Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 2, 1962, edition 1 / Page 1
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TJ"C Library Ssriais Dopt. 3 or. 970 Chapal Hill, 11. iY on rr Weather Clear and cool. High in the 50's. Dark after sunset. See Edits, Page Two Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1962 Complete UP1 Wire Servic ; ?! : Mt ii SL Approves Abortion, Aid. a ' 1 o Jjiducation, HUAC Death r - ,u.,. I v r 4 I - -- h'",-::; i 'vv.v---' . i AycocJfe iLPeiencIs M. I - t 111 C f -' 'vl ; - 111 'f I ' " - I '' . ' ' ! Aft ( A ' I -v-'iirrifrTfiilri Tar Heels Larry Brown, 5 10" Tarheel Co-captain drib bles around Georgia Guard Billy IJado (22) dur ing the first half of the Tar Heel's opening basket Nelirii Rejects China Terms MEW UELtHI (tTPD 'Prime "Min-, ister Jawaharlal Nehru Saturday rejected the Chinese Communist terms for a truce in the border war and accused Peking of trying to grab Indian territory "under cover of preliminary cease-fire ar rangements." CHINA FILM "The Technical and Overall Development of China Under Communism" is the film pre sented by the Public Affairs com mittee tomorrow night at 7:30 in Carroll Hall. Following the 30-minute docu mentary, Dr. Yu of the Political Science department and Dr. Wang of the History department will conduct a question and an swer period with the audience. The showing is open to the public. Reviewer A pp lauds Shaw, Shakespeare By DONA FAGG A roar, a low, moaning, an guished roar, from a shaggy-maned lion rose. The usual pipe-smoking, magazine - reading, card - playing cosmopolitan crowd in Graham Memorial "s main lounge was pre empted Friday night for an ap preciative audience at GM'c Pe tite Dramatique presentation of a "Smattering of Shaw and Shake- bpeare. ... ,' The dramatized reacting oi: George Bernard Shaw's "Androcles and the Lion" was greeted, with; ,,-r-..o titters iinrl 3UCJ1S in ail the right places. The story of how a meek tailor's good turn of pul ling a thorn from the paw of a lion later saved him and his fel low Christians from slaughter in the Roman arena is liberally doc tored with Shaw's theological com mentary. The actors in -conventional street dress except for the lion's mask read their parts with understanding of both the serious ness and the humor of the subject. Slight, blond Garth Ferguson was a believable Androcles, the meek hero. Androcles' wife Magaera was shewishly played by Judy Foster. The captain played by George Gray was properly guff aid authorita tive Myles Eric Ludwig growied bis way through the part of surly Spintho, whose only hope to yque&re through heaven's gates wi by martyrdom. parte of the obnoxious heelers Lentulus and Metellus were well handled by William tMcKennan and ,-..,.i,.rv, piwv Plavmg both the v-,i" - , "Wc -narrAtor parts ot caar t7"hr Eduction :::!:;j:y;:.:Jx:. Take Georgia In Season Opener sNohru made "the -accusation in a letter to Chinese Communist Pre mier Chpu En-lai. Nehru was re plying to Chou's note of Nov. 28 warning that if Indian troops did not withdraw as demanded by Pe king the border fighting could flare again. Saturday's move raised the possibility of renewed warfare. Communist China has insisted it was withdrawing its troops from the battle lines in compliance with its self-proclaimed truce. But In dian troops along the northeastern frontier said there was no sign of a pullback anywhere along the front. A UPI dispatch from Texpur, Assam, said military leaders there believed Peking's announcement of a cease-fire and a withdrawal might be some sort of a hoax for political and military reasons. It said these leaders were not sur prised at lack of evidence of a Larry Warner. Fred Lubs had a double role a the centurion and the editor. liac Smith read the part of a Christian woman. Ferrovioiis, the rather dull-witted Christian who makes conver sions by use of his physical strength, was aptly handled by Gordon Clark. With booming reso nant voice and his large build, he was well cast. Lavinia, the intel- natririan Christian, was , ..-.u nit Phiiiins iwu im uimy .v And the Lion? Yes, the Lion with assorted al growl . and locus "eta b'"' "J ine mouu ciaiitu. aug auun.uv.v sank deeper inro me ea cnaus and divans placed in a semi-circle around two risers. Clarence Felder strode to the platform. He moved agilely from the part of King Lear to Hamlet and then to Richard II. Then removing the script, he threw himself into the part of Macbeth and the well-known "To morrow and tomorrow and tomor row" soliquy. Felder is currently in rehearsal for the part of Macbeth as a guest artist at the Goldsboro Neighbor hood Playhouse. No longer was he just a portly figure in a mis matched, rumpled suit. With his hair falling in his eyes, he be came ' the tormented Macbeth seeing Birnam Wood march up Dunsinane. Finding an enthusiastic audience, Felder shared a favorite William Saroyan story, "Fable Number iNine" and was greeted cy appre ciative laughter and applause. Felder ended his Fnrrr.3rce with a scene from the "Tempest 4 ball game before a full house last night in Woollen Gym. Carolina went on to win the game See story pg. 4. Photo by Jim Wallace wilhdrawal. J : Nehru's letter to Chou sharply questioned the Chinese truce terms which called for each side to with draw 12l2 miles behind the "line of actual control" that was in ef fect Nov. 7, 1959. India insists the Chinese withdraw behind the con trol points of Sept. 8, 1962, when the Chinese launched their current attacks. Nehru listed five principles on which he said both India and Red China had agreed and said "with drawal arrangements, however, that you propose behind what you refer as 'the line of actual control as of Nov. 7, 1959' are inconsistent" with these principles. Nehru said the Chinese version of the line of actual control was really a cover for grabbing Indian territory. "This is a definite attempt to retain under cover of preliminary cease-fire arrangements, physical possession over an area which China claims and to secure which a massive attack since 20 October 1962 was mounted by your forces, He said the Nov. 27 Chinese cease-fire proposals were clearly aimed "at securing physical con trol of areas which were never under Chinese administrative con trol either on 7 November 1959 or at any time prior to 8 September 12." TO SPEAK MONDAY Milt Rosen, chairman of the national Progressive Labor group, will speak on socialism at 8 Mon day in Gerrard Hall. The talk will be sponsored by the New Left Club, and will be open to the public. According to the New Left, Rosen will discuss what socialism is, the "method of achieving it," and "why it is states " Council To Hear UP Elec Hon A rgumen t The Constitutional Council will meet Monday at 4:30 p.m. in Gra ham Memorial to hear an appeal from the University Party on the ruling of the Elections Board that upheld the election cf Jack Har- rell as Freshman class president. The Constitutional Council has sole jurisdiction over matters in volving the legality of the Student Constitution. The Elections Board decided earlier that the Election Law governs only those elections provided for in the law itself, thereby deciding that election pro cedures in the law did cot cover the Freshman class re-election. The University Party then decided toj Chancellor William B. Aycock rc - leased a report b nday m w.ucn ne expressed his approval of out-of-state enrollment at UNC. In the re port, which was made at the re quest of President Friday, he said that those who protest against the out-of-state students are "Provin cial." He said that it is fortunate that the Board of Trustees "has taken a broader view and hai lormulat- ed reasonable policies consistent with the concept of a true univer sity. More than a hundred years ago over 40 per cent of the student body came from beyond the bor ders of this state. In recent years the percentage of out-fo-state stu dents has varied from a high of 35 per cent in 1940 to as low as 20 per cent in 1955. "Currently we have astudent body at Chapel Hill of 9,604 students. Of this number 32.5 per cent (in cluding graduate and professional) are classified as out-of-state stu dents for purposes of tuition cnarges. inis percentage is m keeping with the policies of the Board of Trustees governing the admission of out-of-state students." The Trustees' policy that Ay cocks refers to is the following: The number of entering under graduate students that may be ad mitted to any campus of the Uni versity from outside the state in any semester is limited to 15 per cent of the undergraduate students admitted to that campus during the semester. Certain out-of-state applicants are expressly exempt from this limitation - with the pro viso that they be required to pay the regular out-o-state tuition, namely: (a) Applicants whose place of birth was North Carolina; (b) Sons and daughters of persons born in North Carolina; (c) Sons and daughters of alumni of the Univer sity; (d) Graduate students; (e) Students from outside the United States; (f) Students admitted to schools which have been designated by the Board of Trustees to be serving a regional purpose, as follows: The Graduate School and The School of Public Health at Chapel Hill. Aycock reported that U.N.C. ad mitted "412 out-of-state undergrad uates this year who are subject to the quota limitation. These stu dents constitute 15.6 per cent of the entering undergraduates. We were pleased to read in the "New York Times" (July 1, 1962) that the University of North Caro lina has "moved up to a top first choice position" for graduates of outstanding Eastern preparatory schools." The fact that the fresh man class at Chapel Hill has the highest average college boards in all the public institutions of higher learning in the state is due largely to the admission of top quality out-of-state students." "Also, we admitted 331 non quota out-of-state students this year. Obviously, the large alumni group of the University together with a substantial number of na tive North Carolinians who have moved to other states provide an increasing potential for non-quota applicants. At the same time, no qualified North Carolina resident has been denied admission to our undergraduate student body." '"The Graduate School is exempt from the quota limitation. This is as it should be. Although 43.9 per exercise its constitutional privi lege and appeal the decision. The chairman of the Men's Coun cil, Walter Bellinger, is the chair man of the Constitutional Council Three members from each of the Men's and Women's Councils com prise the remainder of the Coun cil. Bev Haynes, Bev Griffin and Carolyn Pinion are the members representing the 'Women's Council. Whitney Durand, Bryan Simpson, and Grant Wheeler are those from the Men's Council. These members w ere selected in a special joint ses sion of the two Councils last Thursday night. The meeting will be open .to. ail students. " : ' I '; cent of our graduate students come to us irom states other than North Carolina, no resident of this state who was qualified has been reject ed for graduate study." . "Last year the School of Public Health had a total enrollment of 149 students. Of this number, 105 were non-North Carolinians. This School has been appropriately designated by the (Board of Trus tees as serving a regional purpose and exempt from any quota. I might also point out that approxi mately 80 per cent of the support of the School of Public Health comes from non-state sources." "I think we should be proud of the fact that we can accommodate a substantial number of outstand ing students from other states and foreign countries. Without their MEETEMG All women's dormitory vice presidents and sorority house man agers should meet at 5:00 p.m. Monday in the Grail Room, GM. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will meet Sunday at 4:30 p.m. in the Roland Parker lounge . in Graham Mem orial. Refreshments will be ser ved- . .; UP INTERVIEWS The University Party will hold interviews to fill the vacant stu dent legislature seat from Dorm Men's IV (Manly, Mangum, Ruf- fin, Grimes) Monday and Tuesday from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Interested students may sign up for the in terviews at the information desk at GM. STAR OF BETHLEHEM: Continuing through January 7th, the Morehead Planetarium will pre sent its traditional Christmas pro gram, "Star of Bethlehem" at 11 a.m., 3, 4, and 8:30 p.m. on Sat urdays, at 2, 3, 4, and 830 p.m. Sundays, and at 8:30 p.m. each weekday. STUDENT CREDIT COMM. The Student Credit Commission will meet Wednesday at 4:30 in the Woodhouse Room of Graham Memorial. STATISTICS COLLOQUIUM Norman L. Johnson, newly ar rived professor in the Department of Statistics at Chapel Hill and formdrly at University College, London, will address the Statistics Colloquium Monday, Dec. 3, on "Sequential Procedures Based on Minimax and Minimax Regret Pro cedures." The meeting will be in 265 Phil lips at 4 p.m. WESLEY FOUNDATION The Wesley Foundation will meet with the Presbyterian Youth Group Sunday at 7 p.m. in the Presby terian Church. CONSTITUTIONAL COUNCIL The Constitutional Council wil meet Monday at 4:30 p.m. in Gra ham Memorial. The meeting is open to all interested students. GLEE CLUB OPENINGS Men students who would like to join the Men's Glee Club for the rest of the semester or tor ine ;nrin? semester should contact Dr, Joel Carter in 207 Hill Hall im mediately. The club is now preparing music for its spring repertoire as well as rehearsing its fall numbers. PUBLIC AFFAIRS FDLM "ThP Technical and Overall De velopment of China Under Com- mumsm is me imn "j sented tomorrow mght by tne trun- lic Affairs Committee at -7:30 p.m. in Carroll Hall. DORMITORY SECTION All dormitories desiring a page in. the Yac should send a repre sentative to the Yack office in the presence we would become an in stitution of lesser stature overnight. Also, it is well to remember that the University from its inception to the present owes a deep debt of gratitude to other universities who have trained not only North Caro lina students but also have provid ed this University with a great majority of its faculty members. "Currently there are 650 faculty members who hold the rank of As sistant Professor or higher. Of these 650, 156 grew up in North Carolina. The remaining 494 come from forty states and fifteen for eign countries. O't the 650 faculty members, 117 received their high est degree (Ph.D., M.D., LL.B.) from the University at Giapel Hill. Except for sixteen faculty mem bers who received their highest de- Campus Briefs basement of GM between 7-9 p.m. on Monday or from 2-3 p.m. on Tuesday. ELISHA MITCHELL SOCIETY The Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society will meet at 7:30 p.m. tonight in 265 Phillips Hall. "Re search Activities of the Depart ment of Zoology" is the program scheduled. Members who have not paid their dues should mail check to W. S. Pollitzer. secretary treasurer. PHILOLOGICAL. CLUB The Philological Club will meet on Tuesday, December 4, 7:45 p.m. in the Faculty Lounge of More- head Planetarium. Werner P. Friederich of the department of Germanic languages will present a paper, four Major Authors of the Seventeenth Century." All fac ulty members, graduates and mem bers of their families are invited. CATHOLIC ORPHANAGE COMMITTEE The Catholic Orphanage College Editors Under Fire At Ole Miss, UCLA, Alabama TUSCALOOSA, Ala. 'CBS) The impending admission of a Negro, under federal court order, to the University of Alabama has precip itated an unprecedented campaign in this state to avoid the violence surounding a similar incident at the University of Mississippi earl ier this year. Many prominent civic leaders of Alabama have joined in demand ing that the state prevent any reoccurance of the outbreak of vio lence that acompanied the uni versity's short-lived desegregation in 1956. As in the case at the University of Mississippi, the Governor-elect of Alabama, George C. Wallace, has pledged that he will defy fed eral authority in any attempt to integrate the university. Recent ly, however, he has made state ments to the effect that he will not "encourage" violence, and this is interpreted as a reflection of the effectiveness of the anti-violence campaign. The emotion surrounding the Mississippi affair has, however, al ready led to an incident at the University of Alabama. Melvin Meyer, editor of the Ala bama student newspaper, the Crim son and White, published an edi torial condemning the actions of Mississippi governor Ross Barnett, saying there was no moral or leg al justification for Barnett's ac tions. He wrote "the basis of the democratic system is equality be fore the law, and the system is but a mockery if the laws are to extend only to a portion of the citizenry." Meyer has received anonymous elephone calls threatening his life. One warned him that if he hid not eave town in 24 hours, he would 'leave in a pine bos." Two nights j iirollmeiit I gree at Duke University, the re mainder, who constitute more than three-fourths of the current facul ty, were educated in institutions of higher learning outside the State of North Carolina. "North Carolina needs to attract competent students from beyond its borders in a variety of pro grams if the needs for teachers and other professional personnel are to be met in the foreseeable future. "The present policy of the Trus tees not only provides for taking care of our own but also permits a cosmopolitan student body essen tial to a university. To limit fur ther out-of-state students would thwart our aspirations to become a better institution measured by national standards." mittee will leave from Y-Court to- day at 2 p.m. STUDENT FORUM Rev. Dewitt Myers, pastor of the United Church, will speak to the Student Forum tonight at 5:45 p.m. on "Worship" following a hamburger supper at the church. UN COUNCIL The Collegiate Council for the United Nations will meet at the Y tomorrow at 5 p.m. All members find all delegates to the UN Seminar are invited to attend. CAMPUS CHEST INTERVIEWS Tf,; r n ,,uclv,c,vs 1U1 vuiipus wirai. chairman will be held Monday through Thursday, 4-6 and 7-9 p.m at the Campus Chest Office, Y Court. LACROSSE There will be a meeting of all old and DrosDective LaCrosse mlawrs at. 7 n m WoHnpdav in room 304 Woollen Gym. Coach Com-lRabb will direct the meeting. later, a cross was burned in front of the 20-year old editor's fra ternity house, Zet Beta Tau. The 131-year old school has had no Negroes in its student body since Arthurine Lucy, its first, was expelled in 1956 after attending three days of classes. She was ex pelled by the Board of Trustees for making "outrageous, false, and baseless accusations against the university. Her enrollment was surrounded by outbursts of vio lence. In the years since, a few Ne groes have applied to the school, but none have been accepted, on grounds that their applications were incomplete. A further Negro appli cation, which the university ap parently expects to be complete, was filed this year. The . university Board of Trust ees has passed a resolution ex pressing "determination" that law and order will prevau at Alabama in such an event. Significantly, the resolution was proposed by an arch- segregationist on the board. The real question mark in Ala bama today is the tack that the Governor-elect will take. Due to take office in January, Wallace has vowed to maintain segregation at the university, in much the same fashion as Gov. Barnett of Mississippi. He has said that he will "stand in the classroom door" if necessary to preserve the sys tem. Ole Miss OXFORD, MISS. (Special To The DTH) The Campus Senate cf the University of Mississippi will vote Monday on a resolution to both reprimand and commend the actions of . Miss Sidna Browder, Editor of the Mississippian, stu Spearman Elected Vice-President; Lawler Honored By HARRY DELUNG Special to the DTII RALEIGH State Student Legis lature (SSL) yesterday resolved that abortion should be legalized and passed UNC's proposed en dorsement of federal aid to edu cation. The mock legislative body urg ed the abolition of the national House Committee on Un-American Activities and capital punishment within the state. In other action, UNC's Bob Spearman was elected vice-president of the body. UNC Vice-Pres ident Mike Lawler was voted the best speaker of the session. SSL's new president is Bill Constagny from Wake Forest. Carolina's resolution advocating the affiliation of Southern schools with the National Student Associa tion (NSA) passed in the House but failed in the SSL's Senate. Senators late changed their minds on the NSA bill, but an attempt for reconsideration was killed on constitutional grounds. The SSL is an annual meeting of students from all the state's colleges and universities. UNC has 12 voting delegates. .The abortion bill, introduced by Meredith College, made the act legal if: (1) A doctor is "convinced" that the baby will be deformed; (2) The pregnancy is the result of rape or incest; (3) The woman is of unsound mind; or (4) The preg nancy, endangers the life cf the zzJ n' The greatest, controversy on i crvo s aid to eaucauon resolution I was an amendment denying the aid Trfi ? n.JfnZ IUNC delegation unanimously op- 1 nnc(vl fho amPnf)mf.nt whirh fail. ed. Resolutions calling for the abol ishment of the Internal Security Act of 1950 and the Alien Regis tration Act of 1940 passed the House, but failed in the Senate. These bills were introduced by East Carolina and Duke respec tively. The HUAC resolution, introduc ( Continued on Page 3) dent newspaper at Ole Miss. The resolution, introduced a week ago by a campus senator and men. ber of the Patriotic American Youth group, criticizes Miss Brow der for allegedly not carrying the full story of the September 31st riots and commends her for oppos ing the use of violence in the en suing days. In her comment on the riots, she stated that they were the fault of the students, not the Federal marshals. The bill referred to a com mittee which changed the orig inal wording of the bill and then approved it before returning it to the senate where it will be acted upon tomorrow. FIRING DEFEATED LOS ANGELES (CPS) A mo tion to fire the editor of the UCLA Daily Bruin was defeated last week by the UCLA Student Legislative Council. The motion said, in part, that the council was "disgusted with the quality of the paper and its edi tor's failure to improve the pap er." The motion also accused Daily Eruin editor AI Rothstein of "num erous serious mistakes" in the pap er, decline m quality of the pap er, and decline in the number of new staff members, "without whose support the future of the Daily Bruin is in serious jeopardy." Rothstein charged that the ac cusations were "completely false" and interpreted the defeat of the motion as a vote of coridence in the paper and his editorship. Tte LCLA student government, unlike most schools where intermediary boards are in charge of student publications, is in direct control of the student newspaper. W2L5 Luc uirotwi.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 2, 1962, edition 1
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