IC. Library trials Dept. apei HiU. N.C." Infra mff Offices in Graham Memorial CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY. OCTOBER 27, 1963 United Press International Service - rr ;. .' I'i J l! i yVr ' " i jKen Willard Bursts For Three Yards And North Carolina's star halfback (40) drives way into South Carolina end zone with one minute, 48 seconds left in the game at Columbia yesterday. . Willard just made it past efforts of Gamecocks' Pete DiVenere (34) and Lide Huggins (41) for only score in tense Carolina clash, won by UNC, 7-0. John Hammett (under Willard) Underground Blast - " --.. - -s - - S , ( . , f To Aid Test Bah FALLON, Nev. (UPI) The United States exploded a 12 kiloton nuclear device deep un der the desert floor Saturday in an unspectacular but sophis ticated experiment aimed at giving scientists the know-how to police a full test ban treaty. Packing the -wallop of 12,000 tons of TNT, the device was triggered at 1 p.m. EDT at the bottom of . "butonhook" shaft 1,200 feet underground. .The ground directly above the shot point heaved momen tarily and .clouds df surface dust billowed 100 feet in the air. A small plume of smoke rose from one of the shafts. Seconds later there was a prolonged rumbling akin to distant thun der. . ORGAN RECITAL Robert Triplett, acting UNC organist, will present an organ recital Tuesday, October 29, at 8 p.m. in Hill Music Hall. The recital will mark Triplett's first public recital in Chapel Hill. His program will be the "Dia logue sur les Grands Jeux" by Clerambault; four organ choral preludes by Bach and Brahms; the Prelude and Fugue in D Major by Bach; Pastoral by Roger-Du-casse; Arabesque sur les flutes by Langlais; Choralpartita uber "Lo den Herren" by Ahrens; and a selection from the Symphonic Passion for organ by Dupre. NEED A JOB? The following companies will visit the campus the week of Oct. 28 - Nov. 1 for employment interviews: Monday Hooker Chemical Corp.; Kleeb and Bullard, CPA's; Southern Dyestuff Co. Divi sion of Martin Marietta Corp.; U. S. Treasury Dept. Intern al Revenue Service. Tuesday Union Bag-Camp Paper Corp.; Bureau of the Cen sus; Furman University; Allied Chemical Corp.; U. S. Army Medical Corps. Wednesday American Enka Corp.; American Smelting & Re fining Co.; Lehigh Portland Ce ment Co.; The National Cash Register Co.; Food and Drug Administration. Thursday Rohm & Haas Co.; Sinclair Research, Inc.; U. S. General Accounting Office. Friday Ingersoll-Rand Co.; U. S. Naval Ordnance Labora tory; California Packing Sales Co.; Marbon Chemical Division of Borg-Warner; Sonoco Pro ducts Co. Seniors and graduate' students desiring interviews should regis ter with the Placement Service, 204 Gardner Hall. The bomb hollowed out a bub ble in the ground approximately 170 feet in diameter, the walls of which were "coated with molten rock. The initial shock pinched shut the walls of the "J" shaped shaft leading to the blast cham ber, sealing it off before radio active gasses and debris could reach the surface. Newsmen stationed atop a mountain 8,000 feet from Ground Zero felt a distinct motion as the shock waves rippled . from the blast. Seismologists hoped this mo tion will provide the key to pin pointing sub-surface atomic de tonations at great distances in other parts of the world. Reporters Gather Here Next Month Newspaper reporters and spec ial writers who cover courts and trials in North Carolina will at tend . a special "Press Court room Reporting Seminar" at UNC Nov. 7 to 9. The Institute of Government will offer three days of lectures, demonstrations and discussion of court procedures. Reporters from daily and weekly newspap ers of the state' will attend. Elmer Oettinger, assistant di rector of the Institute of Gov ernment, will direct the sem inar. Co-sponsor is the N. C. Press Association. John Sanders, director of the Institute of Government, will speak on the opening day of the seminar on facets of law and press relations in regard to courtroom procedures. Speakers and panel members include Superior Court Judge Hamilton Hobgood, Louisburg; attorney Irving E. Carlyle of Winston-Salem; William Lassi ter, of Raleigh; lawyer for the N. C. Press Assn., and E. Mau rice Braswell of Fayetteville, at torney. Newspaper participants in clude Sam Ragan, executive ed itor of the News and Observer in Raleigh; Mrs. Elizabeth Swindell, of the Wilson Times, president of the N. C. Press Assn., and other editors to be announced. University Law School faculty members who will speak are John W. Scott and James W. Christopher. Prof. John Adams of the School of Journalism will lead a session. Institute of Government spec Carolina Win and Chris Hanburger (55, rear) threw key blocks for TD which gave UNC sole possession of first place in the At lantic Coast Conference. Victory was Tar Heels' fifth against a single loss and now puts them full game ahead of NC State and Duke, whose game yes terday went to Wolfpack, 21-7 (See Page 4). UPI Telephoto Courtesy of WTVD Newsman To Talk! Edward P. ' Morgan, k,'award winning vABC news commenta tor, will visit UNC on Nov. 1 and 2, lecturing to Radio, Tele vision, and Motion Picture (RTVMP) classes. Morgan will speak to a large class, "Critical Analysis of Ra dio, Television and Motion Pic tures" on Saturday,' Nov. 2, pre ceded by an informal coffee hour in his honor at Swain Hall. The coffee is limited to RTVMP majors. Following the lecture, Morgan will be the guest of Chancellor William B. Ay cock at the pre football luncheon and Georgia UNC football game. Morgan is a long-time friend of the university and visited here last year as one of the principal speakers at the model United National General As sembly for the Middle South. ialists, in addition to Oettinger, are C. E. Hinsdale, Clyde L. Ball, Roddy M. Ligon and Jesse R. James. The sessions begin Thursday, Nov. 7 and conclude Saturday, Nov. 9. Those attending will sit in a body at the UNC-Clemson-football game on Nov. 9. UN Seminar Slots Open Interviews will be held Monday, Oct. 28-Friday, Nov. 1, for the selection of delegates to this year's United Nations Seminar. This seminar, held annually in New York City over the Thanks giving holidays, includes visits to various UN delegations followed by discussions on World Affairs end U. N. activities. The central theme for the 1963 seminar will be "The U.N. and Word Politics." The program will include discussions on the USSR: Sino-Soviet , Relations; France: The Common Market and NATO in the Cold War; India: Sino-In-dian relations; Indonesia and Ma laysia: The role of the U.N. as insuring self-determination; Ghana: The role of smaller na tions in the U.N.; and The Unit ed States: The United Nations and U.S. Foreign Policy. Applications, available in the YM-YWCA office, must be filled out before the time of the inter view. The cost of the trip is $35.00. Probation Given To 2 For Lying Client Student Falsifies Roll; Another Fails To List Car Two students were put on two semester probation by the Men's Council Thursday night for lying. A freshman was found guilty of falsifying a. laboratory class roll. He signed in and out of the class without staying to do any work as his signing implied. He turned himself in upon the urging of his roommate who told him he had committed an Honor Code offense. The other student, a sopho more, was convicted of lying when he recorded that he had no car on his registration card last September. The student was scholastically ineligible to have a car on campus. He turned himself in to an Honor Council member after a campus police officer had told him to report to South Building for parking on campus without a registration sticker. Foundation Backs Race Peace Corps NEW YORK (UPI) A pri vately sponsored peace corps to work on the race relations prob lems in the United States was announced this week by the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation. Adlai E. Stevenson, U. S. am bassador to the United Nations and chairman of the foundation, said that initially, most of the people in the program would come from the Peace Corps be cause of their experience in hu man relations, but that other qualified persons would ' be sought,,for the : job. , j, ilyman H. : Bookbinder, idirec tor, of the foundation, said "19 veterans of two years with tthe Peace Corps already have vol unteered for training- in the pilot program, which will pay - them considerably higher than the Peace Corps. Salary for the workers, who will be called "interns," said Bookbinder, will be $5,000 a Ginny Heading For Atlantic Graveyard Hurricane Ginny swung back to an east-northeast course Sat urday and the weather bureau said the threat to North Carolina was decreasing "with the passing hour." The weather agency said the storm had a forward speed of at least six miles per hour. A northeasterly course would carry the center of the tropical twister toward the cold North Atlantic, the graveyard of hurricanes. Despite the lessening threat, the weather bureau kept gale warn ings up on the southeastern North Carolina coast from Cape Fear to Maneto, and said frequent reconnaissance flights would be made into the hurricane area. British Call Soviet Traicling Threat LONDON (UPI) British experts said Saturday that stepped-up spying by Russian trawlers on allied naval movements could spell danger to the projected mixed-manned nuclear surface force. Russian vessels of an estimated 100-strong Soviet "spyfleet" of trawlers shadowed allied ships during NATO exercises off the coast of Scotland -this week, according to official naval scources. This followed similar tactics by Russian trawlers during NATO naval exercises in the Bay of Biscay last summer. Such spying on allied naval moves was seen here to have deve loped into a "regular feature" of Soviet policy and with little ap parent effort to disguise it. The British say that on latest available information the Russians appear to be improving their techniques all the time. Yugoslav Relatives Hint Reprisals NEW YORK (UPI) The American-Serbian committee charged Saturday that the Yugoslav government has begun reprisals, in cluding arrests, against families of emigres who picketed President Tito here earlier this week. George Vujnovich, chairman df the committee, said the commit tee's attorney, J. Dudley Devine, will ask the state department to protest to the Yugoslav government concerning treatment of the demonstrators' relatives. Vujnovich said the committee has docu mentary evidence to back its charges. Moroccans Launch Sharp Offensive ALGERIA (UPI) Heavily re inforced Moroccan troops launch ed a sharp offensive in the sun scorched Sahara Saturday in an apparent attempt to encircle Al gerian army units on the mineral-rich southwest corner of Al geria. The student said that the man at the registration desk last Sep tember had advised him that if he really needed the car, not to park it on campus and he wouldn't be caught. After receiving his sentence, the boy was told by the Dean of Men's office that he would have to take his car home as soon as possible. Students who are academically ineligible to have cars are or dered to take them home when they are caught, Dean of Men William G. Long said. Those who are allowed to have cars and say so when they regis ter in the fall but do not register the cars, must pay a $5 late regis tration fee. If they say on their registra tion form that they do not have a car when they do, then they are charged with lying. year with the Peace Corps pay ing half and the agency with which the interns work paying the other half. All other expenses, such as travel and training, which he estimated at another $3,500 to $4,000 per man, will be paid by the Peace Corps, Bookbinder said. .Stevenson, who announced the program at a news conference said that the program would go into effect Jan. 1, with 25 in terns.f Another 25 per month are to goV into training so long' as funds :permit, he , added. The , ambassador; ..said i he could, ''not predict" just how many persons eventually would be involved" in the project, because 'of fund considerations. ' : "The . critical need for trained inter-group relations specialists has been identified by the Elea nor Roosevelt Memorial Foun dation as a contribution to the nation's racial crisis," Steven son told newsmen. WORLD NEWS BRIEFS The new drive was reported in the Tindouf area, a desert region rich with iron ore deposits, as both Morocco and Algeria ma neuvered to strike a possible knockout blow that would enable .them to negotiate from strength at a peace conference table. Ford Grant .Regional Hnmaiiitie an For UNC. Duke J - t V"?" - i IK W' UUJLur . -.Vmr v- X 1 5 'IwhuihhiJIW" iimitf'Kin nllf." t Fall Comes UNC Press Does Publishing Feat By PETE IVEY One of the great publishing feats of the 20th century, involv ing the British Museum and the University of North Carolina Press, is the announcement to day that the 378-year-old John White paintings of early Ameri can "Lost Colony" life in the New World will, be issued in color next Spring in two volumes at a total cost of $225 a set. Lambert Davis, Director of the University of North Carolina Press, announced that the first facsimile reproductions ever made of the famous paintings that John White executed on Roa noke Island in 1585 is made pos sible after ten years of colla boration between Chapel Hill and London.. "An important event in the history of Anglo-American cul tural relations," Davis phrased Jonas Won H Run For Governorship CHARLOTTE (UPI) Rep. Charles . Raper Jonas, R-N.C, said Saturday he had rather be a congressman than a guberna torial candidate and thus flung open the race for governor in 1964. Jonas, a congressman for 12 years and the GOP's star Tar Heel vote getter, was consider ed the party's best chance of up setting the Democratic rule that has prevailed for .generations. But the congressman, at a news conference, said he was not in terested. The announcement was long-awaited by the leaders of both parties and it was expected to encourage some GOP hopefuls who had hitherto remained sil ent in awe of Jonas' potential candidacy. Jonas spoke to reporters fol lowing a two-hour, closed door session with some North Caro lina Republican leaders, state Republican Chairman J. Herman nn 1 O 1 ilf fi'imr iilfwiMMiiiiii iiirrinT iHwiiinf irfnH Wt frn- i- vr i r -y-J To Chanel Hill Photo by Jim Wallace the event. "The American Drawings of John White, 1577-1590" is the title. White's drawings were the first pictorial documents of the New World done by an English artist and were the basis for Theodore DeBry's famous engravings of life in the New World which have remained the classic source of graphic information about six teenth century America for three centuries. The reproduction of the paint ings in full color involved the work of French, Dutch and Eng lish craftsmen. The project is supported by the UNC Press with a grant from the Old Dominion Foundation and a loan from the Aubrey Lee Brooks Fund. The British Mu seum was assisted by several foundations. Saxon of Charlotte and State Rep. William Osteen of Guilford County, the GOP minority lead er in the House. He emerged with this state ment: "At the end of the current term I will have completed 12 years in Congress. If I expect to continue in public service it seems to me that I should try to return to Congress where this experiene and influence can best be used for the benefit of the people of the 8th District, our state and nation." No Ambition He added, "I have no higher political ambitions." The Lincolnton lawyer had for months refused to comment on the possibility cf his candidacy. And in recent weeks a "Draft Jonas" campaign had sprung up over the state, which Jonas firm ly asked to be discontinued. aclc $800,000 To Be Split By 2 Schools UNC and Duke University will share an $800,000 grant from the Ford Foundation to set up a Co operative Program in the Hu manities, it was announced to day. Joint announcement of the new program and of receipt of the funds was made by President William C. Friday and Chancellor William B. Aycock of UNC and President Douglas M. Knight of . Duke. Each University will get half the money for the program, which is designed to strengthen humanistic research and scholar ship in the two Universities and in cooperating liberal arts col leges of North and South Caro lina and Virginia. The action of the Ford Foun dation in backing this collective venture marks the first attempt to capitalize on the strength of regional colleges and universities in the humanities, Foundation of ficials said. Previous grants in the humani ties by the Foundation have been nationwide in scope. Under the new program, se lected faculty members from the cooperating liberal arts colleges in the three-state region will be invited to spend a semester or an academic year at either UNC or Duke. These Humanities fel lows, who will come from de partments of history, philosophy, English, classical languages, modern foreign languages, music, art and theater, will carry out studies in association with ap propriate members of the Grad uate School faculties of the two universities. The Fellows will have full use of the humanities research re sources which the two universi ties have developed. Library holdings in these fields here and at Duke are among the strongest in the nation. Officials of UNC and Duke said they plan not only to assist the cooperating liberal arts colleges by providing fellowships for their faculty members, but also hope to provide satisfactory replace ments for these faculty members from among advanced graduate students who have completed most of the requirements for the Ph.D. degree either here or at Duke. In addition, the Cooperative Program will include a s'x-week Institute during the summers of 1964 and 1965. The two Institutes will emphasize research in the Medieval-Renaissance period. The Institute Fellows will be drawn from a somewhat larger geographical area than the Academic-year Fellows. A third feature of the Coopera tive Program will be the utiliza tion of Visiting Humanities Pro fessors at the two universities. These will be outstanding schol ars from other regions of this country and from abroad. They will spend varying periods of time in the two universities: an academic year, a semester, six weeks in the summer, or in some instances two or three weeks. Commenting on the new Coop erative Program, President Knight said: "The fact that we in America now quite properly support scientific research very heavily makes it imperative that we should not lose sight of the fundamental importance of the other major areas of study. In my opinion, this Cooperative Program can contribute signifi cantly to such needed emphasis upon the Humanities." Chancellor Aycock expressed similar enthusiasm for the new program. B