tl.n.C. Library Serials Dept. Box 870 l A PARTY II Weather if. See Edits, Page Two On King, on you Huskies! Seventy Years Of, Editorial Freedom Offices In Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1963 UPI Wire Service 'ST'" g J AFTER shortening his neck and pulling up his collar as much as possible, this Carolina Gentleman finds t'.iat a little too much ci him is still exposed to the cold. Maybe he'll stop for shelter under the Old Well dome. Frenzied Covered By Etadin Moladnu and S. Chloss It started a little after nine o'clock in the morning break fast time or a little later. It just slipped up, sort of unexpected. We had expected rain, and we had gotten a little rain, but the rain just about died -down before ' it be gan. Its effect was very little until the temperature started dropping. It would hit the ground, or your overcoat, or your nose, and it would melt right away. But soon.j the mercury supply dwindled and Papei Negotiations Broken Off BULLETIN NEW YORK (UPI) Mayor Robert F. Wagner said Tuesday publishers and striking printers had broken off last-ditch talks la the prolonged New York news paper strike. Wagner said he would announce Wednesday what his next step would be. NEW YORK ( UPI ) Publishers and striking printers met Tues day in a final effort to come to terms without having to resort to President Kennedys third-party ( formula for ending the 81-day-old New York newspaper blackout. Mayor Robert F. Wagner said he would wait to see sides could settle the dispute by themselves before he adopts the role of an independent third party and recommends a non-binding settlement. Kennedy proposed "independent determination" by a third party as a means of restoring operations at the nine newspapers affected by the strike. Several non-striking unions urged Wagner to take the role. The printers opposed any bind ing settlement as a form of com pulsory arbitration and wanted Wagner to continue as a mediator. The publishers indicated they were discouraged over previous city hall talks and that they wanted a bind ing settlement by some third par ty. Strike leader Bertram Powers, resident of Local 6 of the Inter national TvDOCraphical Union (ITU) said: "We presume thai if we don't reach an agreement ... mat tne mavor will then make public a settlement to the parties, which ill not be binding and to which we do not object." Invitations The Order of the Grail has ex tended the deadline for placing orders for graduation invitations in rrder to allow all seniors to obtain them. Invitations be on sale for the final time Wed nesday from 9 a.m. untK 4 p.m. in Y-Court. j ! s s 4P & fir yA '? ( Mi , ' i ' ' i S ' v J 4, I 7 i "T 3 ' 5 5- -Photo by Jim Wallace ampiis With It It was with us on basis. a permanent (An official calibration at night fall shewed that we had about four- and-a-half inches of It. Weather people said that It would quit by early Wednesday morning, but that more coldness was coming. tA- junior transfer co-ed gleefully exclaimed, "This is' just '. fabulous. I can t believe I m seeing '. It for the first time ia 20 years." To this young lady from Miami, the wea her m Chapel Hdl is quite a mys terious thing. And you know, she's right. It was greeted with enthusiasm by almost everyone, especially Chapel Hill school children who got out of school at 1:15 yesterday and didn't have to report today. But UNC students weren't so lucky. School trudges on through the slosh and slush and many students decided that today was just the day to take the "first of my three cuts." The Lower Quad had its annual fight with It and the Greeks in big fraternity court were battling for all they were worth. Two major meetings were can celled and many committee meet ings were postponed because of the snow. Talks by Mrs. Otelia Conner and state Sen. Charles Strong were called off and the University Par ty was forced to postpone its meet ing. The Chapel Hill police reported i they had the usual rash of phone ' . ,rjdPnt The bothersome; one); according th mainr .traffic " 'H'Tv T trfer truck 4 n C if the two.v. , r,..: "TT-. wnicn naa sua una x siue-wajro yv- sition in the road. Campus police seemed calm about the whole matter and re ported they had no ' unusual re ports about anyone, throwing snow balls at Chancellor Aycock. .Of. J' i ... v- ., f - JUST THINK, in a few more months the azaleas will be blooming, the birds will be singing, and Local NAACP Will Picket Art Theater By MICKEY BLACK WELL The UNC chapter of NAACP vot - ,ed Monday night to co-operate wnen me uurnam youm cnapter! uuiais uieir picKeis againi tne niai- to Theater beginning March 1. Pick ets will be up eac'i week night from 4 to 9 p.m. and on weekends from 1 to 9 p.m. The UNC chapter will j take charge of the pickets each j night from 7 until 8. The Durham youth group said j they decided to picket the Rialto ajter its manager, Miss Maggie Dent, failed to integrate the theater after indicating she would. Both groups said they were not picket ing ,against Miss Dent personally, but against a segregated theater. The Rialto is an art Uieater, cat ering primarily to the university communities. Miss Dent said yesterday, "Picket ing tne Rialto is a senseless action because it cannot possibly get the 'theater opened on a non-racial basis at this time "I always wanted the theater the first one w.th a real art policy in the triangle area to be open to anyone who wanted lb see the' kind of films shown here. .Anyone who knows me at all knows tiat. Un fortunately at the last minute, I had to open it differently. "From most people I have had understanding and tolerance of the situation. I regret that a few others vv.'ll not wait a few short weeks which could see a change in the situation as it now exists. . "Only a closed Rialto can result if the picketing is successful in its c'ni. Picketing She Rialto at this t.me car.r.ot ope a it on an integrat ed basis." Miss Dent said she feels that per sonal feelings have entered the matter, "Since other theaters in Durham, all segregated, are not being picketed, I can only believe ihe real purpose for the picketing is to destroy the Rialto because I accepted a, temporary compromise, to be able to open it at all." But Kellis Parker and Mrs. Mar ion Davis, speaking for the campus chapter of the NAACP said jointly, "We cannot and will not let per sonal feelings creep into our ac tions." Parker added, "As far as Negroes are concerned, the Rialto Theater doesn't exisit, and we are just trying to be treated as human beings." Both the Durham youth chapter and the UNC chapter have stated several times they were not picketing Miss Dent, but were "pick eting to achieve human equality." Count Basie, Tokens To Play For Germans Count Basie and his sixteen-piece jazz orchestra and the folksinging group, the Tokens, will be featured at the Winter Germans Concert here, March 8, Germans Club presi dent, Dexter Rumsey announced yesterday. The concert will be Fri day, March 8 at eight o'clock in Memorial Hall. Basie and his orchestra have re ceived world-wide acclaim as a foremost jazz band. They have play ed before many European audiences and have made several Royal Com mand performances. Recently Basie received the Downbeat magazine award as outstanding jazz musician. The Tokens specialize in doing folksinging numbers. Their record of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" sold three million copies and headed the best-selling list for several months. r -a e life will once yesterday, oh i DC Advises: Duck Snoivballs, Fights The IDC yesterday requested all IDC representatives to "be especi ally careful" of snowball fights during the current snowfall. Prop-! erty damage and personal injury resulting from snowball fights is a cause for action by the IDC court, 'P!aiiv - warnJ nnt tn thrnw snowballs at coeds who might be1 passing bv dnrms 8- mm IT SEEMED there weren't enough umbrellas to go around yes terday, what with all that white stuff and everything coming down Fall Dean's List Counts 218 In A&S Dean J. Carlyle Sittersoa of the College of Arts and Sciences yes terday announced that 218 students had made. the Dean's List for the fall semester including 15 stu dents who achieved a straight A average. . Requirements ' for the Dean's List are that a student take a min imum of 15 semester hours of work and receive grades of B or high er on all work taken. The list is as follows: Newton F. Adkmson r., Psychol ogy; Alice Anne Ainslie, Psychol ogy; Henry Belden Aldridge, Eng lish; Toni Allen, French; Judith Eileen Anapol, Sociology; Floyd Wilson Ahgley Jr., History; Va leria Claire Armstrong, English; Marie Stuart Austin, Math AB; Donna "Bess Bailey, English; Marshall Ballard III, History; Dav id Harned Bamberger, History; George Harlow Bare, Chemistry AB; James Herbert Barnhill, Psy chology; Harry E. Bamneau III, Sociology; Everett Ira Baucom, Chemistry BS; Douglas C. Baz, Economics; Andrew Vincent Beale, Sociol ogy; Daniel Milton (Bell, Econom ics; Robert Beale Beennett, Eng.; George William Bensch, Political Sci.; James Allan Benson, Inter. Stud.; Ira Gilbert .Berlin, Inter. Stud.; William I. Berryhill Jr., Political Sci.; William Wade Bev is, English; Gerald Wayne Blake, Medicine; Garry Francis Blanchard, Politi cal Sci.; Alyce Diane Blanton, English; William Frank Bloom, Medicine; Judith Marion Blythe, English; Dennis Edward Bobrow ske, Inter. Stud.; William Oliver (Continued on page 3) . f 'V. A r it m I y again come to the Arboretum. But well yesterday ... Photo by Jim Wallace G a uiba. Mulligan Gives Jazz Fest At Gerry Mulligan and three members of his famous jazz quartet will appear ia Memorial Hall tonight at 8, sponsored by Graham Memorial. Recently, Mulligan has been acclaimed by "Downbeat" magazine jjas. "the one U S. musician with. with "the bossa "nova and just about a bossa nova album." A latin contemporary said of Mulligan's connection with the bossa nova, "Bossa nova has a jazz influence. Gerry Mulligan had a great influence on us. You could call bossa nova 'cool samba,' and some body did call it that in Brazil. The authentic Negro samba is very primitive. They use maybe 10 percussion instruments and maybe four or five singers. They shout and the music is very hot and won derful. BGssa nova is cool and contained, cn the otlier hand. It tells the story, including the lyrics, trying to be simple and serious and lyrical." "When you cool down the obvious," said JVIulIigan, "you can say more melodically and harmonically. That is the connection between the bossa nova and West Coast jazz. It's kind of wonderful." iMulligan has also been a leader in the .small band movement and a unique small band instrumentation trumpet, trombone, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone, French horn, tuba, piano and drums as well as the integrated, loosely swaying ensembles that were as important as the solos. He also started another upheaval by organizing a pianoless quar tet composed of his baritone sax, a trumpet, bass Xid drums. Al most immediately the piano became unpopular and innumerabla quartets, which attempted the same deceptively simple mobile counter point and soft, melodius movements, sprouted wih every conceiv able combinaion of instruments. Gerry Mulligan first gained acceptance as an arranger, though his fars know him primarily as a baritone saxophonist. He has been writing for big bands since he was 16, and now has 20 years' ex perience at it. In the '40's he wrote for the Claude Tharnhill band. Then in 1949, he and Gil Evan, Miles Davis, and John Lewis organ ized an experimental band. They made a series of single records for Capitol, launching the era of so-called "cool jazz." Mulligan went on to form a series of groups, including a sextet and several quarters the latest revision cf which includes Mulligan on baritcne; Bob Brookmeyer cn trombone; Bill Crow, bass; and Gus Johnson, drums. I.D. cards will be reuired for admission tonight. UNC Glee Club Repays Debt For Recording tl. r.lao fluK Viae rp rain thp slvxi which it Dorrowea Fl mLSZ ri, t last UUI" uluuuii. spruio- ,,,tt said there must have been, the loan, wnicn was normal Glee Club budget, was ; ar-j mTnUnn0 iolSfarecord; c h;rhthe Glee me . nn rprnrnpn last mjiiu , been selling this year. Good response to the record has maae it possiuie u. . i- v.o pxricted 'and toads being found alive after earlier than was expct ana are now above, Jif,rv loan earutr moil "'u.i.- e:n4 ,n aiu fnr a ppn Sales are now above 1,000 reports sales manager Dennis &weene. the record has aireau uiauc . . l i m n Proni- . The Glee Club tcr - pians lis cusiumcuy ee ; According to .u vuui ' , tour wUl J.f trances m Mr-a. fto A. Mi'f-A n I WUr UlUiiafe! Joyner, the ly of appearances r!atsc havp hpn 5et rjf : ,,i tnnr thp club win appear m ue uc f t 0 and another at ment's Tuesday Evenm r 13 feeL It said they had revived FJtiA eaten flies and berries out of will aDoear in the Music depart- selections from noted operas. Of Dean W0i s? unexpected like. Anyway, asyene who ventures out in weather like this had better carry along a buddy, or else he might get lost. Photo by Jim Wallace a, legitimate claim to a connection the, only cne who had not made Scientists Doubt Russian Claim Of Reviving Lizard NEW YCIiX 'UPI) Moscow j Radio reported Tuesday Soviet' geologists had revived two pre-! - in the frozen wastes oi Siberia , - voars Snt a IT S sr'pn-i "5ome floppy scic.:ti:ic observa-i i Dr. Charles ,M. Bogert, of the' 'American Museum of Natural His-' t nlv rxnressed skenticism (at the Mosccw report but also cast doubt" on reports of fish surviving ! a tpr'hein2 frozen in ice for years - -- . toad ound alive after . - - r MTV,rl. caH'were found. I am doub'Jul it wmH i i it- m i v" x i 'iiL. j m. t v i , c,ul,-, l 'a'rd discoveries, Russian scientists Ul UiC giuci iau iii. - . believe -t may te posible to pn m?n x ion2 ,Dace flights -- - w i , Me frozen in a state of ana - - bi5is. or suspended anination. broadcast Menied the h- arGS s four-toed tritons and said a derth of 25 .7-J West Is Musk V V r I I i Student Union Gets Backing Of Trustees The Visiting Committee of the University Board of Trustees rec ommended Monday that the trus tees support the construction of student unicw-"building," an - under- SJraduate librarv anW air.fnnHiUnn ing for the Wilson Library at UNC.Ieascs' Kusk said the Present con T I.. , i in ils annual report, ine com should be considered a "high pri ority item among the Capital Im provement needs at the Chapel Hill campus." The Committee """l-"-' said that a student union is "the center and laboratory for the de- velopment of student leadership, and the availabilitv of such train- ing on the Carolina campus hasjrecton- been one of its finest assets through the years." The Committee also urged that the budget request for library pur- poses be appropriated by the Gen eral Assembly. The need for a ully air-conditioned library to promote full use of the library and to protect books and documents from damage and deterioration was cited by the Committee. The Committee commended the University for its efforts to estab- ish a Bachelor of Fine Arts de gree and urged that an "adequate University theatre" and addition al personnel in areas of the per forming and fine arts be supported by the trustees. They endorsed the strengthening of applied science in the existing science departments of UNC. At the conclusion of the report, the Committee said they shared "the quiet but deep concern of the administration, faculty and students that UNC does not have the financial support available to other distinguished Universities." scientists' hands before dying a few weeks later, " 'Triton' is the old name for "It is - an expression tnat ha 11 sriPntHIC CirclPS in hp last 50 or 60 years. A newt is a salamander. All liviig salamanders have four tQes Triton cornes from Greek mytho'egy. "My gues is tnat these lizards ; reported by Moscow either fed nl the excavation or went down a rodent hole. Salamanders arc ac - -ivo right down to the 'reezing poin out ai a ccupie c dg l Ithe permafrost ext but at a ccupie cf oegrees below, t'lat thev die. I d3 not knew where Ithe cermafrest extends where tnevl - --o fW7nr at 13 ft Wn:x rauld estimate by our recent cold snap - - " ' -i - .--v. . here. . a tome salamancJers can ce .rczen tor proi revived, I talked with for prolonged periods and a palentologist at; !i??ch and hs even doubts that fishj can be frozen and restored. So; many of these stories turn out to be based on sloppy scientific ob-j senation." H 1L 1L Soviets Can't Be Accepted On Island HOUSTON, Tex. d.rpi) Sec retary cf blate Dean Rusk said uesday the goal of the Ameri can hemisphere must be to '"re- urn the Luoan people, nicer free eadership, to their rightful place in the American family." Addressing tho Texas Dailc Newspaper Association, Rusk also iaid the administration hopes to work out a multilateral nuclear brce with NATO countries. He aid the U. S. attitude on how it hould be done "will depend in arge part upon the attiirde of ur allies." Reitcratl-ig U. S. policies on Cu- 3a, Kusk said a Marxi.si-enin.st regime there is "incompatible with he cjmn.itmcnto of t le hemis phere aid with the obligations of Cuba itself." "Cuba will not be permitted to use any ot its arms outside of Cuba," Rusk declared. "A Soviet military presence on that island nnot be accepted." "Castro is learning that the path cn which he has embarked has no uture for himself or the Cuban people, except the future of in creasing misery and frustration. "The hemisphere is again un animous that the object must be to return the Cuban people, un der free leadership, to tlieir right ful place in the American family. And policies and actions, taken by many countries throughout the free world, are being directed to that necessary result." As for North Atlantic nuclear de- I centra tion oi nuclear power in - 1,. u0 r 4u rr.,,- t "may not fully meet European re jirements." But for European countries to I I 1 i i r lveiup Pv, nuciear lore-,, nf 6aia' ia increase me nsK of war, make disarmament more Jiff5cult and rob Western defeases Pf lie "unity of strategy and di- ine Ulir3 alternative ,tusK &aiu, I s organize a multilateral nu- Pear Iorcc. . in wnicn tne turo- , :t. . r equably." Nikki Plans Major Speech On Red Policy MOSCOW dJPIi Soviet Pre mier Nikita S. Khrushchev will deliver a major address Wednes day which may contain new warn ings to the West as part of an ap parently hardening Kremlin line. The Soviet Foreign Ministry an nounced that Khrui-hchcv will speak at a pre-election rally open ing in the Kremlin's Palace of Congresses. The new hard line ap peared to be part of Soviet efforts to patch up differences with Com munist China. Soviet Defense Minister Iladion Malinovsky waned la.st week that any attack on Cuba would trig ger World War III and devc-ta'e the United States and it j a I;e. Diplomatic sources said Khrush chev may echo Malinovsky's warn ing now that time apparently has healed any political rounds he may have suffered in the witndra .v- at n( Knvif mits.i!ps frn-n Cuna last October His speech is timed two days after U. S. Ambassador Fov Koh- ier met Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Tnetr d-cu-Kn was .not made public but there .vas speculation it t niched on removal iof Soviet tro-jp from Cuba. S The pretnier is exrcc'ei to a r su?'i ksues ai the njt.ear test r. ta ks. ti c r rancr-crm i i friendship treaty and U. S. nu r!PPr fnrre-, in Europe Thp Pfrh whi'-h w ll h" broad- tw..-. cast ajrewd. will be made to voi- ers from Mcsccw-'j Kalinin e.ec- .... r ' . I t tcrdi district wnere rir.ri.n.r.e is run.nj.ig for deputy t j the Itu- siai Federation Sjrrenc Soviet. RADIO SCHEDULES WUNC-Radio program oulletins a:c now available. Copies may b picked up at the studies in th basement of SwaLn Hall. Copies :nav be e Says