TT.S.C. Library Serials Dapt Box S70 Chapel Hill, IUC. Dellinger See Edits, Page Two y" ?- : -.:-: Weather March weather may get here before March does. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1963 UPI Wire Service Morgan Char Can9 4 I I ges , , :r kf-- ' - i- ' ! ' - -"-I kf. (X-) 4 1 -- Ki.i f t ? -;:;i-:--:V::J: " .: A' : " S iS; -: . ..... V v ,. ' ' ' - i I , 1 -r .Glides, Satan D By STEPHEN N. DENNIS A devil which combines the Sa tan of Michelangelo's "The Last Judgment" and Marcello of "La Dolce Vita" competes for attention nternational Students oar d To By PETE WALES A symposium on international student affairs will be held here April 20, sponsored by the Interna Greeks Admitted To Dorm Council By OWEN BISHOP The Intcrdormitory Council Wed nesday night voted overwhelming ly in favor of an amendment to its by-laws opening 'Council mem bership to members of social fra ternities. The amendment had been consid- cred last tall but failed to get! the two-thirds majority vote neces sary for adoption. The Council reconsidered it this week after the Rules Committee presidents announcing a new ol sUuient legislature suggested charge-card system for .the dorms, "they do so. Under the new system only peo- It was adopted by a vote of 44 pic with charge cards can make For c:-k! 2 Against. j purchases on credit and the cards The IDC by-laws, as amended,' are non-transferable. Anyone mak now require only that a dorm res- ing a purchase, according to Dcar ident nave and maintain a "C" ing, must show both the charge average in order to be eligible for, card and his. ID card. 'Hie system IDC membership. The provision now reads as follows: Any student residing in a Uni- vcrsity dormitory and having at t & : . ' I BEAT DOOK A s:gn ct the UNC-UVA bdketbill se Wcdniday night Uags as a with several Daliesque female nudes in John McCurdy's- fifteen by twenty-one foot mural "Peace," commissioned for the United Na tions Model General Assembly. Hold S tional Students Board. The theme is Challenge and Re sponsc: Issues Facing the Students Today. least a 'C average may be elect cd to any office in his dormitory All elected dormitory officers must reside in the dormitory of their election and maintain a 'C aver age for the duration of office." I'l other action, the Council elect ed Gerry Goodc, President of Ruf f jn, to serve - as IDC vice-president for the remainder of the term Also, IDC Treasurer Lin Dearing announced that he has sent letters to all local merchants and all dorm is ycing msugaieu iu uup oucumv; the problem of unauthorized pic charging things to dorm counts. reminder of the Party tonight at sasgSLlf fm'-m ominatel The mural will be on exhibition in Carroll Hall through Saturday, Feb. 23. It will form the back drop for MGA proceedings and will furnish a symbolic keynote for the: ymposium There will be three speakers, panel discussions and a luncheon during the day. Students will be invited from colleges in Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. "There are three major purposes for the symposium," said Kellis Parker, chairman of the subcom mittee on the symposium: "1.) To give expression to stu dent opinion on the changing role of students and to create a better understanding of the role of stu dents in other countries. "2.) To stimulate an awareness of the profound challenges confront ing students today. "3.) To inspire students to re spond to these challenges." Magnus Gunther, a student here from the Union of South Africa and a former president of the Na tional Union of Students of South Africa, will speak at the luncheon. Dennis Shaul, president of the National Student Association, will speak in the afternoon followed that evening by an address from William Welch, first president oi NSA. Student leaders from all over the world currently studying in the U. S. will fill out the panels. Students from India, Indonesia, Korea and the Congo have already been scheduled. Many of these foreign students have headed major political move peo-.ments in their respective countries ac-;and will speak on the issues and I problems facing students abroad. i Junior Class Beat Dock Combo ilie Homcbte ad. See map pg. 3.' Pbato by Jim Wallace -Photos by Jim Wallace miraJ series of meetings and debates to take place in Carroll Hall this week. McCurdy, son of Dr. Harold G. McCurdy of the UNC Psychology Department, has been working on the painting since early November. Ironically, this worldly satire- is the effort of a major in the philo sophy of religion. McCurdy wasUnd less debate on rocedure and gradailted Irom Duke Univeriitj.' m 1961 with an A.B. in religion and spent last year at Princeton working toward his doctorate. He plans to resume work at Prince ton next year. The painting is bound to be a controversial one during its ex hibition. Intended as a satire and prophecy derived from UN themes, it carries the UN, according to one interpretation, from the chaotic so cial state preceding it, symbolized by non-human devils and "Mar-i tians" in tortured poses, to the idealized and serene figures of the world which UN advocates hope will materialize as a result of the UN's efforts. However, McCurdy himself be lieves that the process in the painting may be interpreted as moving in the opposite direction. Ke admits that the painting is deliberately symbolic, meant to be read in several directions. One of the more interesting fig ures in the painting is a "hump backed buddha" with six hands, two of them grasping a short, fat bomb, two of them plugging his ears with strained fingers, and two accepting money from flank ing sycophants. One of the syco phants is strongly reminiscent of Leon Trotsky. The mouth, eyes, and nose of the central figure were taken from a picture of Spencer Tracy at Marilyn Monroe's funeral. Other figures in this panel are a female skeleton playing Pan pipes and a Swedish female ghoul carrying a gravedigger's shovel and a silk tophat, seated atop a coffin. McCurdy has several interpreta tions for the buddha-like figure. He is not sure whether the figure is plugging his ears to avoid the bickerings of the flanking figures bribing him or because the bomb which he is holding is about to go off. The mural contains three merg ing scenes arranged in a roughly triangular fashion, with two sides and a top. Details of the stylized figures at the top of the mural were taken from pictures in body-building magazines, anatomy textbooks, and the skeleton of the zoology depart ment. The composition of this portion of the mural is taken from the tra dition3l Renaissance form of a Vir gin enthroned with saints. After completing a drooping fig urc cn the crossbeam of a tels phenc pole in the right scene, Mc Curdy spiked a carpet tack through nis Mt thumb while changing the canvas to new stretchers, he said. A focal point of this scene is a ed flower being dropped by a .-ou ig girl onto an obete giant with '.e3d es. The giant is supported y a strained devil with a distend ed tongue. In view ef McCurdy's admission Df the thematic ambiguity in his tainting, students are advised" to view the painting themselves be .ore deciding on its theme and -artiirtir mr-rits. Understand -A- -A- Crisis Increases UN Role According To Affairs Head By PETER VOORHEES In a stuffy and smoke-filled ban- luet room of the Carolina Inn, in a nerferf. . imifatirm fh -oncentior I n hi uvrf 77- "I" , ",vaiuauiC 1,1 Dr Wi ?aJ , TnSL leveI.dlP!omacy'!the solution of international dis- rttofAJSfS? ?m ; PUf CS- el General Assemblv hl i These international civil servants wife ,E f,H nt Mohave teen able to find new modes .noughts about the future of the nf A;c.,cc:nn ,,A United Nations Jordan prefaced his remarks by ;aying that the first condition for my constructive thought must be 'o forget the past. Quoting Khrush hev's speech to the Supreme So viet at the end of the Cuban crisis in November, he called for "a penetrating, scientific approach to the problems . . . facing the peace ful nations of the world." Having stated the need for this approach and the need for an "increase in mutual intelligibility," Dr. Jordan went on to list the contributions and the objectives of the UN to day. Speaking of its contributions to the maintenance of world peace, Jordan made five points. The first and major accomplishment of the UN has been to increase the cli mate for high-level conferences, "whereby states of the world are able to . . . thrash out the prob lems which confront them" on a meaningful and immediate level. In conjunction with this, he made his second point, that there is less therefore more actual discussion of issues, a condition which in tne past had frequently prevented needed high-level discussion. Dr. Jordan then turned to the corps of international civil servants which has grown up with the UN, trusted and respected men owing allegiance not to a national gov-1 Magazine Picks Van Vlaanderen Best Dressed By MARY HARRIS Judee Van Vlaanderen has been selected Carolina's best-dressed coed. She will represent UNC in GLAMOUR magazine's search for the ten best-dressed college girls in America. The national winners will be featured in the magazine's August issue. Miss Van Vlaanderen, a senior irom Ridgewood, N. J., was spon sored by Pi Beta Phi Sorority. First runner-up in the judging kvas Sherry Stone, a junior from Grifton, N. C. sponsored by the Nurses' Dorm. Second runner-up was Gayc Rag'and, a Junior from Jacksonville, Fla. sponsored by Vipha Dcita Pi Sorority. Chosen from 14 contestants, the winners were selected cn the basis of posture, deftness in the use ot .nake-up, appropriateness of dress, jse of colors and accessories, and general good grooming and neat less ot appearance Other contestants and tneir spon will visit cnapei niu itu. ,crs vere Kathryn Algary, Kappa1 interview any students interested m JeKa: Belli Bellamy, West Cciw'jobs on his staff. Any student in form; Kitty Foiil, Kappa Kappa-terested m having ,amma ; I"at Ha'l, Alderman should call c Presbyterian Church . :offii- Q42-.ii .-3. joi-m: Dcnna waitman, cytuter jorm ; Donna Henncssee, hue cad Dorm; Jujy Ogrady, Ir Jelta; Jane Paden, Mcivcr Dorm fancy Frevcs., Chi Omega; -ayior, Aipha Gamma Delta; aad ,andra Welier, L r Cobb Dorm. Judges tor t?ie contest, held Wed nesday afternoon at the Kappa Jeita house. we;e Mrs. Kay Kyer, irs. Barbara Weoo, Mrs. J. M. dexanusr and Dr. F. V. TJing crg. Richard Vinioot introduces e content ;-:i's. i FXAXNING TALK Henry Fa on of the City Flan ging and Transportation Authority .v.U sneak at 2 and 8 p.m. today j3 115 Ackland. His topic will be 'Emerging Methodologies of Trans portation Flannirg." The public s invited. CCF The Carolina Christian Fellow shin will meet at 6 p.m. today upstairs in Lenoir for dinner. A rroim Eihle SUiaY Will IUiivJvv. group Bible study crnment but to the UN. These men have made themselves increasing- ly, recognized as a truly impartial h .i..v,, : I " nunu umcuis the usual pattern of "arrogant as- sertion and counter-assertion" that and impartial world organization, has in the past blocked progress. ! Jordan closed by stating that the This was Jordan's fourth point, and ! "fabric of the international corn closely tied to it was his fifth, 1 munity must be strengthened," so which was the building up and ( that "people could work with people perfecting of expedients to avoid as people and not as representa and contain conflicts by such : tives of a national power." He means as the UN Peace Force. j called for the increase of intcrna Jordan compared this progress, ! tional offices for the purpose of however, to pouring a bucket of water on the burning Westminster Abbey (in reference to his experi ences as a fire marshal during the London blitz). He said the reasons for this were the two main trends in world politics today, the devolu tion of power from Europe to the newly-independent nations of the world which have yet to consoli date their strength and their re lations with the established pow ers. He cited the necessity of this by saying that the only ways pre sently available for the solving of problems was by the imposition of force, the intervention of the UN, or action by responsible regional groups. He predicted that the lat ter course will be used increasingly for the next decade or so, saying that this is what the nations of the Middle East, Africa, and Asia must accomplish for themselves. The second trend he noted was the . increasing concentration of co ercive power, in reference to the nuclear forces of the U. S. and the msSS5SSt.S?5- Campus Briefs ORIENTATION INTERVIEWS Interviews for the 1963 Orienta tion Committee will be held this afternoon. 3-5 p.m., in the Grail Room of GM. Interested students should sign up for the interviews at the information desk m GM. YALE DEAN TO VISIT Mr. Charles Runyon, Associate Dean of the Yale University Law School, will hold interviews here today for all students interested in admission to the Yale Law School next fall. Anyone interested in an inter view should contact Anne Queen at the "Y". PETITE MUSICALE Rene Flachot, a young French cellest. will appear Sunday night ' at 8 p.m. in the Main Loung in GM in a Petite Muoicale. This program is open to the public. JOB INTERVIEWS Mr. John Ensign, director of Camp Hanover in Richmond, Va., -. - - a i l TT11 TTU OO OA in - "" JUNIOR COLLEGE EOWL All groups wishing to participate in the Junior Class College Bowl should contact Woody Harrison by card, at 407 East Rosemary St., or oy pnone, at 963-8215, as soon as possible. ORGANIZATION REPORTS All organizations that wish to -j included in the 1963-64 Student Government budget must send their nrsanization reports to the SG of fices in GM before Monday. GM DARKROOM AP. locker fees for lhe GM dark - occn Icr this semes'cr must fce aid this ueek or ihf lockers will, emptied. READING COURSE Registrations for the reading im provement course for the spring semester will be accepted through April 11 at the Reading Program TTD -k -A- USSR. He said these fortes must be rendered safe for the world and fhat testing must be stopped, both L-u5,e oi us narmiui eitecis ana because a solution mast be reach- ed while the two nations have a i monopoly on the weapons He sug. gested that the U. S. and the USSR should turn their weapons f TTAT .... t. uici w mc uii, muuj mam to war in the hands of a responsible , associating pcaceiui international functions on an internationally rather than a nationally-identified basis. Noting apprehensively the increasing tempo of international affairs, Dr. Jordan praised the UN for its work in the Cuban crisis and pointed out that whereas pre viously diplomatic relations might well have been broken off between the U. S. and USSR at the time when they were most needed, the two governments had continuous and immediate means of communi cation available to them. He fur jther noted that without this factor, war might not have been averted Jordan concluded that "times of crisis can be times of opportuni- a i 1 4-V- .4- i tyY-i4 otherwise not have been accepted will be as the only alternative to . . - ii war. lie ciosea Dy saying inai me UN is the hope for the future of world neace. and that "desperate as the world situation is today, it does have the instruments to change these situations. office in 106 Peabody. Students interested in improving their reading skills should enroll as soon as possible since a mini mum of 30 hours is recommended. A supply fee of two dollars is the only charge. YACK INTERVIEWS The Publications Board will hok interviews for the position of edi- tor of the 1964 Yackety-Yack oi March 5 from 3-5 p.m. in the Grail Room of GM. All interests candidates are urged to see th current editor Louis Legum be fore the interview date. "BEAT DOOK" COMBO PARTY The "Embers" will highlight this weekend's entertainment slate as the "swing for the campus" to nite at 8 at the Homestead. Ad mission prices is $1.00 and setups will be provided. GM INTERVIEWS Interviews for Graham Memorial President for 1963-64 school year will be held Tuesday and Wednes day, Feb. 26 and 27, from 2 to 3:30 p.m. A sign-up sheet will be at the information desk. All appli cants are asked to make appoint ments. SENIOR INVITATIONS Senior Class commencement in vitations will be on sale today from 9-4 in Y-Court. Today is the last day invitations can be obtained. WRC The Women's Residence Council has granted 1:30 a.m. late permis sion for girls attending the Navy and Air Force ROTC Military Ball Saturday. WESLEY FOUNDATION Dinner v ill be served tomght at M W'esiey House at 6 p m. All ! students are invited, but should call 942 - 2152 by 3 p.m. today for reser- vaUcns. The Foundation vm meet, Sunday at 6 p m. in the basement j cf the University Mothodist Church. RELIGIOUS EiriLASUi Tho Rrlicirvic Virmliai,i; Com-: mittee will meet today at 3:30 in Tom Davis' office in Y Build - In-. "H HI Says We Fail To Capitalize On Red Mistakes Americans are not ready and may not be willing to understand the ac:ivities of the Communist camps of Russia and China and the current disarray of the west 2rn alliance, according to Edward ?. .Morgan, ABC commenat&r, in an address to a United Nations Moisl General Assembly meeting here yesterday. ""At precisely the moment v hen the Communist bloc is shuddering with internal upheaval, the west ern allies choose this time to fail cut among themse.ves and the United States finds it.sejf ursab'.e 30 far to devise a pattern c;" lea J Tihip that will cope succossfuT.y .vi.'.i these radically change; cir cumstances." said Morgan. Morgan suggested that action on the home front is needed. "If we cannot force petty despots at home to cede sovereignty to the larger good how can we expect to de velop the flexibility, the credibili ty to devise a partnership with al lies in which certain national rights are ceded to the common good?" Morgan said that the United States in particular and the west- em allies in general are not mak ing the most of "great, shattering and possibly fatal disappointments" which the Communists have suffer ed and are continuing to suffer. 'Morgan emphasized that the Communists have not "added an acre to their empire by open, peaceful means since World War II." He said that any gains of the Communists have been by force I " f wxupyiBS armies." I I KhriKhrnpv c. f 1 1 1 thrpsfrns u: -. from the old and deeply dangerous sore spot ot .Benin to me newer and bothersome boil of Cuba. But the Cubans have not chosen Corn- Jmunism voluntarily.' .Morgan said we can confront Communism I ill VUUd tfllU UK UUCdl VI It VUXS' f j where in the hemisphere with the realism the situation demands." iiv ou00t aiM nu;vi ivuuj siiiyulu realize that the Communist lead ers themselves nave not louna JommunLsm the easy vehicle they hdious - ht it would be for their ride 0 worjd domination. Due to faltering of the long-range objective ot Communism, the Com- nunisU may take "some desperate isk or try to stampede us into some atal act of weakness or other fol- y aod uiis, in tne view ot some houghtful sources in Washington, is precisely why the immediate f u- turc is charged witn danger and dark portent for us," according to .Iorgan. He said that Knrush- jxiev s misadventure into cuoa iast year and its American thwart s "no guarantee against a repe dtion o: some bold, brash Com nuni.st thrust elsewhere." Morgan said that it L the sym bol oi "sovereignty" which Is 'plaguing free men and men itriving to be free at almost -very level of human society." He said that it is this symbol which underlies the struggle with Gen ial de Gaulie and which under lies "the rows in our own local communities" in problems of civil rights, education and public wel .'c.re. Just as de Gaulle is not ready o share sovereignty, "we Ameri cans" are not ready to share it jither, said Morgan. "In iact our nsistencc on control of nuclear .veapons is one of the big lumps .1 the stew of c.ntroveiMCJ with ur aUies. de Gaulle and Diefen ,aker included," said Marfan. He iaid that "Congress exerges a major villain here" and charac terized the them of Congress in operation today as not that of "public service but subservience to senility." He cited misrepresen tation and inflexiDle Congressional seniority as reasons for his charge, and urged a heeng of the "'ma chinery of democracy " by the ac aon or the pecpie. Morgan spoke in Memorial Hall iast nisM as pari of the fmjrdiy UN Model Assembly meet. WUNC RADIO, 91 5 FM Schedule fr Friday cvenir February 22: 6:C0 The Dinner H ur 6:55 N't..? Summary 7:C-Projecl M 8:00 Let's Listen to Opera ! After Opera-Ten O'Clock Report ! Till 10:59 Tne Qu;et Hours 1 10:53 News Headlines