i TWC Library Serials Dept. Bar 870 CUapal HILl, H. C. Beat Duke Parade See Edits, Page Two Weather Fair and Wanner, high in the 50's. -f Offices in Graham Memori ai Election rotests Continue The University Party announced yesterday ; that it will appeal an Elections Board decision not to disqualify Jack Harrell as a can didate for President of the Fresh man Class. The Board held the rp-flprtinn after, granting a Student Party ap peal mac tne oallot in the original election, in which UP candidate iari Johnson led, was incorrect Harrell won last Tuesday's re- ciecuon Dy 42 votes, but he did not turn in an expense account before the deadline stated in the Elec tion Laws.' The original election was ruled invalid because the name of Sandy O'Quinn, an illegal candidate, ap peared on the ballot. Neither leg al candidate got a majority in the first election. The Board ruled yesterday that the Election Law does not govern re-elections, and therefore the deadline stated in the law does not apply. Mike Chanin, UP chairman said, ."The University Party is very distressed that this last election was run without any rules at all "The party feels that the Elec tion Laws do cover all campus- wide elections, and that they were not drawn up to be disregarded "For the above reasons, the Uni versity Party will appeal the ac tion of the Elections Board to the Constitutional Council. We will cal Mike Lawler (Student Body Vice- president) as our lead witness." .-When-Lawler, SP, was asked to comment, he said, "The elected Student Body officers have a re sponsibility to the Student Body P as a whole. This responsibility takes precedence over party af filiation. '"I feel that as Vice-president of the Student Body, and with a fa miliarity with election laws and elections, 'Mr. Chanin's point is well taken. - "I have asked to appear before the Constitutional Council to offer my perspective on the legality of this election.' India Ridicules Chinese Proposal NEW DELHI ( UPI ) India issu ed another statement Tuesday ridi culing the Chinese Communist truce terms in an apparent pre lude to rejection. There were re ports India might use British-built bombers to try to drive the Chin ese from Indian territory. The statement came as India signed a formal aid agreement with Britain Tuesday for arms to defend against Chinese aggression. Like an earlier American arms agreement, there were safeguards gainst, the arms being used against Pakistan. Kfft Anions iiroes on sate JA. J Political The fourth issue of "Reflections ! from Chapel Hill" went on sale here and throughout the country this week. Published by students and former students of the Univer sity, this issue of the magazine is the largest since its first pubil cation in the summer of 1961. The current issue contains two political articles,' two' short stories, a pictorial feature on the sculpture of Edward Higgins, and eight of poetry. Fditor and Publisher Bob Brown said the magazine had a press run of "almost 3,000" copies, its larg est to date. He said the increased number of issues was necessary to supply the magazine's new out line in college towns and major cities throughout the country. Over SO per cent of the copies are soia tiH North Carolina. Assistant Editor Mike Smith said r the staff hoped to expand the num v.pr of Southern outlets for the magazine with this issue. "We are t0 o rpsnonal' magazine." he iH "But we are particularly in trted in tapping the creative re Circes of the South. To date we t,av. rot had as many outlets in cntwn colleges as we would til.. We ceetf these outlets to let young Southern writers and artists kr-OvTwe exist; we hope to obtain more of these outlets with this is- irhcrt Matthews, formerly chief cf the New York Times Havana Kennedy, Macmillan To Meet For Conference In December Allied Leaders Plan To Review Cold War Strategy At Nassau WASHINGTON UPI )-President Kennedy and British Prime. Minis ter Harold . Macmillan will ; meet Dec. 19-20 for a far-ranging re view of allied cold war strategy in the wake of the Cuban crisis and amid evidence of growing dis sension in the Communist camp. The White House announced that the conference would be held at Nassau, in the British Bahamas. 190 miles east of Miami and 200 miles north of Cuba. No agenda for the talks was announced but Macmillan told the House of Com mons Tuesday that the sweeping review was designed to "deal with practical problems which might be capable of solution at the pres ent time." The aim was to find ways to lessen East-West tensions. U. S. officials said Berlin, dis armament, Red China's attack cn India and Moscow's increasing dif ficulties with Peking undoubtedly would be major topics. Kennedy also could be expected to dis cuss the long-range prospects for naiting Communist expansion in the Western Hemisphere. Meeting Details Undisclosed TU. Il'L.-i- tt me mme House said onlv that KPnnpdv snH Ma --. "1 I j ... i'iui.uimau uavc i teit that it would be useful to have a further meeting to continue the informal series of reviews of the world situation which they hold from time to time." This will be the sixth Kennedy- Adenauer D efense Minister BONN (UPI) Chancellor Kon- rad Adenauer agreed to dismiss controversial Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss as the price for ending his worst government crisis in the 13 years he has held power, authoritative sources said Tuesday. Adenauer was reported to have decided on the move in a meet ing with Erich Mende, leader of the Free Democratic Party FDP which formed a junior partnership 'with Adenauer's Christian Demo- cartic Party. Five FDP members of the cabinet resigned in anger over Strauss' political activities. Informed sources said Adenauer planned to make Strauss the par liamentary floor leader of the Christian Democrats, replacing former Foreign Minister Heinrich von Brentano who would become iustice minister. FDP Justice Min ister Wolfgang Stammberger has said he is leaving the government for good. Housing Minister Paul Luecke, &z a nne-lessed war veteran, would become defense minister But Luecke was reported to have told Adenauer he was willing to take the job only if the 86-year-old chancellor insisted. Later he - Articles. Short bureau and currently a member of the Times editorial staff, is the author of "Poverty and Possibili ty," the lead article in the maga zine. He examines the United States role in Latin America. Gen. Hugh B. Hester (retired), a UNC graduate and former Food and Agricultural, Administrator of the U. S. Zone in Germany, dis cusses "The Tragedy of Our Ger man Policies" in the magazine's second article. Two short fiction works, "Re turn of the Sad Fat Organization Man," and "The Beggar in the Bullrush" are by Ralph Dennis and Leon Rooke, both UNC graduates. Brown said Rooke would become "Reflections" Fiction Editor be ginning with the next issue. The magazine's eight pieces of poetry are by Michael C. O'Hig gins, John Foster West, Guy Owen, Bronson Dudley, Theodore Crane Jr.. and George Raleigh. Erown said the magazine was "particu larly proud" to present the work of O Higgins. an English author. The center of the magazine is occupied by six pages of photo graphs of the welded sculpture of Edward Higgins. UNC Associate Art Professor Robert Howard in troduces the section with a short piece on Higgins. Erown said he heped the maga zine would receive extensive re views of this issue. "Articles on our new fiction and poetry awards Macmillan conference. The five previous sessions took place in March, 1961, at Key West, Fla.; April, 1961, in Washington; June, 1961, in London; December, 1961, in Bermuda and last April in Washington. Kennedy has described the cur rent international situation . as "s climatic period." He and Macmil lan are expected to consider how the momentum generated by the successful U.S. handling of Khrush chev's Cuban gamble can be ex ploited to make more progress on other East-West conflicts. Macmillan, De Gaulle to Meet U. S. officials believe Kennedy's tough stand on Cuba may - have convinced Khrushchev of the firm ness of allied pledges and willing ness to fight if necessary in the Berlin area and on other fronts. Macmillan will - fly to Nassau shortly after meeting in France with President Charles de Gaulle, whose refusal to cooperate whole heartedly in NATO is a cause of continuing concern in Washington. Macmillan told Commons, in re sponse to questions, that Western leaders must hrln cnlim ervrv-i f thP mmpdiaU nmH, rt f omc Ul . ariiicuiienr. The United States and - Britain agree that a total disarmament pact with Russia is impossible at this time. But they believe there is a possibility of making some progress on individual items. To Fire stiffened his opposing to taking Strauss' job. Although Strauss was reported agreeable to giving up his post, Adenauer was said to have met stormy opposition when he broke the news to a closed door meeting of his Christian Democratic CDU1 deputies. The CDU has supported Strauss in the four-week old political bat tle over his part in a government security crackdown on the news magazine Der Spiegel. The Free Democrats said Strauss ordered the arrest of Der Spiegerl editors without informing the FDP jus tice minister. Strauss is head of the Christian Social Union CSU, the Christian Democratic wing in Bavaria. He led his party to victory in elec tions Sunday in Bavaria, a move which made it more difficult for Adenauer to fire him. Adenauer needs Free Democrat ic support to get a workable ma jority in parliament but there are so few iBavarian ministers he can get along without them. Tuesday, (Mende told UPI he and Adenauer agreed to continue the coalition which would give Adenauer a ma- ority. Stories Are In have appeared in newspapers throughout the South, and we hope this will lead the same newspapers to review the magazine .when it appears in their area," he said. The previous issues of the maga zine have been reviewed in most North Carolina newspapers, two Virginia newspapers, the Washing ton Post, and college newspapers in North Carolina, New York, Mas sachusetts, Michigan and Wiscon sin. All reviews but one have been favorable. The magazine has grown in size with every issue. The current is sue is 72 pages, with the pages wider than in any of the previous issues. Brown said the magazine, priced at 65c a copy, was selling "well" so far. He explained that the staff hopes to reduce the price to a standard 50c per issue with the next issue, but was unable to do so with the current issue because of printing costs. The publication is run "on a shoestring" and still owes some money to the printers for the third issue. Smith said the magazine is in need of new staff members. ' hope the list of staff members at the beginning of this issue won't scare students away," he . said. Many of the students who are list ed there worked on this issue of the magazine but have since left the magaine. Smith said the magazine particularly needs a Seventy Years Of CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1962 Mikoyan, Adlai In Meeting WASHINGTON ( UPI ) President Kennedy Tuesday received a spe cial report on the latest Cuban negotiations at the United Nations amid indications he may discuss the whole situation Wednesday with Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan. The President conferred at the White House with Ambassador Ad lai Stevenson, who with other top U. S. officials met Mikoyan Mon day night after the Russian had returned from his 24-day trip to Cuba. John J. McCloy; the President's special representative in the Cu ban negotiations, accompanied Ste venson in Tuesday's meeting with Kennedy. . . The White House said it may have a statement - later on the possibility of a Kennedy-Mikoyan session Wednesday.. There had been reports this might take place Tuesday. Speculation was that the veteran Russian troubleshooter would most likely press for the easing of U.S. economic and diplomatic sanctions against Cuba now that the military I aspects of the crisis is over. Economy, An Issue But the indications were that this would be rejected. Mikoyan is a trade expert. He is under stood to have spent much of his time in Cuba reviewing the island's stagnant economy and seeking ways to eliminate some of the mismanagement practiced by the Castro regime. After his Monday night meeting vith Stevenson and other U. S. officials he told reporters that the sessions had created "a good at mosphere for settlement of ques tions which are of concern to both of. us." The atmosphere did appear brighter for a final settlement of the Cuban crisis, and there are to be more meetings between Mi koyan and U. S. officials before he goes back to Moscow. No Meetings Tuesday There were no such sessions Tuesday, however. The two U. S. negotiators, Stevenson and Mc Cloy, came to Washington and Mi koyan remained at the Soviet mis sion in New York. The major unresolved question in the crisis is that of verification of the dismantlement of Soviet of fensive weapons in Cuba. Castro has said he would agree to this if similar inspection were carried out in the United States to check on "invasion" bases set up by Cuban exiles. Mikoyan has supported this proposal. But the U. S. position was that such a deal would be of interest only if it meant global inspection of all bases, including those in Russia. Magazine business manager. Brown said any students, profes sors or townspeople interested in writing or working for the maga zine should contact him at the magazine's office at 308 Cameron Ave. (across from the Chi Psi Lodge). Wesley Foundation There will be a dinner at the Wesley House Friday at 6 pjn. All students are invited. Please call 942-2152 by 2 p.m. Friday to make reservations. The Wesley Foundation will also meet with the Presbyterian Youth Group at 7 p.m. Sunday at the Presoytenan Church. Philosophy and Psychiatry Dr. Erwin W. Straus, Research Consultant to the V. A. Hospital Lexington, Kentucky, and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, University of Kentucky Medical Center, will speak on "Psychiatry and Philos cphy" at 8 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of Morehead Planetarium Thursday, November 29th. Religious Emphasis Committee The - Religious Emphasis - Com mittee cf the YM-YWCA will meet at 4 p.m. today in Tom Davis office in the V-BuUdins. Editorial Freedom 3 lane Dance Group O f Thailand Plays At 8 -The Phakavali Dancers of Thai land will perform in Memorial Hall at 8 p.m. tonight. Graham Memor ial is sponsoring this troupe, which is on its first tour of the United States this season. In other parts of the world these Dancers already enjoy a well es tablished reputation as artistic per formers. The troupe is small but select,' consisting of six girls and two men and an orchestra of six. A great attraction of the com pany is the fact that, although ex otic to the Western viewer the performance is not incomprehen sible.. As one European review de scribed it, "for the uneducated, ab solutely enjoyable beauty now and then accompanied by a refined pan tomime, with a clarity which left nothing to wish for." s The dances are notable for their variety, from the ritual dances of the court to familiar folk dances. Outstanding among the court dances is the impressive "finger nail dance" in which six girls per form wearing long, exoctic gold fingernails and weaving exotic pat terns of movement and color. The most exciting number is the fierce battle of the "sword dance" between the masked demon and the Monkey King. The Thai classical orchestra pro vides accompaniment . for the group. The orchestra uses two types of wind instruments, the flute type and the oboe,, and a variety of percussion i instruments.- Some of these cannot be compared to any instrument found in the West. iThe Phakavali Dancers will per form at 8 o'clock Wednesday night Seats not occupied by students at ,7:45 will be on sale for the public at $1 per person I VSA iirt - j iinn m- Girls-A Part Of The I fK X4 V & f &M , Student Assembly Appointments Open By Mary Regan ' Interviews for the National Stu dent Assembly are being held in the Y office this week. The National Student Assembly will meet at the University of Il linois, Dec. 27 through Jan. 2. Every four years students from colleges throughout the United States meet to discuss national and world problems. This year the theme is "Revolu tion and Response." Top government, business, and education experts will assist in discussions of responses to social injustice, urban mass culture, the changing roles of men and women, and the dilemma of atomic power in a divided world. Interested students should con tact Anne Queen at the Y or Judy Bryant, chairman, at the Kappa Delta house. John Erademas, congressman from Indiana, wiU-lead a discus sion on "Challenges to the Demo- rrat'n Idea." - Deouty Assistant Secretary from the 'State Department, James Grant, will speak on "The World in Revolution-'' v rasne On B ft V--- 5 WAYNE EDGAR KING Wayne King Wins Prize In Contest Former DTH Editor Wayne King has been named one of the top ten finishers in the October news writing contest sponsored by the William Randolph Hearst Founda tion, it .was. announced yesterday. Norval Neil Luxon, Dean of the School of Journalism, who announ ced the award yesterday, said ! King would receive a $100 scholar ship from the foundation. An equal amount - will be awarded the. Jour nalism School. - The prize-winning story, an ac count of the' riots at the University of Mississippi Oct. 31, appeared in the Greensboro Daily News. King was among nine DTH reporters at the scene during the riots. Over 43 schools and departments ff journalism throughout the coun- "J' wc'c 'itacu m me .-unitnb, ? r 'ft Si r-- o : Kb Phahavali Troupe The "Social Injustice" discus sion will be led by " Morris Mil- gram, director of the Modern Community Developers. W. Carey McWilliams Jr., of the government department at Oberlin College, will speak on "The Di lemma of Atomic Power in a Di vided World." Judy Bryant, chairman, said, "There seems to be a lot of in terest here in the assembly. We've had a lot of students come by for interviews." She added that interviews would be continued the rest of the week. Legislature Won't Hold Weekly Meet The Student Legislature, due to a 1 the SSL meet and an overaDona ence of quizzes, will not meet this week. Rcton Club The firt meeting of the Roton nub will be held tonight at 7 p.m in 321 Soencer dorm. The meet- in will be for mesibers only. V t Tim If II II LLLLLL arc Jet Airliner Rams Into Hillside While Preparing To Land LIMA, Peru (UPI) A Varig Airlines Boeing 707 jet airliner en route from Rio De Janeiro to Loss Angeles crashed into a hill Tuesday while preparing to land at Lima Airport in the predawn darkness. All 97 persons aboard were reported killed, including at least three residents of the United States The Peruvian Air Ministry said the plane's wreckage was found on Las Cruces hill in a desert coastal strip south of here. The ministry said the 80 passengers and 17 crew members burned to death. The air force rescue party which! spotted the wreckage said the giant airliner was "destroyed." The crash brought, to 179 the number of persons killed in plane accidents on four continents in five days. Eighty-two were killed in crashes in . (Maryland, . Brazil, France, and Sai Tome Island off Portuguese West Africa. Flew Over Andes The plane had taken off from Rio De Janeiro and had flown ov er the 22,000-foot Andes Mountain range. It was setting down for a landing when it vanished. Hours later searchers found the wreck age. ' Lima Airport officials said that about 20 minutes before the air craft was scheduled to land, here, the pilot radioed the control tow er at Pisco, Peru, to give his po sition In his message to the Pisco tow er, the pilot gave no indication the plane was in trouble, officials said. It was the last communication re ceived from the plane. In Rio, Varig officials identi fied three of the passengers as iPaul -Best, export crude sales man ager of California Standard Oil Co.J San Francisco; Walter Curtis Gard-j eral as a powerful executive tak ner, aviation operations analyst, ling independent executive actions; Standard of New Jersey, New York City, and Wolfram Arendt of Mon mouth,. N. J., a Columbia Univers ity student on a Ford Foundation scholarship . ; . . . ; Cuban Official Killed Varig also reported that Raul Cepero Bonilla, president of the Cuban National Bank, and several other Cuban delegates to a just concluded U.N. food and agricul tural organization conference in Rio were aboard. Another passen ger was identified as Maj. Gen. Jesus Melgar Escuti, Peru's min ister of junta which seized con trol of the country last July. At 3:37 a.m., when the pilot's last ramo i tuui l wia icvtmvu irlSCO, XjUiia au yvi t j"- there was visibility here for 8I2 miles and the ceiling was about 1,500 feet. This is considered good visibility for Lima. Later in the morning, heavy clouds covered the ocean and tnis ranital citv. hampering search op erations. Nearly 10 hours elapsed from the pilot's final report to dis covery of the wreckage. The Varig aircraft had been scheduled to stop at Lima, Bogo ta Panama City and Mexico cny before proceeding to Los Angeles. Dook Parade Is Led By Queen Betsy Caron Betsy Caron, a dark-haired nur sing student from Falls Church, Va., reigned over the Beat Dook parade last Tuesday. A panel of judges seieciea ner queen from five finalists announ ced earlier. Miss Caron, sponsored by Craige dormitory, is a junior, a member of this year's Yack Beauty Court, a member of Kappa Kappa Gam ma sorority. Members of her court were Sarah Broadhurst, a Chi Omega spon sored by Phi Gamma Delta; So phia Pike, a Chi Omega sponsored by Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Dana Smith, a Delta Delta. Delta spon sored by Kappa Alpha; and Sher ry Stone, a Kappa Delta sponsor ed by Kappa Delta. National Student Assembly Interviews are being held, this week in the Y office for delegates to the National Student Assembly to be held Dec. 27 through Jan. 2 at the University of Illinois. Complete UPI Wire Service IP II t i II Mil LL VLyJLL ILiLO Holidays Are Study Period For Students By JACK GREGORY Thanksgiving proved to be an in structive holiday for a group of 37 UNC students. The students, members of the UN Seminar of the Collegiate Council of the Unit ed Nations, left Chapel Hill Wed nesday and arrived at the Hotel Edison in New York Thursday at 2 a.m. for a meeting with six UN delegates. There they met with the six delegates and Mr. .Eric Valters, General Agency Speaker .of the UN, to discuss the seminar's theme: The Changing Role of the UN. . - - T7 o T TJ 7 HiMecL (Mr. Valters, speaking directly on the theme itself, said that there had been, three major changes vx the UN's role: The shift of em phasis from the Security Council - to the General Assembly; the emergence of the Secretary Gen- and the emergence of the UN as a meeting place. All three of these changes, he said, could be in the recent Cuban crisis. The non-aligned countries took the problem to the General Assembly and by-passed the Se curity Council. The Soviet Union and the United States recognized the position of Secretary General as a powerful mediator and agreed to submit, the problem to arbitra tion. The seminar group met with del egates from the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, France, India, Tanganyika, and Algeria, to dis cuss each country's relations with the UN. A common theme for several of ... , ,, f Market. Mr. Edouard Koudriavtsev, Delegate to the USSR Mission, said the Common Market was an aggressive alliance against Russia, detrimental to independent African and Asian countries and pointed toward the emergence of neo-colon-ialism. Mr. (Malecella, the Tanganyika delegate, said "The Common Mar ket is a political union which will dictate terms to the newly inde pendent African states." He said Africa should form a Common Market of its own. Mr. Cornell Capa invited the group to. a party at his apartment Friday night. Capa met several Y members earlier this year when he did a story on student life at UNC for the London TIMES. Judy Alexander and Kellis Park er were co-chairmen of the group. The Y members arrived back in Chapel Hill at 10 p.m. Sunday. United States Will Try For Agreement GENEVA fUPI) The United States said Tuesday it will press for an agreement on one of the two Western plans for a nuclear test ban despite Soviet refusal to accept inspections. Western sources said the Rus apparently are unwilling to make any policy changes that might ease the test ban and general dis armament negotiations which were resumed here Monday. Infirmary Students in the infirmary ye terday included: Nanett Powers, David Sente'Je, William Harrison, Merrell Smith, Sutton Farnham, John Etienne, j Stephen Hoyie, Steven Ellis, Paul Burroughs.

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