T7.N.C. Library
Serials Dept.
Box 870
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(See Story on Page 4)
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Today's Weather
1 Variable cloudiness and cooler.
Parade Edition
Offices in Graham Memorial
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1963
United Press International Service
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A WORKMAN puts the finishing touches on a
giant Christmas star, placed yesterday afternoon
on the top of the Morehead Planetarium. The
Violence-Torn Venezuela
Calls For Cuban Blockade
CARACAS (UPI) President
Romulo Betancourt called Tues
day for an air naval block
ade of Communist Cuba to pre
vent it from exporting arms and
revolution , -
Betancourfs call for hemis
pheric action against Fidel Cas
tro came as new scattered vio
lence flared anew in Venezuela
and President-elect Raul Leoni
awaited official confirmation of
his election to the presidency.
It also coincided with a Wash
ington decision by the Organiza-
NEAR-WINNER
Leonard Victor Huggins Jr.,
part-time instructor in the De
partment of Art has been given
an "Honorable Mention" award
for his oil painting, "Painting
Number 23" in the Fifth Annual
Springs Art Contest and Show in
Columbia, N. C.
The exhibition is limited to ar
tists from the Carolina s and is
sponsored annually in November
by The Springs Cotton Mills.
The six prize-winning entries
and the 25 Honorable Mention
winners will compose a travel
ing exhibit to be shown in the
Springs Building in New York
City for two weeks. The exhibi
tion will then tour the Carolinas
for six months.
Exam Schedule
The time of an examination may no be changed after it has
been fixed in the schedule. Quizzes are not to be given in this
semester on or after Monday, January 13, 1964.
Prior to taking an examination to remove a grade of "Exc.
Abs." or "Cond." a permit must be secured by the student from
the Office of Records and Registration.
All French, German and Spanish courses
No'd 1, 2, 3, 3x & 4 Mon. Jan. 20 8:30 a.m.
All 10:00 a.m. classes on MWF Mon. Jan. 20 2:00 p.m.
All 10:00 a.m. classes on TThS Tues. Jan. 21 8:30 a.m.
All 1:00 and 1:30 p.m. classes on MWF &
Political Sci. 41 Tues. Jan. 21 2:00 p.m.
All 11:00 a.m. classes on MWF Wed. Jan. 22 8:30 a.m.
All 2:00 p.m. classes on TThS & Busi.
Adm. 71 & 72 Wed. Jan. 22 2:00 p.m.
All 3:00 p.m. classes, all classes not other
wise provided for in this schedule &
Astr. 31 Phys 24 Thurs. Jan. 23 8:30 a.m.
All 8:00 a.m. classes on TThS Thurs. Jan. 23 2:00 p.m.
All 12:00 noon classes on MWF Fri. Jan. 24 8:30 a.m.
All 2:00 p.m. classes on MWF & Econ.
61 & 70 Fri. Jan. 24 2:00 p.m.
All 9:00 a.m. classes on TThS Sat. Jan. 25 8:30 a.m.
All 12:00 noon classes on TThS, All Naval
Science and Air Science Sat. Jan. 25 2:00 p.m.
All 9:00 a.m. classes on MWF Mon. Jan. 27 8:30 a.m.
All 1:00 and 1:30 p.m. classes on TThS &
Busi 150 Mon. Jan. 27 2:00 p.m.
All 11:00 a.m. classes on TThS Tues. Jan. 28 8:30 a.m.
All 8: CO a.m. classes on MWF Tues. Jan. 23 2:00 p.m.
Instructors teaching classes scheduled for common examinations
shall request the students in these classes to report to them any
conflict with any other examination not later than December 18.
In case of a conflict, the regularly scheduled exam will take prece
dence over the common exam. (Common exams are indicated by
an asterisk).
Stars-Eye View
tion of American States to in
vstigate Venezuelan charges of
aggression, lodged against Cuba.
The OAS council voted 16-0 to
appoint a five7nation investigat
ing . committee to study t lie"
charges.
Betancourt's call for action
against Cuba was' his second in
a week. The first came after
Venezuelan confirmation of sus
picions that a three-ton ship
ment of arms and munitions
UP To Meet
Next Tuesday
I The University Party will hold
a regular business meeting next
' Tuesday at p.m. in Gerrard
Hall. The highlight of the meeting
will be the election of a new
party chairman to succeed Mike
Chanin.
Other items on the agenda
will be the same as those on the
last scheduled party meeting
t which was postponed, with the
exception that Dean Long will
not speak.
The UP Executive Committee
will meet today at 4 p.m. in the
Grail Room to conduct legislative
interviews for vacant seats in
TM II and IV.
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star symbolizes the new. program currently be
ing given at the planetarium, "Star of "Bethle
hem." Photo by Jim Wallace
found buried on a lonely Vene
zuelan beach last month orgi
nated in Cuba.
Speaking to foreign newsmen
here to cover the elections, Bet
ancourt also- called on all hem
isphere nations to break diplo
matic relations with Cuba. Only
five Brazil, Bolivia, Chile,
Mexico and Uraguay still re
tain such contacts with the Cas
tor regime.
Earlier, in a resumption of
the Cuban-backed terrorist war
against Betancourt, one man
was killed and another wounded
when a bomb-rigged car ex
ploded in the Catia market area.
Tom Gilmore
To Address
YDC Meet
Tom Gilmore, president-elect
of the Young Democratic Clubs
of North Carolina, will be the
featured speaker at the second
fall meeting of the Carolina YDC
Thursday at 8 p.m. in Gerrard
Hall.
Gilmore will outline the YDC's
obligations and responsibilities
in next year's general elections.
The speaker was selected as
one of the three top Young
Democrats in the nation in 1958
and was assistant manager of
Gov. Terry Sanford's Youth
Voters Campaign in 1960.
He served as State YDC or
ganizer for two years and as
president-elect of the Statewide
organization, will direct its ef
forts in next year's important
elections.
Gilmore, a native of Julian in
Guilford County, is a graduate
of North Carolina State Col
lege, holding a degree in horti
culture. His appointment to the State
Board of Agriculture in 1961
marked the first time a man
as young as he was named to
this board.
Details of the YDC National
Convention at Las Vegas, Nev.,
which was postponed from De
cember to February because of
the tragic death of President
Kennedy, will be discussed at
Thursday's meeting.
Carolina club president, Lane
Brown, urged all interested per
sons, club members as well as
non-members, to attend the
meeting.
JACOCKS COLLECTION
American and Old Master prints
from the extensive collection of
Dr. W. P. Jacocks will be on ex
hibit at the Ackland Art Center
from Dec. 5 through Jan. 5.
The Ackland Art Center is open
to the public Tuesdays through
Fridays from 2 to 5 p.m. and
8 to 10 p.m.; Saturdays, 10 a.m.
to 5 pjn.: and Sundays, 2 to 5
p.m. The Center is closed on Mondays.
Labor
or
Gator Bowl Train
Plans are under way to arrange for a special
train to carry Carolina fans to the Gator Bowl,
head cheerleader Tom Gruehn announced today.
If enough interest is shown, the Seaboard
Railroad will add special cars to its train, wThich
will leave Raleigh at 9:15 p.m. Thursday night,
Dec. 26, and arrive in Jacksonville Friday morn
ing. The round-trip cost will be $26.50 per per
son. Both block and individual seats will be sold,
all on day coaches.
All interested persons are asked to call the
student government secretary between 2 and
5 this afternoon. The number is 933-1257. Tell
the secretary how many people are expected to
be in your party.
Mike Lawler, Student Body president, will
meet this afternoon with all dormitory, fraterni
ty and sorority presidents. They will be notifi
ed sometime today of time and place for this
meeting, the purpose of which is to coordinate
groups interested in making the trip.
The 9:15 Thursday evening departure is only
tentative. It is possible that the train could
leave at 6:15 Friday morning (Dec. 27) or 9:50
that night, if the mojority prefers this schedule.
World News Briefs
Administration Pledges Rights Support
WASHINGTON (UPD Presi
dent Johnson Tuesday threw the
full weight of his administration
behind an all-out campaign to
win the earliest possible pas
sage of the late President Ken
nedy's civil rights bill.
- Leaders of Congress, organ
ized labor and the Negro com
munity immediately swung be
hind the President.
FBI Report Indicates Oswald 6 A Loner9
WASHINGTON (UPI) An
FBI report concludes that Lee
Harvey Oswald was a "loner"
who shot and killed President
Kennedy, government sources
said Tuesday.
The report says the President
was hit by two bullets, either of
which would have killed him.
The report is expected to be
submitted to Atty. Gen. Robert
Murder Trial Of Jack Ruby Postponed
DALLAS (UPD The murder
trial of Jack Ruby, who killed
the man accused of assassinat
ing President Kennedy, was
postponed Tuesday until Feb. 3.
Ruby's trial originally was
scheduled to start Monday. But
Dist. Judge Joe B. Brown post
Senate Approves Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
Senate quickly approved a bill
Tuesday to provide an office
staff and Secret Service protec
tion for Mrs. John F. Kennedy.
The measure was sent back to
the House for action on a couple
of minor changes. The House
passed the bill Monday.
The Senate version gives Mrs.
Kennedy an office staff for a
year, free mailing privileges for
life, and Secret Service protec
220 Servicemen Leave Saigon For Home
SAIGON, (UPD Three U.S.
Air Force jet transports flew
220 U.S. military men out of
South Viet Nam toward home
Tuesday.
A fourth plane developed en
gine trouble on Okinawa, end
74 other men were stranded
here until today.
The 294 men are the first of
1,000 U.S. military advisers who
Love Says Johnson
' WASHINGTON (UPI) Gov.
' John Love cf Colorado said
Tuesday that President Johnson
will submit a budget next year
$3 billion less than the one the
late President Kennedy would
have proposed.
Carey Addresses Newman Club
Chieftain Blasts Business
oiis Hirin
1 They pledged solid support for
' swift enactment of what John
' son has described as one of the
greatest tributes that could be
' paid to President Kennedy.
The battle will begin Monday
on Capitol Hill, and the target
will be the Southern-dominated
House Rules Committee, where
the bill is now stalled.
F. Kennedy Wednesday.
By the end of the week it is ex
pected to be forwarded to the
White House and turned over
to a blue-ribbon commission
named by President Johnson to
investigate the assassination.
Sources said the report finds
that both Harvey and Jack
Ruby were acting as individ
uals, not as part of any con
spiracy. poned it after conferences with
Dist. Atty. Henry Wade and de
fense lawyer Tom Howard.
' Neither Wade nor Howard
commented. But it was under
stood that neither was ready
for trial Monday.
For Mrs. Kennedy
tion for herself and her two chil
dren, Caroline and John Jr., for
a year.
In other news, Mrs. Kennedy
witnessed a solemn ceremony
honoring the "exceptional brav
ery" of Secret Service Agent
Clinton J. Hill, who jumped to
her aid at the first sound of gun
fire in Dallas.
The 31-year-old agent received
a gold medal from Treasury Sec
retary Douglas Dillon.
expect to be home for Christ
mas. Two other flights have
been scheduled during the next
nine days.
Military sources here did not
1 take the scheduled 1,000-man
reduction as a sign the war
against the Viet Cong .guerril
las is going better or that the
U.S. military effort is easing
off. A total of 15,500 Americans
remain.
Will Cut Budget
Love quoted Johnson as say
ing such a cut was necessary to
assist in. getting the tax bill
through Congress.
The governor did not know
what the proposed Kennedy bud
get would have been.
: fa'
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M 1
1 )
JAMES B. CAREY, president of the International Union of Elec
trical Workers and an AFL-CIO vice-president, Tuesday night charg
ed that big business and industry have shown a "callous indifference"
toward mass unemployment. Carey was addressing a meeting of the
UNC Newman Club. Photo by Jim Wallace
Personality Tests
Hard To Measure
By PATTY NASH
Moacirpmpnt nf nrsnna1 itv
tests in college admission pro
cedures is almost impossible,
according to Charles Bernard,
director of admissions at UNC.
Bernard agrees with the Col
1 e g e Entrance Examination
Bdard which recently warned
its members that the use of
these tests involves "very seri
ous risks."
"I just don't believe there's
an effective test," he said.
The CEEB feels that the full
conquences of such tests of cre
ativity, motivation and other
characteristics are not yet
known, and that they should not
be used as a basis for admis
sion to college.
The tests also make it possible
for students to lie in reporting
their behavior to their advan
tage, the board stated.
The trustees of the CEEB
said that in many cases school
authorities who don't understand
the meaning of the measurement
Coppers Chase
Campus Crooks
Little progress has been made
by Chapel Hill Police concerning
the rash of petty thievery current
ly plaguing the University commu
nity. Chapel Hill Detective Howard
Pendergraph reported four new
complaints during the Thanks
giving holidays. Clothing was re
ported stolen from the SAE Frat
ernity House, St. Anthony Hall.
Lewis Residence Hall and from
an automobile parked on cam
pus. "Despite warnings not to leave
clothing in parked cars and un
locked rooms, some people insist
on running the risk of having
something stolen," said Pender
graph. "These people cause 90
per cent of the trouble themsel
ves." Pendergraph said the Chapel
Hill Police Department is doing
all it can to halt the larcenies.
"Any suspicious person should be
repcrted right away," the detec
tive said. "We'll need the co-op-eraticn
cf the students if the peo
ple responsible for these thefts
are to be found."
Indifference
scores are given access to per
sonal and private information.
UNC does not use personality
tests in admitting students. In
1962, however, a group of fresh
men were given the "Opinion,
Attitude, and Interest Survey,"
a test which is known to be the
most promising so far in its field.
Motivation of the students was
measured in this attempt to see
if this type of testing is worth
while. The results of the experi
ment are not yet known.
The "Opinion, Attitude, and
Interest Survey" has several ad
vantages over its predecessors.
It is supposedly impossible to
give a premeditated picture of
yourself while taking the test.
The best answers are not ob
vious, as is not the case with
most tests of this type. The
scoring keys are kept only at the
scoring center, so it is impos
sible for unquilified persons to
have access to this secret in
formation. The author of the test, B.enno
G. Fricke. hopes that this test
will soon be used as College
Boards are used, and to the
same extent, according to Dan
Campbell at the Computation
Center.
SSL Interviews
To Begin Today
Interviews and tests for dele
gates and alternates to the State
Student Legislature will be con
ducted today in Roland Parker
2 and 3 in Graham Memorial
from 3 to 5 p.m.
The interviews will run
through Thursday. Graduates
and undergraduates are eligible.
SSL is an annual mock legis
lature of state college and uni
versity students. Resolutions
and bills discussed range from
state and campus to interna
tional affairs.
This year's meeting of SSL
will be in Raleigh Feb. 27-29.
The UNC delegation will pre
sent a primary and an alter
nate resclutioa and will debate
the resolutions presented by
other schools.
Members of this year's selec
tions committee are Darst Mur
phy, Pete Wales, Neal Jack
son and Armistead Maupin.
Labor Loss
Is Cited As
Top Problem
By GARY BLANCHARD
A top U.S. labor leader
charged yesterday that big busi
ness and industry have shown a
"callous indifference" and a "let-em-eat-cake
condescension" to
ward mass unemployment, de
privation and suffering. He warn
ed that this "could very possibly
one day result in big business and
industry being called to account."
"After all," said James B.
Carey, 52, president of the In
ternational Union of Electrical
workers and an AFL-CIO vice
president, "whose fault is it
that the vaunted free enterprise
system doesn't work for millions
of jobless Americans?"
Speaking to the UNC Newman
Club, a Catholic discussion group,
Carey said "serious and drastic
economic measures must be
taken" to solve the nation's un
employment problem, which has
caused "the paradox of proverty
admist plenty."
"Prominent among these meas
ures should be a large public
works program and the establish
ment of a 35-hour week throughout
industry," he said.
Carey, maintaining that two
fifths of the American people
"live in proverty-stricken con
ditions," said 'the right to a job
is a property right" although this
is not recognized as a constitu
ional fact or as a legal precedent.
'If an American in 1963 doesn't
have the right to work, the right
to a job, then what rights does
he have?" Carey asked. "What
rights does he have if he can
not provide a decent home for
his family ... if he cannot give
his children necessary medical
care and educational opportuni
ties?" In a brief interview, Carey
said Monday's Supreme Cort
ruling giving state courts the
right to enforce state laws reg
ulating "agency shop'' labor
union agreements, "will have
limited effects in limited areas
and has mixed blessings.
"Rather than mincing steps,
as the Court did in this deci
sion," he added, "I would pre
fer that Congress enact legisla
tion to repeal the Taft-IIartly
Act, especially Section 14-B
which gives the states the right
to enact righlr to-work legisla
tion." Carey also said that "Ameri
cans must rid themselves of ir
rational fears of economic plan
ning, implanted by years of Na
tional Association of Manufac
turers and Chamber of Com
merce propaganda.
"Essentially what we have now
is a planless society and a plan
less economy, and planlessness
has brought us to our state of
four postwar recessions, six mil
lion seemingly permanently un
employed, and 77 million impov
erished and deprived.
"We must learn that economic
planning thoroughly compatible
with democracy and freedom,
and that actually the greatest
danger to freedom is mass un
employment, millions of men
and women suffering enforced
idleness and economic hard
ship. "Government must play its
role," he said, "with all other
human institutions, in taking
mankind's part in seeking the
eradication of proverty and
economic misery, in elevating
the living standards and thus
the dignity of ell God's child
ren." Tracing the development of
organized labor, Carey cited
three papal encyclicals with
playing a major role in bringing
about recognition of "the rights
and obligations of workers in
the modern world.
' "First was Pope Leo XIII's
Rerum No varum in 1331," he
said, "and 40 years later Pope
Pius XI's Quadregesimo Anno.
' Finally, two years ago. Pope
John XXl II gave us the epochal
Mater and Magistra."