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mm 22l2ii2Grah Memorial CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1963 United Press International Service Va. how Power; WORLD NEWS.; BRIEFS ' - ; To Reca ll i""w..a.-vlwin., .ijj. -.t - - - 4 I lack Spartmns Maul Tar Murders eeiB9 ....n(.,..M. 1 DR. JACQUES HARDRE Dr. Hardre Will Receive High Honor A University professor will re ceive the famed Palmes Acad emique given by the French gov ernment for distinction in French letters. He is Professor of French Jac ques Hardre, of the Department of Romance Languages, honored for his distinction in French af fairs, teaching scholarship, and administration. Dr. Hardre will receive the rank of Chevalier, one of the three ranks conferred by the so ciety. In the near future, a rep resentative of the Cultural At tache of the French Embassy will come to UNC to confer the decoration on Dr. Hardre. The decoration was founded by Napoleon I in 1803, and is given to only a few men throughout the world who have distinguished themselves in French letters. In 1955 the statutes were revised to include three ranks, that of knight or chevalier which Dr. Hardre will receive, the officer, and the commander. Prof. Hardre igi n&tional presi- I of Teachers in French. He has participated widely in academic affairs and is well known for his distinction in French letters. A native of Dinan, France, Dr. Hardre received his Baccalaur eat Sciences-Langues in Paris, his B.A. degree from Guilford College and his M.A. and Ph.D. from UNC. Dr. Hardre joined the UNC faculty in 1945. He has publish ed widely in professional journ als and is a member of the Mod ern Language Assn., the South Atlantic Modern Language Assn., and the Association des Profes seurs Francais en Amerique. SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBERS Dr. Dan H. Martin, internist, of Chapel Hill, and the Rev. Fred Reed, Memorial Hospital chaplain, are members of a Subcommittee on Medicine and Religion of the Ncrth Carolina Medical Society. The subcommittee is planned as nart of a nationwide AMA pro gram to "unite physicians and clergymen in total health care. George Millers At ...mi i in in in 1 1 . ii "" "" "' "" " 5- ;,,.! . . - '"- ' .'..';:';V ; :'"J-'j I r - .. -.i . - -fei :v5:; fciT-ni-iiii l""r'1' ' 11 ' " T GEORGE MASON MILLER , . . High School Grad At 14 Donovan Forecasts CHICAGO (UPI) New York Atty. James Donovan, the man responsible for negotiating the re lease of the Bay of Pigs pris oners, has forecast more Castro type revolutions in Latin Ameri ca. Donovan predicted in a speech to the Executives Club yesterday that the uprisings would be in "worse form" than the Cuban revolution. He said they could break out at any time in Central Elliott Says Integration Hastening WASHINGTON (UPI) Con gressman Carl Elliott of racially torn Alabama said Saturday bombings and rioting "are doing more than anything else to has ten integration" in the Deep South state. Elliott called on Alabamians to "face up to the racial conflict Angels To 'Rush 9 On No, those 21 girls who appeared on campus Thursday wearing blue and white uniforms and high heels hadn't just decided to all dress alike to help beautify the Carolina campus. They were all members of a unique organization at UNC the Angel Flight. The Angels are the sponsor corps of. the AFROTC. Sponsored by the Arnold Air So ciety, the Angel Flight which is a national organization, has three main purposes: to promote inter est in the AFROTC, to learn about the Air P'orce and its func tions and to maintain a hign morale level in the Cadet Corps. During the year the Angels carry out a schedule of social and educational events. Among these are coffee hours in the Cadet Lounge, visits to Pope AFB, the Air Force and Military Balls, the annual Christmas party for needy children, and an Area Conclave. The Angel Flight invites all in terested coeds to go through their selecions program. During the week of Sept. 30 through Oct. 6 Notice The Daily Tar Heel is published daily except Monday in Chapel Hill, N. C, and has offices in Graham Memorial. The editors are Gary Blanchard and David Ethridge, and the Managing Edi tors are Wayne King . and Fred Seely. The Daily Tar Heel dis tributes an average of 8,500 is sues each publication day throughout the school year, and is owned by the student govern ment of the University of North Carolina. The business manager is Art Pearce. More Revolutions and South America if social and economic reforms were not made immediately. He said the Alli ance for Progress program was a "step in the right direction, but inadequate." The only solution to the prob lem, Donovan said, was for Amer ican businessmen to join together to insure a living wage, better health programs, adequate hous ing and education for underdevel oped Latin American nations. with vision, with self-restraint, with sound judgment and with scrupulous dedication' to law and order. "Any other course even just plain indifference will have a disastrous economic, industrial and employment impact for many years to come." Begin Monday nominations will be submitted. To be nominated, see an Angel, AFROTC cadet, or call AFROTC headquarters in Caldwell Annex. The selection process, which will run from Oct. 7 to Oct. 18, consists of the following a re ception for the nominees on Oct. 9, followed by two informal parties. The final decision is made by a five-member board - composed of the AFROTC Cadet Group Commander, the commander of the Arnold Air Society, the com mander of the Angel . Flight, ' th Angel - Flight - Executive -Officer, and the Angel Flight Advisor. YMCA FROSH PROGRAM A ski trip to western North Carolina and a coed tour of New York in the spring are two of the planned features of the YMCA's freshman program. Marshall Bellovin, head of the program, announced yesterday that all freshmen interested in taking part in the program should meet in the Y Building lobby at 7:30 p.m. Monday. The meeting will be held to organize the program and . form a steering committee. VANCE TO BROADCAST UNC Professor Rupert Vance will deliver a lecture, entitled "In ternal Migration and Population Change in the United States," to be broadcast over USIA's Voice of America radio service as part of I a 19-program series on The I Population of the World." By MICKEY BLACK WELL George Mason Miller is a prodigy with a capital P. He: appeared on a nation-wide quiz show when he was 11; lectured in Africa when he was 12; finished high school at 14; spent the following summer at Columbia University; graduated cum laude in His tory from Livingstone College when he was 17. And now at the ripe old age of 18 he's beginning his second year as a. graduate stu dent in Political Science here. While others his age are tak ing Carolina's library orienta tion tour as entering freshmen, Miller is preparing to write his Master's thesis. Yet, being possibly the young est person ever to enter grad uate school here doesn't seem to bother the polite young whiz kid from M cores ville. He's scheduled to receive his MA degree in comparative gov ernment this June. He plans to enter Yale Law School next Sep tember and study civil and con stitutional law. His exceptional talents were recognised early in his life and the decision was noadft to let WASHINGTON (UPI) Joseph Valachi, convict mobster who is spilling the deadly secrets of the underworld, will publicly tell of murders he helped commit for the Cos a Nostra crime cartel, Senate investigators said Satur? day. - Valachi, who turned vengeful informer on ' the syndicate when : he was marked for . death by "boss" Vito Genovese. is expect ed to testify on his first-hand ex perience rin gangland , assassina tion Tuesday when he ' resumes testimony before the Senate in vestigations subcommittee.: The 61-year-old ; veteran of the Cosa Nostra already is under a life sentence for the killing of a fellow prison inmate . whom he mistook as a Cosa Nostra execu tioner. . ' ' During his first . open . testi mony Friday, Valachi matter of facUy acknowledged that as a "soldier" in the crime combine, he had Carried out murder as signments. . - Asked what he had done for the .organization, the 1 husky voiced witness replied: .'Td. go out and kill for 'em." With the crime hearings in a weekend recess Vaalchi returned to the cloistered seclusion of the District of Columbia " jail where he is being held by federal prison authorities. In his testimony, he made it clear that his motive in telling his story nto the subcommittee and the nation, was : "vengeance" against leaders ; of Cosa Nostra who are said to have put a $100 000 price on his head. , Valachi V: testimony ; prompted subcommittee member. Karl E. Muridt,' RS.D.,' to- suggest that prison' authorities crack dqwn on Genovese.' --The Cosa Nostra overlord, Valachi said; not" onljr gave him a "kiss "of death" ; but also ordered the murder of mob ster Tony Anthony; Strollo .Ben der, from an Atlanta prison, cell.. Genovese. has. since been transferred to the federal prison at Leavenworth. Warden J. C. Taylor at Leavenworth reported that - Genovese is hospitalized with a heart condition and high blood pressure; "Indications are that he will never be any better," Taylor added. LEGISLATURE It's legislature time again, and the 50-member body will convene tomorrow night to open their. 33rd session. Bob Spearman, vice-president of the student body, will head the group, which is responsible for the sudent budget, produced by $18 in fees assessed on each stu dent. Meetings are held every Thurs day in the Di-Phi hall in New East. The meeting Monday was called by Speaker Spearman to vote on the dormitory intramural manager program. W on George skip the first grade. His progress was so phenom enal that he also was allowed to skip the fourth grade and parts of the seventh and eighth grades. Now . he is attending classes with graduate students that are from five to 25 years older than he is. And, there are drawbacks to attending classes with those who are much older than himself, George quickly admits. "I'm not as stable as most of the other graduate students are," he says. "I don't ride things through to the end like most of the older . students do. I have to back up and start all over again." As a Negro he is highly aware of the civil rights "revolution". The 145-pound youth, who could well double as a voice and diction teacher, pushed back his large-frame glasses when he spoke of the movement. "I believe," he said, "that nothing will be accomplished by stopping the integration - of schools'. - "I think Governor Wallace of Alabama is doing what he is do ing because of several political promises he made. ' . "The. views that Wallace holds serve only a small part of the population. All he is doing is 0 "3 I s f " - v :-)l!rt":MM""" UNCs Bob Lacey Grabs .... MSU lEubu Ban Def iers NEW YORK (UPI) Four young New 'Yorkers indicted in con nection with the recent illegal visit of 59 students to Cuba are expected to surrender for ar raignment Monday, it was learned Saturday. U.S. attorney Joseph P. Hoey said he had been informed the four would be surrendered by their attorneys. They will be ar raigned the same day in U.S. District Court, he said. The indicted New Yorkers were Lee Levi Laub, 24; Phillip Ab bott Luce, 26, and Stefan Mar tinot, 24, all of whom made the Cuban trip, and Anatol Schlosser, 26, who: did not go but was charged with conspiring to re cruit and arrange for the trip along with others. The indictments were returned by .a federal grand jury Friday, and Federal Judge Walter Bruch hausen issued the bench warrants for their arrests. Convictions could result in as much as 15 years imprisonment O Oil OB nying an education to perfectly innocent children. "The South can truly rise again if jt realizes its resources and if the white and Negro youths combine. But the South cannot rise again as a racist South." George believes the rood to decent treatment for all races will come . through co-operation from everyone concerned. "Right now, the communica tion lines between the races are down. Local officials should take the first steps in mending these lines. "The New South must be an era of partnership between the races. When the Negro 'is giv en what is duly his and when everyone works together through peaceful co-operation, then both races will then indeed be free." The .youth has had many im portant things .happen to him in his short life but the two he remembers most; were w inning $10,000 on a quiz show and visit ing "Ghana in South Africa. ".The. quiz show was 'Giant Steps," George remembers. "It was for children from ages 11 to 17 and the host was Bert Parks. It was very excitins except-when I picked up a cookie to eat and found that it had been sprayed with some kind of wax used for commercial demonstra J 2i s Defender Don Japlinga Had Photo by ind $20,000 fines for the three who took the trip, which was made in defiance of a ban on Cuban travel issued by he U.S. State Department. Ole Miss Negro Fined For Pistol OXFORD, Miss (UPD Cleve McDowell was convicted Saturday of carrying a concealed weapon while he was the only Negro Stu dent at the University of Missis sippi. McDowell said he carried a pistol because the Justice De partment was not protecting him. Justice of the Peace W. J. Jones rejected McDowell's argu ment that he was justified in car rying a loaded .22 caliber pistol on campus because of a fear for his safety. A tions." George's other memorable experience began in Washington when he met Mr. Nkrumah, the minister of Ghana when we were both in Washington." Nkrumah, who was educated in the United States invited young Miller to visit him in Ghana and George happily accepted the invitation. "I lectured on the United Na tions before the Ghanaian As sembly and spoke in several of the elementary schools in the city of Accra," he says. George is quick to tick off the natural advantages he has been blessed with during his short but fruitful life: "I have had a tremendous op portunity, people have been nice to me, my parents don't push me and I try to regulate myself and exercise a good deal of self control." However, studies don't occu py all of George's time. He is an amateur sculptor and painter and collects stamps. He builds model airplanes and ships and has a girl friend named Jane. A former Boy Scout, George's first merit badge gives a good idea of -why the young prodigy' is where he is today: Scholarship. M 4- 25 - Yard Pass No Chance Etadin "Glue Fingers" Moladnu BLOOD NEEDED Ollie Farrar, 59, of. Chapel Hill is urgently in need of 40 pints of blood. : She is currently in Memorial Hospital and can receive any type -of blood. " Blood donors are urged to con tact either the DTH office in GM and leave their name or go im mediately to the hospital. Blood donors must be 21 years or older or have written permis jsion from their parents. Jones fined him $100. The maxi mum penalty under the charge was a $300 fine and three months in jail. "I carried the gun because I had reason to believe my life might be in danger," McDowell testified during the 20-minute trial. McDowell was arrested Mon day by Sheriff Joe Ford after sev eral students saw him drop the pistol while rushing to class. McDowell, who was a law stu dent, testified he was late for the class because he. had visited a Justice Department representa tive in downtown Oxford to plead for Federal protection. He said he had delivered a let ter to the Justice Department ap praising "my safety at the uni versity and in the state of Missis sippi in general, and calling at tention to my vulnerable posi tion.". McDowell also cited a statement by Gov. Ross Barnett "that the state of Mississippi would not pro tect me at the University of Mis sissippi." U. S. Marshals were on cam pus until August, when- Ne gro James Meredith was graduat ed. But none returned last week when McDowell registered for the fall semester. In Washington the Justice Department told United Press International the marshals were here "only to support the court order" in the Meredith case. McDowell's attorney Jack Young, filed an immediate appeal of the conviction to the Lafayette County Circuit Court. Young also revealed McDowell was appealing his expulsion to the State College Board. j McDowell was charged under a statute prohibiting students from carrying concealed weapons with in two miles of their schools. The section does not provide for a defense based on justification. Such a defense would have been possible under the regular statute against carrying concealed weapons. Lopes, Lou Bohich Star In Win By CURRY KIRKPATRICK EAST LANSING, Mich. Michigan State may be one of the Big Ten's weaker sisters this season, but North Carolina wasn't too convinced here Sat urday. The powerful Spartans, tear ing off ground yardage in large and sometimes spectacular chunks, swept by an outclassed UNC team, 31-0, and the Tar Heels could only be relieved it wasn't more. Led by 210-pound fullback Rog er Lopes and kicking-defensive specialist Lou iBcbich, Michigan XwivtWWv.'.vf.'.v.VrtV, . r. ----- UNC MSU First downs 7 21 Yds. Rushing 30 332 Yds. Passing 4 Tl Passes intercepted by 1 3 Fumbles lost 1 1 No. of punts 7 5 Aver, distance punts ..40 42.5 Yds. penaliezd 15 75 North Carolina . Michigen State .0 0 0 00 .7 3 7 1431 Scoring: MSU Lewis, 13 lateral pass from Krzemienski, Bobich, kick. MSU FG Bobich 35. MSU Juday 1 run, Bobich kick. MSU Lopes 76 run, Bobich kick. MSU Proebstle 1 run, Bobich kick. Attendance 60,832. State dominated play throughout . and looked as good, probably bet ter, then last year in the 38-6 rout.r The Spartans scored sensation ally in the first and fourth per iods and in between contained Carolina and its Junior Edge-to-Bob Lacey passing combination almost to a point of nothingness. After swift Sherman ' Lewis had opened the scoring on a pass lateral play in the first period and Bobich had booted a 35- yard field goal in the second, the 60,832 crowd knew it was all over. For, in between the two tallies, Edge-Lacey had assert ed itself, end not only no score, but no real concentrated drive had come of it. An exchange of punts followed MSU's 7-0 first quarter lead, and Carolina found itself on its own 44. On first down, Edge spotted Lacey just over midfield but threw the ball a bit to the big end's right and behind him. With Don Japinga hanging all over him, Lacey turned, jug- " gled the ball with one hand and controlled while racing down field. He eluded three men be fore being brought down on the MSU 30. But this was the only serious imitation of a scoring play UNC was to come up with all after noon. Edge's next attempt was in complete, Eddie Kesler ran for three, and Lewis then batted another pass away from Lacey. UNC faced the fourth end sev en by having Max Chapman at tempt a field goal from the 35. But it was short as 10:07 re mained in the half. About two minutes later, Caro lina got the ball back on the State 46 after holding the Spar tans inside their 30. Lacey again caught a first down pass as he out-danced two men for the ball and got to the 33. But three plays gained nothing, and Edge threw a fourth-and-ten into the arms of MSU's Bobich. Lacey had his man beaten at the 10, but Edge's pass was short and soft. As it turned out, Carolina never again crossed midfield. Michigan State was plagued by penalties on its subsequent series, but Bobich soared a 56 yard punt to the Tar Heel 22. Two plays later, the Spartans had the ball right back when Edge's hook-in to Lacey was knocked high in the air and in tercepted by John Karpinski at UNCs 35. Lopes, who gained a total of 157 yards, cracked two times and got a first at the 27, but Caro lina held, forcing Bobich to dis ( Continued on Page 4) Rog
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 29, 1963, edition 1
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