, president o the YMCA; Mack -Armstrong, dele gate to the NSA -National Congress Mike Lawler, . vice-president of the student body; Walter Dellinger chairman of the Men's Honor Coun cil; Beth T Walker, secretary of the senior class and a member of the SSL committee; Bill Imes, former legislator; John Ulf elder, legisla tor and member of the SSL com mittee; Jim Reston, former mem ber of the Honor Council and Aca demic Affairs Committee; Dave Williams, legislator and member of the SSL committee; Jean Yoder, legislator and member of the SSL committee; and Bill Phillips, po litical intern in Raleigh last sum mer. Alternates' . (Appointed as official alternates were Bob Spearman, minority fioorleader of the legislature; John Shelburne; Sue Russell; Hugh Blackwell; Anne Lupton, clerk of the legislature; Phil Baddour; and Charles Cooper, chairman of the judicial committee. . Carolina will have one of the largest delegations to the SSL, which meets . at . the . end of this month. The seven official alter nates will be able to vote and speak only if they take the place of an official delegate on the floor. Un-1 official alternates act primarily as observers. Unofficials : The 24 unofficial alternates ap pointed .were: Harry DeLung, Chandler Van Ormond, Robin Britt, Bill Hobbs, Bo Edwards, Pete Wales, Whitney Durand, Haynes McFadden, Neal Jackson Jim Barnhill, Barry Hyman, Bill Criswell ' Jerry Hancock, Jon Commander, George Rosental, Martin Lancaster, Kenny Mann, Johnsie Massenburg, Munford Yates, Dailey Derr, Dick Ellis, Glenda Lackey, Leon Barber and Mike Chanin. There will be a meeting of the delegation today at 2 p.m. in Ro land Parker I; all members are urged to be present. The S.S.L. serves as an open for um of student opinion and is made up of delegations from schools throughout the state. Current state and national problems and issues will be discussed and debated. Beth Walker and Scott Summers, are co-chairmen of the UNC committee. Soviet Physicist Landau Is Nobel Prize Recipient STOCKHOLM (UPI) Soviet physicist Lev Davidovic Landau, who recovered four times .from "clinical death" after an accident, was awarded the Nobel physics prize Thursday for his research on gases. Two British scientists shar ed the chemistry prize. Dr. John C. Kendrew, 45, and Vienna-born Dr. Max Pcrutz,' 48, who work together at the Caven dish Laboratory in Cambridge, England, were honored for their studies of hemoglobin and myo glob, two proteins which makes blood and muscles red and form links Ln the body's oxygen supply. They will share the $50,000 prize, the same value as Landau's. . Landau, a 53-year old Russian Jew, still is in serious condition from the automobile accident last January. He told a Western vis itor in Moscow hospital , he was delighted to have received the prize. But he was not allowed fur ther visiters. '. No Brain Damage . Landau incurred a fractured skull, fractured pelvis, and . nine broken ribs in the crash. The So viet press reported his heart stop ped briefly four times during his recovery "clinical death" but that he was revived without brain damage. . . Although Landau's research con cerned liquefied gases, it was stat- Major W. D. Locke Leaves Position After 20 Years Major William D. Locke, profes sor of air science at the Univer sity of North Carolina and execu tive officer of the University Air Force ROTC unit, retired from ac tive military duty Wednesday after 20 years of service. Major Locke was presented with a retirement certificate, a letter of appreciation from his command ing officer; and a personal recogni tion from the unit and University officials. He has been with the University ROTC unit for four years. In the early phase of World War II, Major Locke was commission ed a 2nd Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps and shortly thereafter was assigned to the European The ater of Operations as a P-47 pilot. He flew 83 aerial missions com prising 213 combat hours.: For his performance in the wrar, he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. In 1947 he accepted a commis sion in the regular Air Force and was ordered to Japan where he served in a Fighter Intercepter Squadron. He was one of the first Air Force officers to see ac tion in the Korean War. He was shot down in August 1950 and be came a Prisoner of War. He flew 41 aerial missions over Korea and received the Purple Heart as well as an oak leaf cluster to his Dis tinguished Flying Cross. After Korea, Major Locke ser ved in various capacities in this country and later in Europe be fore coming to UNC. He is a native of Enfield, N. C. and a 1940 graduate of High Point Col lege. His wife, also a native of North Carolina, is from High Point. hey will remain residents of Chapel Hill. XJMiss Students Warned Against Demonstrations By LEON DANIEL OXFORD, MISS. (UPI) Uni versity of Mississippi Chancellor John D. Williams warned Thursday that students face possible expul sion if caught demonstrating against Negro James H. Meredith or Army troops stationed here to insure his safety. "Swift and drastic disciplinary action, including expulsion from the university, can be expeted," Williams warned in special meet ings Thursday with all male stu dents. The threat Thursday apparently signaled the most serious crack down by university officials agains student violence here. The warn ins followed a quickening in the sporadic incidents of rock and bot tie throwing and name calling. ed authoriatively that it had no connection with rocket fuels, liquid or solid. He is a specialist on low temperature physics, studying the effect on gases by converting them to solid or liquid by reducing their temperature to the nearest attain able point to absolute zero 459 degrees below zero, Fahrenheit. The Swedish Academy of Scienc es, which awarded the prizes, sin gled out Landau for his pioneer work on helium. It acts like no other gas at low temperature and even will flow upward as a liquid Landau's contribution was to de velop a theory which made it pos sible for other physicians to pre dict the behavior of helium at cer tain stages of liquefaction, open ing the way for more and better uses of the gas. . Perutz, who has lived in Eng land more than 20 years, said he was "extremely pleased" with the award. He described the work car ried on with Kendrew on the two globular proteins, hemoglobin and myoglobin, which he called "the chemical machine of life." "Hemo globin makes blood red. It is the substance someone is short of if he is anemic," Perutz said. "Myo globin makes muscles red. Steak is not red because of blood, but because of myoglobin. Hemoglobin tikes oxygen from blood to the tissues. R lotin rotest NEW DELHI (UPI) Rioting Indian students Thursday smashed a Chinese restaurant and shops, burned a figure of Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-loi, and stoned a Communist party office in an angry protest to the Communist invasion of their country. On the border battlefronts, the only action reported was Chinese mortar fire. Prime Minister Ja waharlal Nehru took over as de fense minister and sent the man he demoted from the post, V. K. Krishna Menon, on a one-day trip to the battle headquarters of Tez pur, where a crowd cheered him. Indian newspapers welcomed the demotion of the unpopular Krishna Race Is Oil Can You Find Ugliest Man? By CHRIS FARRAN The Ugliest Man on Campus con test is in full swing from three to tree. The kick-off was held Saturday at the Wake Forest game, when religion got kicked in the teeth 23-14, a fitting omen for the start of the UMOC contest. Voting boards are now placed in three strategic buildings on cam pus, like Y-Court, Lenoir Hall, and the Circus Room; which qualify as strategic places because you can (a) eat there; and (b) watch the girls there. Votes are lc each, or more, if j you are (a drunk; or lb Y with a girl you'd like to impress. The candidate getting the most money wins for the sponsoring organiza tion one year's possession of- a arge trophy. The Ugly One him self wins an all-expense paid date with a campus beauty whose name is being kept secret to pro tect her mother. In fact her name is so secret that she doesn't know the good news yet herself ... this will certainly be a big surprise for the lucky girl! "Jungle Jim," otherwise known to the free world as David Lobdell, was last year's winner from Cobb Dorm. He could win again if be were sponsored by Cobb Dorm, because so few girls have such maenificientlv hairy chins: but Dave is sponsored by Mangum dorm this year. Never before has a winner sought to be Ugliest twice. Maybe its habit-iorming. Maybe he knows who the Lucky Girl will be. Maybe he's the Pro phet of Something New. Other entries and their sponsor ing organizations are: Asian Foe, sponsored by the DU's; "Open Gates, from Joyner Dorm; The Mature Nail, from TEP; the Monster from Philips Hall; Rogah, escaped from Ever ett Dorm; Troll, courtesy of the SAE's; Avery Ghoul, from Avery dorm; and Crisis, from the Scab bard and Blade. The contest is a lot of fun, and there is no truth to the rumor that it is being investigated by the American Legion. It is being in vestigated by the AEC and those people in white coats from the bio logy department who are running around looking for mutants. See, the money raised by the contest goes to the charity HOPE. This is a very worthwhile project and the APO, sponsors of the con test hope that all students will su pport the fun to the hilt. So. here's your chance to do Alfred Hitchcock and the Twilight Zone a favor. Strike a blow for Boris Karloff and Lon Chaney! Vote for the Ugliest Man! Infirmary Students in the Infirmary yes terday included: . Sondra Childress, Mary. Johnson, Lynda Robinson, Mary B. Heeden.1 George Ingram, Roland. Tildec, Michael Musart, Palmer Skoglung, Donald Drapalik, Edgar Causey, Roy Lee Spach, William Pope, Robert Lane, Charles Gurd, Henry Merrill, John Jennings, Joseph Pollock, John Thomas, J on e.s Pharr, and Clarence Page . ndian nvas Menon and many demanded his complete exclusion from the cabi net. Women Sell Gold Indian women, including Ne hru's daughter, sold their gold jewelry to help the government buy arms and even the Indian "Chinese Party condemned "Chinese aggression" and backed Nehru. India thanked the United States for offering military aid, but Pakistan appeared worried that the weapons might be used against it. An angry crowd of about 500 students split off from a protest demonstration of 10,000 students Harrington: Society Is . By BILL DOWELL "This society could in many ways turn out to be the crudest society man has ever known," Michael Harrington, author of "The Other America," said in Carroll Hall last night. The new poverty, Harrington said, is more difficult to see be cause it has been isolated by sub urbs and zoning laws. The lowest estimate by any seri ous observer, Harrington said, lists the poor in the United States at at least 19 per cent of the population. Harrington said that it was prob ably a lot closer to 50 million. ; The poor in the country now are different, he said, because they are the first minority poor. In a country where the majority-arc poor, he said, poverty would be the nation's biggest worry. In the United States it is often ignored or hidden. The new kind of poverty is parti cularly deadly, he went on, be cause in it there is none of the hope or advancement that existed in the old slums. The advent of automation and the need of higher Campus Briefs Flu Shots Flu shots are being given in the infirmary from 9 to 11:30 a.m. and from 2 to 6 p.m. today. Writer-In-Residence Committee There will be a meeting of all students who are interested in the writer-in-residence project at 4:30 p.m. today at the YMCA office. Student Affairs Committee The Student Affairs Committee will meet at 4 p.m. today in the Woodhouse Room at GM. All mem bers are requested to be present to have their pictures taken for the Yack. Lost A brand new green corduroy coat, size 9, in Lenoir Hall Mon day. If found, please contact Bet sy Battle at 968-9078. . The Duke-UNC Physics Collo quim will sponsor Prof. Walter I. Goldburg of Perm State University at 4:30 p.m. today in 265 Phillips. Tea and coffee will be served. Room Reservations All women: students are asked to sign up before Nov. 8 if they require dorm space for the spring semester. - . Relations Committee The YMCA Relations Cranmittee will meet at 3 p.m. today in the secretary's office at the YMCA Carolina Sweethearts A meeting for the foxrnulation of plans Jor the . coming year and the election -of officers will -be held Monday at 5 p.m. in IRoJand parser Lounges II and IILJn GM Both representatives and alter nates must be present. The yack picture will be taken over .again. -: -HHIe! Foundation Rabbi Joseph Hievine, Dir ector . of the Hillel Foncdaiion. will speak on "Psychoanalysis and me Jewish view of Man" at S p.m. today at the Hillel House -at 210 ;uclexits By ion in downtown New Delhi to attack, the fashionable Golden Dragon Chinese Restaurant. Police fought the rioters but could not prevent them from shattering the windows of the restaurant and ripping down the Chinese characters forming its sign. They also damaged a Chinese shoemaker's shop ana" curio store. Shouting "death to the invader" and "drive the Chinese back to the China wall," the students waved aloft an effigy of Chou and later set it afire. Then they turned on the par liamentary headquarters of the Indian Communist Party, pelting the office with stones. Some Com munists defending the office This Cruel education in order to advance, Harrington said, had made cross ing the gap from prior to middle class nearly impossible. The major groups composing the poor, he said, are those over 65, racial minorities, agricultural poor and the industrial rejects. Of the people over 65, Harring ton said, half were living on un der $1000 a year. They live not only faced by death and illness, he said, but with no way of get ting enough money to live decent ly on. Discrimination against Negroes, he went on, increases with profes sional training so that there is far more discrimination against a Ne gro doctor than there is against a Negro worker. Th result is that society is- increasingly demanding more advanced education, and at the same time making it impos sible for Negroes to live when they have it. The industrial rejects, Harring ton said, were a growing problem. It used to be, he said, that 50 was the age limit for industrial workers; men now have trouble finding jobs in their 40's. W. Cameron Ave. There will be a 12:30 p. m. brunch Sunday at the Hillel House for all students. cusc A tea for all CUSC members will be held at 7:30 p.m. today at President Friday's home on Franklin Street. Dorm Presidents Dorm presidents must have their lists of poll tenders in to the Elections Board in the Informa tion Office at GM no later than Sunday night. Polls are open Tues day Nov. 6 from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Candidates All campus candidates must have their expense accounts in. to the. Elections Board Office at GM by high noon -Monday. Newman Club The Newman Club wil meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at uiapei ui St. Thomas More for dinner, fol lowing the dinner there will be a nanel discussion on "Federal Aid to Private Education." Young Republicans The Young Republicans Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Manning Hall Courtroom. A film on the Republican Party in the South will be shown. Yack Tickets All members of the Yack staff with unsold tickets to the Beauty Contest are requested to turn in those tickets to .the iac otnee by 5:00. p.m. today, : , I Free Flick - The Free ..Flick, tonight ,-is "Houseboat" Showings will be -at 7 and 9 p.m. . fiM Meetings The State Affairs Committee will meet at 4 p.m. in the Woodhouse Room at GM, and the Flying Club will meet at 8 p.m. in the Grail Room. . - Reds threw stones, at the rioters and three or four students were in jured. Reds Oppose Invasion The rioting in New Delhi's smart Connaught Circle district broke out only a short time be fore the Communist Party of In dia, which has been split on the issue, announced its opposition to the border attacks. After two days of debate, it appeared to all sections of the people to unite in defense of the motherland against Chinese aggression." It approved buying weapons abroad but opposed sending foreign troops to India. Venezuela U. Head Salutes UNC Progress "Venezeula's youngest state Uni versity is very glad to salute the oldest state university in the United States," said Dr. Luis Manuel Penalver, president of Venezuela's University of the East, who is visiting here this week. Dr. Penalver extended a mess age of universal friendship to facul ty, administrators, and students of all North Carolina universities. He is visiting the UNC Peace Corps training project to speak to the trainees on the socio-political as pects of life in Venezuela and to acquaint traineers with the Vene zuelan educational system. All universities in Venezuela are free .according to Dr. Penalver. Students have to pay only for their Ii viriiT f &cili tiesr A t the" University of the East where the majority of the UNC Peace Corps trainees will be performing their two years of volunteer service, the administra tion is trying to stimulate coopera tion between the government and private corporations, Penalver said. He said that 30 per cent of that university is now supported by private corporations while the re mainder is government-supported. Of the UNC Peace Corps group, Dr. Penalver said, "They have a very big interest in their future jobs. They are very enthusiastic nd we feel that they will do a very good job in Venezuela." Dr. Penalver said there is a great pressure for higher educa tion in Venezuela, and generally Venezuelan university students are from the middle classes. The uni versity enrollments are jumping with increases, according to Dr. Penalver. He attributed the growth to the Venezuelan government's tremendous effort to develop the country's educational system. LATE BULLETIN GREENSBORO The Wo men's College Student Legisla ture voted Wednesday night to submit a referendum concerning the school's continued member ship in the National Student As sociation to the student body. UNC Vice President Mike Lawler and N.S.A. Coordinator Harry DeLung have been asked to speak affirmatively for N.S.A. in a four person debate schedu led before the referendum. "We just heard about the re ferendum," said DeLung last night. "I'll have to talk to other Student Government officers be fore I could say wnat action we will take." Positions Sought On Faculty Group Two student legislators are at tempting to gain faculty acceptan ce of a non-voting ex officio stu dent representative on faculty com mrttes which deal directly with the students. Student body vice-president Mike Lawler has written to Dean Hend erson and student representative Gordon Appell has talked with Dean xnfr Ts'rarrfir!3 student. reDresenta- tives on faculty committees. They Plan to follow this with interviews with' committee chairmen. Dean Long said, "I endorse the jstudents' right to make sucn a re quest" ... - - - The proposal wouki aiiecc. sucn committees as the committees on fraternities and .sororities, discip line, university government, ath- B ivuw, Yack Sweetheart To Be Selected In Contest At 7 Tonight at 7:00 p.m. the annual Yackety-Yack Beautv contest will be held in Memorial Hall. This years' contest will mark a depar- ture from those in the past. An admission of 50 cents will be charged, and door prizes will be given away, with the winner of the grand door prize becoming the sixth judge of the contest. Kemp B. Nye will be master- of-cermonies, and additional at- tractions will be the U.N.C. Men's Glee Club and Dorcas Henley, Miss Chapel Hill. j. is. itoDDms, m addition to con- tnbuting a door prize, has su pplied the Old Well archway that wil be used, and six Chanel No. 5 spray cologne sets to be given to the contestants.. The door prizes are as follows: One shirt for either male or fe male from Town and Campus; one Madras snirt irom btevens- Shephard; passes trom the Varsity torn idtetta a cH K . - ji No. 5 set of spray cologne and Kofh u,r. o a.Lt Khirt fmm .Tnuan'c- a ctriincr ciive Demi, Tasse sooon from T. L. Kemp Jewelry, a flask from The Hub; a wall plaque of the Old Well from Huggins Hardware; a blouse from the Fireside; and a bottle of chamDaene from the Ranch House. There will be 83 girls in the contest this year, and only thir- teen girls will win one will be queen and twelve girls will be in the court. TicKets are on sale at ivemp s at the G.M. desk,- and at the Yack office, or may be purchased at the door. V JOHN M. MOREIIEAD University To Celebrate 'Morehead Day Tomorrow John Motley Morehead will be 93 this Saturday. The famous Carol in a graduate, who has served his country as a scientist, diplomat and philanthropist, will celebrate the occasion in his Rye, New York home. He is now the oldest employee of the Union Carbide Corpora tion, which he serves as an en gineering and chemical consultant. He is a member of the Baptist Church and the Republican Party. "Uncle Mot" was born in Spray, N. C. and graduated from the University with the Bachelor of Science degree in 1891. - While in school here he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and was tap ped by the Golden Fleece. Upon graduating he went to work in his father's aluminum mill in Spray. In 1S32 he discovered a commercial process for the manu facture of calcium carbide which is still used today. The process was verified by Morehead's old j Carolina chemistry professor, Pres. j Francis P. Venable. Morehead later devised a meth od for the analysis of gases that was widely accepted as the most efficient and cheapest procedure. In World War I Pres. Wilson held his abilities in such high regard that he asked Morehead to be in charge of the wartime production of TNT. Curtain Closed To Arms WASHINGTON (UPI) The Unit- ed States Thursday reclosed its Caribbean curtain against Soviet arms to Cuba and resumed aerial surveillance to determine whether weapons already there are being dismantled ct ' . . ,r Secretarv General T:-,ant. hart in Lvew York after two ri.v, ii r,hn w annmin uv irthnr cviv0tfn,' assistant Defense' secretary for mihlir affairs He caiH th nhc would not be analyzed before F, day, and gave no indication whe ther the findings would be made public. Sylvester also flatly denied a re port from Key West, Fla., that two American pilots who made flights over Cuba were missing. The report is 'without foundation," ne sajd. Earlier, White House Press Sec- P" S?f"f' '"f that the arms blockade of Cuba , . , ,, , ri resumed at dawn Thursday after being suspended for the two days Thant was 00 the island- In his statement, Sylvester said: -ine united Mates conducted a reconnaissance mission over Cuba Thursday. The planes returned without incident. No analysis of the pictures is expected before Fri- day morning. "Reports from Key West that at least two other pilots are missing on a mission over Cuba are with- out foundation. By "other pilots" Sylvester said he meant nilots other than Mai. Rudolf Anderson Jr., the Air Force flier whose body the Cubans have agreed to return to the United States. Salinger Explains Action In explaining why the picture making would be resumed. Salinjer said Wednesday night: "In the ab sence of effective United Nations arrangements, the hemisphere na tions have th eresponsibility for continuing survillance." This referred to Thant's appar ent inability, during his meeting with Castro and other Cuban lead ers, to work, out any agreement for inspection of the arms pullout. In an apparent move to soothe or persuade Castro, the Kremlin dispatched Deputy Premier Anas- tas Mikoyan to Cuba by way of New York. For one thing, Mikoyan was expected to offer the Cuban premier additional Soviet econom ic assistance. Castro meanwhile continued to insist on five conditions for the arms removal, including U. S. withdrawal from its Guantanamo naval base. U Thant, opening a new round of Cuban-crisis talks at the Unit ed Nations, said his two days of discussions with Castro were not unpleasant. The Secretary general was reported "still optimistic about settling the immediate problem" of a U.N.-poIiced removal of the Soviet arms. Morehead's work in the diplo matic field is hardly less distin guished than his scientific accom plishments. In 1929 he accepted appointment by Pres. Herbert Hoover as Envoy - Extraordinary and Minister - Plenopotentiary to Sweden. For his distinguished work here Morehead was the on ly foreigner to! ever receive the gold medal Kur-gl from the Swe dish government. But "Uncle Mot is probably best known to most North Carolinians and Carolina students as a great philantrophist. Much of his gener osity to Carolina, which includes 'the gifts of the Morehead-Patter son Bell Tower, the Morehead Planetarium, WUNC Sundial, and the Morehead Scholarships, is well known. But Mr. Morehead has al so been very generous in other areas. He has made a substantial contribution toward the establish ment of WUNC-TV, Carolina's educational television. In 1953 he gave the station and Morehead Sta dium and Chimes to the Tri-City High School at Leaksviile-Spray-Draper. In recognition cf Mr. Morehead's many accomplishments, he has been awarded various honorary de grees. These include: an LLd irom UNC, (1926); a doctorate in Science from Wake Forest (1344); and a doctorate in Engineering from Upsala (1244). i
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 2, 1962, edition 1
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