Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 16, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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. w . Library Serials Dept. Box 870 Chapel Hill, N.c. . Nonsense See Edits, Page Two ' a. Weather Variable cloudiness. Chance of showers. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1363 UPI Wire Service nn 1L SJI iomB E Mil Congolese Say They'll Agree To A mnesty ELISABETHVILLE (UPD-Pres- iuenc ivioise Tshombe announced tne, end of Katanga's secession irom the Congo Tuesday. He said he was surrendering his last strong hold of Kolwezi to United Nations forces. Tshombe, in a note to the United Nations, asked for truce talks and demanded amnesty for himself and his followers. - The United Nations announced that a previous Congo lese government guarantee of am nesty for Tshombe still held good. Central Congolese Premier Cy rille Adoula and President Joseph ivasavuDu promptly sent messages to U. N. Secretary General Thant from Leopoldville pledging they would respect the amnesty given Tshombe. Barring a sudden new change of mind by Tshombe, the swift series of developments would mean an end to the war that U. N. troops nave been waging with Tshombe's forces in an effort to bring the break-away province of Katanga into me Congo s central govern ment. May Change Mind But observers here noted that Tshombe had. made promises in the past and broken them. Sources said that if." Tshombe keeps his word . this time, it would remain only for Tshombe to reach politic al agreement with the Central Leo poldville government a process1 that could take months or longer. In LeopoMville Tuesday, an en raged mob of more than' 800 screaming Congolese burst into the British embassy, 'ransacked offices, smashed windows and injured an embassy official. The rioters were protesting Britain's opposition to the U. N.'s use ot munary iorce to end Katanga's secession. First word that Tshombe had agreed to end Katangese secession and surrender Kolwezi the mining town he and his supporters . had threatened repeatedly to blow up under a "scorched earth" policy came from Britain's consul in Elis abethville. The United Nations in New York confirmed that Tshombe, in a note to the Belsian consul at Salisbury. Southern Rhodesia, had announced his readiness to end Katanga's se cession, give the United Nations full freedom of movement through out the province, and cooperate with Thant's plan for reunification. Despite Tshombe's action there was no guarantee that the 2,000 Katangese gendarmes and 200 mercenary soldiers ' guarding the Kolwezi stronghold would give it up without a fight. . Cliem Group Initiates 20 Pledges TJho Chanter of Alpha Chi Sigma, National Honorary Chemistry Fra ternity, recently held its fall initia tion, initiating 20 pledges to boost its total membership to 47. The fraternity, founded at the University of Wisconsin in 1902, is composed of' nearly 60 collegi ate and professional chapters throughout the- nation. Bho was founded at UNC in 1912, and is composed of undergraduate cnemis try majors and graduate students in the field of chemistry. A pro fessional branch is now being form ed in the Chapel Hill area. ' Those initiated were: Everett Eaucom, Byron Bowman, Walter Brown, Phil Burks, Gerald Davis. Bob Day, Henry Drott Richar4 Fleming, George" Fozzard, Don Kendall, Dohn Martin, Joe Mason, Jack Recce. Roy Swarington, Al an Taylor, Charles Twine, Richard Veazey, ' Ralph Wisnant, Ralph White and Ron Williams. . Newly elected officers for the coming year were installed at the chapter's January -14 meetins. They are:' Fill StepneiBcB", presi dent; , Gilbert IcmtU-vice-presI-deat: Gece . Hetjdrix, . secretary; Jack Reece, . treasurer; David Yount; reporters . Bob Cunning ham, master ..of ceremonies"; aid Bill Rice, alumni secretary. An e o Of . .3; -i . 1"! 4b4 NEW REHEARSAL HALL This acoustically sound rehearsal hall, in the newly completed Hill Hall Annex, will be open and ready for use Feb. 4, for. the spring semester. The new hall, a high Annex To ill Hall A new addition' to the UNC School- of Music allows for an in crease in enrollment plus greater facilities and equipment. Faculty and students have al ready moved into the added 32, 000 square feet of space even though new equipment and furni ture has not arrived. By Feb. 4, the first day of classes in UNC's green and white interior of the new addition will be complete for use. Kenan Professor Glen Hay- don is chairman of the Music De partment. The biggest feature of the addi tion is its large acoustically-sound rehearsal hall for band and or chestra, located on the first floor. This partly-panelled hall will also be used for music clinics such as the band and piano clinics. Fac ing down on the hall is a control room suitable for recording per formances. Other rooms located on the first floor of the addition include an expansion of the music library with a new listening room, which will be equipped with earphones and tapes, a reading room, and a checkout counter. The former li brary area will be used as a stack area and as graduate carrels. There are new instrument storage rooms, a band library, a repair room to be used for training pur poses for those going into band directing and public school music, and offices for the band director and the assistant band director on tlie first floor. Professor Herbert Fred is director of the band. The second floor houses nine faculty studies and six graduate studies, an . orchestra library, a string storage room, and the of fice of the string teacher. In the basement is an organ practice room housing a new Moel- ler practice organ which has not vet been played. There are also six teaching studios, 2b practice ITEMS FOUND I 1he following' items'- are being held in 100 CarrollHall where the owners may claim them:- A slide rule left in ' Hanes 107 Jan. 9. A key "ring with 1 two" Weys ' found in Carroll Hall auditorrom after a free flick Jan. 6. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT'S OAHD The. International Students Board will meet at 4 p.m. today at" the y" Building for a - brief but in portant session. H nounceg Bi-w bgt Increase Capacity rooms, three ensemble rehearsal rooms, a uniform storage room and dressing room, and a bulk instrument storage room for the football band equipment. On order for shipment are sev eral new practice pianos and sev eral new grand pianos and lock' ers for students' equipment. New electronic equipment already re ceived is a several-hundred-dol lar stroboscope, used for the visual measurement of tuning. Quick Action On Tax Bill Is Promised WASHINGTON (UPI) Demo cratic congressional leaders Tues day assured President Kennedy speedy consideration of his tax cut program. The odds favored ap proval this session of some form of tax slash. Kennedy told House and Senate chiefs during a White House meet ing that he would spell out details of his proposals in a special tax message Jan. 24. Speaker John McCormack said, that after receiving the message, the House Ways and Means Com mittee would proceed quickly with hearings on the plans that would net a $10 billion reduction in fed eral tax rates over a three-year period The speaker told newsmen after the WTiite House legislative Dreas fast that tax reduction was a "mat ter of urgency" in .the adrnanistxa- tion's lesislative time-iaDie. Congressional insiders were will ing to give heavy odds that tten uouid he able to push through tax ts for both individuals and rnrrorations. But they teit tne President's program would be "al- tered and the 30b would not De finished before October. Kennedy is expected to go fur ther into. the tax situation Thurs day when -he sends Congress his hudret for fiscal 1964. He is ex pected to explain . in the budget message how much the cut ulti mately would cost the nation and how he plans to pay the dui. In his' State of the Union me sa-. Kennedy said that the new budget would increase spending for defense and space but the total out put would be cut for all other pur poses. It has been reported that he is working hard to hold the fiscal 1364 budget under $100 billion. :f- .4,.,., imss, ecession light jof the annex, can also be used for music clinics. "A control room, located above the hall, provides facilities 'for recording performances. Photo by Jim Wallace FirstWieeh Of Semester To Be Full By VANCE BARROW A full slate of entertainment has been scheduled for the first-week end of the spring semester by the Graham Memorial Activities Board. Headlining the program will be hypnotist John. Kolisch on Friday evening, February 8, .'and the U. S Army Men's Chorus on Saturday evening, February 9. Kolisch will present. "The Truth about Hypnotism" at 8:00 " p.m. in Memorial Hall, in which Ko lisch will explain and demonstrate the uses of hypnotism. Kolisch was bom in Vienna and became interested in hypnotism while he was a student of psychology at the University of Vienna. He will at tempt to show how post-hypnotic suggestion may be used in weight control, stage-fright, insomnia, or the elimination of excessive smok ing, drinking, or other habits. Kolisch is noted not only for his ability as anentertainer, but also as a competent hypnothera pist. He will draw on audience par ticipation to. demonstrate such things as self -hypnosis, mass-hyp nosis and post-hypnotic suggestion Kolisch emphasizes that all vol unteers from the audience will be treated with the "utmost respect and consideration they would ex pect in any clinical demonstra tion." A question-and-answer . peri od will follow the program. The performance will be free to all UNC ; students . and faculty mem "hers. . On Saturday evening, February 9,; at 8:00 p.m. in Memorial ; Hall, the U. S. Army Men's .Chorus . will perform. According to Sam Blum- berg, GMAB publicity director, tne Army ien s Chorus is con sidered to be as good as any chor us around." The Chorus is -com posed of 52 men drawn from the entire army and has a waiting list of over 1000 others. "La Dolce Vita" will be thown Sunday afternoon and evening, February 10, - under the auspices cf both-GMAB" and the Sunday Cinema series. Two Free . Flicks are also scheduled ;f or the week end. "Pepe", a comedy starring the Mexican actor . Cantinflas and supporting stars such as -Maurice Chevalier, Ernie Kovacs, Kim No vak, Feter ; Lawford and , Jack Lemrcon. wail be seen on Satur day, February 9. , "Pepe" is the story of a baggy-pants bullfighter and his affection for Don Juan, his horse. ' "The 'Egyptian", a movie with a "cast of thousands", is. schedul ed for Friday, February 8.-. Books Missing From Library Worth $3,000 There has been a startling in crease in the number of missing Modern Civilization reference books from the undergraduate library, the Student Government Attorney General's office said yesterday. Since June, r 1962, 320 books valued at some $3,000 have been reported missing. It is a violation of the. Honor Code to have possession of any books taken from the library that are not properly checked out and anyone who has access to one of the books is urged to return it as soon as possible, the Attorn-, ey General's office said. Student government action. through the Attorney General's statf.-and the Men's Council,- will be taken' to recover those books not turned in. The Attorney General's office will be open during exams. Any violations of the Honor Code can be reported between 10 p.m. and 12 p.m. or between 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. Vtati4Ctattro&KK4 V.v. k .... St . a ... X .... . .AfcJ Tern Drop To CHICAGO (UPI) The middle west- suffered Tuesday in a frigid blast that tumbled temperatures to SObelow zero in Wisconsin and came close to giving Milwaukee and - Minneapolis-St. Paul their coldest weather in history. The' mighty new surge of arctic air off the Canadian prairies sent the mercury, plunging to 50 below at Black River Falls, Wis., and to 46 below at Lone ; Rock and West Salem,. Wis. viArOicagt),"Mw1ttnfe temperatures hit 19 . below at O'Hare Inter national Airport, . water crib ten ders in Lake Michigan began syna- miting ice to keep the city's water supply . flowing. The Mississippi River froze bank to bank for six miles below the Alton, 111., dam for the first time since the dam was built a quar ter of. a century ago.. Heavy snow swirled off the east ern shores of the Great Lakes. A storm that dumped 19 inches of snow on the Buffalo, N. Y area moved inland and forecasters pre dicted seven to 15 inches of new snow. Elsewhere in the nation, there was some moderation of the wide spread cold wave that had claimed close to 100 lives. Thick clouds prevented fresh disaster to crops in Texas semi-tropical Rio Grande Valley and forecasters in San Francisco saw hope for an easing Channel 4 To Carry Picture Of Contest WUNC-TV, Channel 4, will offer broadvision coverage of the Uni versity of North Carolina-North Carolina State basketball game to day at 8 p.m. Broadvision is a technique whereby WUNC-TV provides tele vision, coverage of the game out not a' play-by-play account of it. Viewers must tune in a radio sta tion to hear a description of the game. The UNC-NC State game is the first of this year to be carried ov er WUNC-TV. beratur JL Legislature Won't Meet - FLU SHOTS Flue shots are being given in the infirmary from 9-11:30 a.m. and 2-5 p.m. Mon.'-Fri. A flue epidemic is expected . in the country this winter. COSMOPOLITAN CLUB The Cosmopolitan Club will give a semi-formal .Valentine Masque rade Ball on Feb. 9 from" 8-12 p.m. at the Chapel Hill Country Club. Tickets are $2.50 per couple and may be obtained this Wed. and Thursday at Lenoir Hall from 12-2 pm and from 5-7 p.m., or. by call ing Maria Elena Bravo at 963-9132. Tickets are limited. - UNCBUKE TICKETS Studefit, faculty and employee tickets f6r the UNO-Duke basket ball; game Saturday, Feb. 2, will be available on a first come first serve basis. They may be .East Side BERLIN (UPI) East Ger man Communist party boss Wal ter Ulbricht, 'long :a tough and cynical Stalinist, meekly fell in line with Premier . Nikita S. Khrushchev Tuesday in the rift between Moscow and Peking. The goateed Ulbricht indirectly accused China of aiming at war and dropped a hint that the Soviet Union . and its Communist bloc supporters might be considering breaking off relations with both China and Albania. Khrushchev beamed broadly and the delegates from the East Euro pean - countries applauded wildly during the speech. The Chinese Communist delegate froze into si lence. Without actually calling China by name, Ulbricht said the quar rel is not merely an internal one among Communists but one that affects world peace. The arguments between the So viet Union and the dissidents are about questions of peace or war," es In Near-Record Lows of cold that caused frost damage to crops in much of California. IBut the . temperature held below zero daylong in much of the mid dle, west and midwesterners yearn ed for ''sunny" Alaska where Juneau registered a comparatively balmy 33 above. The mercury .sank to 24 below zero in -Milwaukee, creaking a Jan. 15 record which had stood for 75 years and falling only one degree short of the city's all-time French Exchange Program Now Open The nternational Student's Board of Student Government has an nounced the second yearly ex change program between the Uni versity of North Carolina and the University of Poitiers, at Tours. Scholarships have been set up for two students, one UNC student and one French student from the city of Tours. The student from Tours will be selected by a committee in the city and will come for the fall term each year, remaining the entire year. This student will participate fully in the life of the University, socially & culturally, and academ ically. The student government, Campus Chest, and the Faculty Scholarship Committee are sup plying the necessary funds. The UNC student will be select ed in early March by a committee chosen from the Student Govern ment, the French Department Fac ulty, and the Administration. Com petition will be through written application and an interview. The scholarship which the Col lege Americain at the University of Poitiers will supply for the UNC student" covers all university expenses, room and board with a French family, and trips to Paris, picked up at Woollen Gymnasium starting Monday, Jan. 21. Fall semester pass cards must be presented, both to obtain the tickets and to get into the game. On the basis of information furn ished by the Admissions Office, a few tickets will be held out for new students registering on Jan. 23. AFROTC Colonel Marvin W. Heath, Direc tor of Material, 464th Troop Carrier Wing, Pope AFB, will speak to the entire AFROTC. Cadet Corps on Thurs. at 12 noon .in Carroll Hall. . His subject will' be ".The Troop Carrier Mission- in Tactical Air Command.'-" - - LIBRARY . SCHEDULE The following is "the L. R. Wilson Library schedule . for the post-examination period, January 23 to February 4: Tuesday, Jan. 23, 7; 45 German Ag ainst he said in a marathon five and a half hour speech to the opening session of the sixth party congress of the East German Communist party. Ulbricht's hint of a possible fu ture break came when he said the East German Communists are coming more and more to the conclusion that there is no point in dealing with the Albanians at all. It was the usual Communist custom of using Albania as a euphenism for China. "The Albanians are enemies of Leninism and Marxism," he said. Ulbricht was interrupted by ap plause eight times during his on slaught against China and Albania. Each time Chinese delegate Wu Hsiu-chuan was a silent monu ment of Oriental inscrutability. There had been rumors in the part that Ulbricht might fall into disfavor with Khrusehev because he clung too long to the Stalinist views denounced by Khrushchev but Tuesday he was pro-Khrush- Midwest low of 25 below, registered in 1875. Residents of iMinnesota's twin cities congealed in a minus 32, only two degrees above the all time low of 34 set in 1936. The 32-below was a new record for Jan. 15. The Milwaukee weather bureau comforted shivering residents of Wisconsin with the statistic tidbit that "the world record low is minus 125" - established on Aug. 25, 1958, in Antarctica. Flanders, and Monaco. Spending money will be provided by the student. His travel to and from France is provided for in the schol arship funds. The programs of study at Nice which the UNC student may follow are International Affairs, French Language, Literature, and Cul ture, and Fine Arts. Since care has been taken to set up the cours es properly, full credit can be ob tained for work done in France. This means that the UNC student will not lose a year academically by participating in the exchange program. J Any Carolina undergraduate who: has had sufficient minimum prepa- t: i rn r iu areas listed above, who has had sufficient training in the French language, and who would be will ing to return to UNC for a year is eligible. The student should be well informed about campus activities and student government, national and international politics, and should show the interest and flex ibility necessary for a student em barking on such an experience. Application forms are available at the YMCA office and at Graham Memorial. Deadline for returning the applications is February 15 . a.m. to 5 p.m.; Wednesday, Jan. 30, thru Friday, Feb. 1, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 2, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 3, closed; Monday, Feb. 4, resume regular schedule. The regular schedule will be ob served during the examination per iod. EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIPS Applications forms for two ex change scholarships to be awarded for study in 1963-64 at the Univer sity in Goettingen, Germany, are now available. They, may be ob tained at GM or at the YMCA. The deadline for returning these forms is Feb. 15. DI-FHI HALL The halls and offices of the Di Phi will be available to active rep resentatives and conditional repre sentatives in good standing for examination studying. Keys may Leader ma Jchev all the way. ! ueierrmg to Albania by name jand to China by implication, Ul bricht attacked "dogmatists" who want war. Then he lambasted Communist China directly for vio lating the doctrine cf peaceful co existence by its border with India. He said the Chinese launched the war without consulting or even in forming any of the other Commu nist bloc nations. More than 2,500 delegates and 3.000 guests were massed in Uie Huge Werner Seelenbinder Hall in East Berlin for the speech. "fr "3V Some Even Go Naked For Khrushy's Sake BERLIN (UPI) The Commu nists Tuesday stripped some West erners to their underwear and took other extraordinary precau tions to protect Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev from pos sible attack. Security agents scrutinized wom en's lipsticks, removed auto huu caps and took other measures in their efforts to provide airtight protection for the man from Mos cow. Observers said the secur ity ring aroung East Berlin was at least twice as tight as during any of Khrushchev's five previous visits here. Controls at the three checkpoints on the East-West Berlin border were redoubled. East German po lice and border guards, in addi tion to the usual close check of all foreigners and West Germans entering the Communist zone, forc ed some westerners to remove hub caps from their" cars, and, in some cases, take off their clothes. Khrushchev has been surround ed by Soviet and .East German, plainclothes and state security VUJOL agents since his arrival Monday night. . " : All Westerners and Germans are being checked four times by Com- Imunist police on entry to East Berlin and four times when leav ing. Names Of Officers Not Known By Many Less than half the Student Body knows three of its top four officers, according to a recent Communi cations Committee poll. In a random survey of 171 stu dents, only President Inman Al len was identified by a majority. One hundred forty-five students, or 84.8, were able to answer cor rectly the question, "Who is the President of the Student Body?" Vice-President Mike Lawler poll ed 49.7, Secretary Judy Clark was identified by 30.9, and Treas urer Bill Criswell was known by 26.7. Bob Spearman, chairman of the Communications Committee,, com mented that this poll was one in a series to be conducted through the remainder of the year. APO BOOK EXCHANGE Alpha Phi Omega will operate a book exchange in Y-Court Feb. 4-Feb. 11 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Students can set there own prices on used texts APO will keep 10 of the sale price, and the rest is yours. The APO Book Exchange will be closed Feb. Jih at 1 p.m. and Feb. 10th all day. Thursday be obtained (303 Ruff in) Vance). from Arthur Hays or Bob Buliard (11 CANDY SALE The Sophomore Class will spon sor a candy iale this week and during exam week. The candy in tins priced $1.00 and $1.50 will be sold in Y Court and around campus. All hungry students are urged to pick up something to nib ble on during study hours. PROFESSIONAL IPC The Professional InterFraternity Council will meet at 7 p.m. Thurs day in Roland Parker III in G.M. STUDENT LEGIiiATURE The Siudtnt LtrUture will ret meet this 'Thursday. The time and date of the first meeting of the new semester will be announced in the Daily Tar Heel after ezzszs.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 16, 1963, edition 1
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