1 1 1
U.N.C Library
Serials Dept.
Box S70
Ctmpel Hill, N.C,
SEE STORY PAGE FOUR
i. C Stale Fair
The N. C. State Fair featarcs
a variety of races pigeons at 2
p.m., harness horses at 2:10 and
ponies at 4:30 today in Raleigh.
SP Newspaper
For editorial comment on the
Student Party's new campus
newspaper, see edits page two.
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Founded Feb. 23, 1893
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1964
Associated Press Wire Service
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Cards 59 Yanks 2 In Ten
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RUSSIANS LAUNCH SPACESHIP
Three-Man Vehicle
Hurled Into Orbit
MOSCOW (AP) Riding a pow
erful new rocket, a Soviet space
ship with pilot, doctor and scien
tist aboard was hurled into orbit
Monday for a long flight, the Rus
sians announced. But usually re
r liable sources said the space ship
may stay up only two days.
The world s first space ship to
carry more than one man, the
Voskhod (Sunrise) was whizzing
around the Earth every 90.1 min
utes in a cigar-shaped orbit
110 miles above the earth to a
maximum of 255 miles.
Soviet announcements said the
flight, the first manned one
launched by the Russians since
June of 1963, was to test the
stresses and strains on man dur-
ing a long flight.
The Commander is Col. Vladi-
mir Komarov, 37, an engineer
and fighter pilot. Doctor Boris
Yegorov, 27, is ' : to check the
flight's effect on Komarov. The
scientist, Konstantin E. Feoktis
tovs, 38, an engineer, speciality
was not disclosed.
I'hey told Premier Khrushchev
by radio that they felt fine and
everything was going according
to plan. "Fm very happy,"
( Khrushchev replied, and promis
ed them a big welcome when
they landed.
"Sunrise" was sent aloft at
10:30 a'.m. Moscow time (2:30
a.m. EST) by "a new powerful
launch vehicle," an official an
nouncement proclaimed. -
G The various announcements
gave no clue to the weight of the
three-passenger vehicle. Viewers,
vho watched " taped television
easts from the space ship saw
the men dimly but could get no
idea of the cabin's size.
s A booster rocket apparently
was more powerful than the U.S.
Saturn 1 but with less thrust than
the Saturn 5, still being develop
ed, was used.
Informants said they did "not
expect the three crewmen to try
, to leave the satellite for experi-
mental floating around in space.
ZINC Student-Pilot
Faces Trial Today
UNC medical student Ted Rog
ers will appear in Chapel Hill
.Recorder's Court today on char
ges of violating anti-noise ordin
ances. His appearance in Carr
boro's Mayor's Court to face a
similar charge in that city has
-.been rescheduled for Oct. 19.
Rogers allegedly flew his air-
plane over both towns on recent
Saturday afternoons broadcasting
advertisements. He was arrest
ed Oct. 3 after landing at Horace
Williams Airport and was charg
ed with violating, the Chapel
Man Charged
With Attack
On UNC Coed
A Recorder's Court hearing is
scheduled tcday for a 23-year-old
Farrington man accused of , at
tacking a UNC coed Sunday night
on Columbia Street near Franklin
Street intersection.
. Charged by police with assault
v;ith intent to ravish is Homer
W. Morrow. He was being held
in city jail yesterday in lieu of
$1,000 bond.
Police said Morrow attacked
the coed, a graduate student,
.near Ackland Art Gallery, about
:45 p.m. . ,
The woman told police that
Morrow was walking in front of
her at a slow pace. As she grad
- ually overtook the man, he asked
. her for something her pocket
" book she thought.
She refused and Morrow pulled
a toy pistol from his pocket and
grabbed her around the neck,
.police said.
The coed screamed and caught
the attention of George Prilla
' -man, a Chapel Hill High School
:; student who was standing near
, by. fr Prillaman rushed to the
scene and grabbed Morrow, twist
'ing his arm behind his back, po
lice said.
Prillaman subdued Morrow,
took him to a nearby service sta
- ' - cui.feu r cuice.
Neither were they expected to try
to make any significant change
in the space ship's elliptical or
bit. Official confirmation of these
points was unavailable. Nor was
there elaboration of an announce
ment referring to "a long
flight." The longest previous
Soviet manned space flight was
five days.
The launching was well ahead
of the plans being developed in
the United States for the race to
the moon. The United States ex
pects to orbit a two-man vehicle
atr next year.
Campus Talk
By Wallace
Is Uncertain
Plans for a campus speech by
Alabama Gov. George Wallace
are still pending, according to
Carolina Forum Co Chairman
Bill Schwartz.
Schwartz denied reports that
Wallace would definitely speak on
campus sometime in November.
Bill Jones, Wallace's press sec
retary, turned , down an Oct. 22
date for Wallace's speech be
cause the University did not have
a large enough hall to accommo
date the expected crowd.
The Forum has asked the Gov
ernors aides to set a date for the
speech sometime ' in November,
but no reply has been received.
"We've made every effort to
cooperate with Gov. Wallace's
office to schedule him as a speak
er this year," Schwartz said.
Other Forum speakers this
year will include economist and
former ambassador to India John
Kenneth Galbraith on April 8,
and Playboy magazine publisher
Hugh Hefner on April 22.
Hill ordinance. Later Carrboro
brought a similar charge against
him.
Through his attorney, William
Stewart of Chapel Hill, Rogers is
sued the following statement: Be
fore flying his plane (Air Com
mercial Advertising Co.) the first
time, he investigated and was in
formed that broadcasting from a
plane was legal. He was not
aware of the amendment to 'the
ordinance when he flew his plane
the third time. Now, being aware
of the amended ordinance, he
does not intend to fly the plane to
broadcast. His intention in fly
ing the plane in the first place
was to provide a source of reve
nue, to help pay his way through
med school.
Carrboro Mayor C. T. Elling
ton, who presides at Mayor's
Court, said he had not decided,
in light of Rogers' statement,
whether to impose a penalty
when Rogers appeared before
him on Monday.
Wrhether a penalty actually will
be imposed on Rogers in Chapel
Hill Recorder's Court also re
mains to be' seen.
Student Party Ends
Election Dispute
A disputed election was finally
settled Sunday night by the Stu
dent Party at its weekly meet
ing. Bob Wilson defeated Alvin Tyn
dall, 33-18, for the party's Policy
Vice-Chairman post in the spe
cial election. Wilson repeated
his victory of two weeks ago,
when he edged Tyndall, 24-21.
. A special election was called
by Wilson after it was revealed
several votes were invalid.
In other action, the party form
ed a committee to investigate
faulty vending machines in resi
dence halls, and formally set
dates for the fall nominating con
vention. It will be held next Sun
day and Monday nights.
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Organist Kr enter
Recital Tonight
Dr. Rudolph Kremer, accom
plished organist and new mem
ber of the UNC Music Depart
ment, will be presented in a
free recital tonight at 8 in Hill
Hall Auditorium. Featured on
the program will be Three Fan
tasies for Organ, which Kremer
himself composed.
This will be the second pro
gram in the Tuesday Evening
Concert Series.
Other numbers on the program
will be "Voluntary in G Major"
by John Stanley; "Toccata XI"
by Alessandro Scarlatti; Canonic
Variations on the Chorale "From
Heaven Above to Earth I Come,"
and "Prelude and Fugue in G
Major" by J. S. Bach; "Chorale
in B Minor" by Cesar Franck;
and "Sonatine for Pedals Alone"
by Vincent Persichetti.
Dr. Kremer attended Curtis In
stitute of Music in Philadelphia,
where he studied with Alexander
McCurdy. After graduation, he
was awarded a Fulbright Schol
arship, which enabled him to
study at the Academy of Music in
Vienna under Anton Heiller.
After a tour of duty in the Arm
ed Services, he enrolled in Wash-.
ington University in St. Louis,
where he received the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy in Musico
logy. . W .. -,,. ; .,. '..
- Prior to coming here this fall,
he was professor of organ and
theory at Cornell University.
Playmaker Tickets
Go On Sale Today
, Tickets will go on sale this
morning for the opening night
performance of the Carolina
Playmakers production of "My
Fair Lady." Available m Y
Court and at the Playmakers
Business Office in Abernethy
Hall, these half-priced tickets are
good for the Friday, Oct. 23, per
formance only, and are limited
to UNC students and their dates.
"My Fair Lady," the success
ful Lerner and Loewe adaptation
of Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion,"
is being directed by Thomas M.
Patterson. Foster Fitz-Simon is
choreographer, and Charles Hor
ton serves as musical director.
The cast includes Peggy Jones
as Eliza Doolittle, John Whitty as
Prof. Henry Higgins, Graham
Pollock as Colonel Pickering,
Fred Cook as Alfred P. Doolittle,
Ann West as Mrs. Pierce, and
Creed Freeman as Freddie Eyns-ford-HUl.
Concert Tickets
Still Available
Tickets lor Wednesday night's
Odetta concert will go on sale
today to the public at the infor
mation desk in GM for $2.50.
Some 600 student tickets are still
available at 50 cents each and
$1 for date tickets.
Odetta, whose rich contralto
has contributed much to contem
porary folk singing, will appear
tomorrow night at 8 in Memorial
Hall. She is one of today's most
sought-after singers and has been
enthusiastically received abroad.
Combining the plaintive songs
of the deep South with folk mu
sic and blues, Odetta weaves a
varied and versatile program.
She has recorded albums for
Tradition, Vanguard, and River
side, and is presently appearing
under the RCA label.
Duke Music Series
Will Begin Tonight
The 1964 "Evenings With Iain
Ilamiltcn," a series of musical
discussion-recital sessions by the
Duke University Department of
Music and the Mary Duke Biddle
Foundation, will open tonight.
At 8:15, Hamilton, British com-poser-in-residence
at Duke, will
lecture on "New Dimensions in
Music: The Work of Karlheinz
Stockhausen."
The first, of the 1964-65 series
will introduce discussions of such
new musical fields as electronic
music and musique concrete
"the inclusion of any sound in a
work, including pure noise, as
well as vital " new developments
in the dimension of time."
The lectures are open to the
public without charge.
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.X '
LEADING THE" PROCESSI01rretery of V
State . Dean Rusk and " University President Wil
liam Friday." The be robed educators here pause
Old Friends And Memories
Greet Rusk On UNC Visit
By MICKEY BLACKWELL
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
was puffing intermittently on a
non-filter cigarette. Joining him
was University of North Caro
lina President William C. Fri
day, who had discarded his
filter cigarette for a short black
pipe.
They were huddled in a corner
of Chancellor Paul Sharp's of
fice, awaiting the start of Uni
versity Day ceremonies.
"This visit here today is just
like a homecoming for me,"
Rusk said. "It's been about a
year since I've seen my old
classmate "Spec" Caldwell.
J. R. (Spec) Caldwell and
Rusk were classmates at David
son College where Rusk gradu
ated in 1931. They were both
members of Kappa Alpha frater
nity and studied together much
of the time they were at David
son. Caldwell now teaches in
the UNC history department.
Many of Rusk's visits to
North Carolina are return trips
to his old alma mater.
"I'm on the board of visiting
trustees at Davidson College,"
Rusk said. "I try to get back
when I can, and I aso like to
drop in at other places through
out the state whenever possible."
The Dean Rusk you see in
person bears little resemblance
to the Dean Rusk you see on
television. For one thing, he's
much taller than you might
think.
"Many people tell me that,"
Rusk said. "Television viewers
very seldom see me while I'm
standing . ; . I guess that might
be part of the reason."
Rusk, is a meticulous and
conservative dresser. Monday he"
It Happens Every Birthday
Seldom has the University of
North Carolina celebrated its
birthday without something hap
pening that isn't included in the
program.
. Monday's University Day cere
monies were no exception.
The principal speaker. Secre
tary of State Dean Rusk, didn't
forget a thing when he left to re
turn to Washington.
But bis wife did.
Warns
Proinet Nuclear
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was wearing a navy blue suit
and blue striped tie, one of his
favorite outfits.
There were no rings on either
hand, and only occasionally
could you see the gold watch
tucked under his left shirt
sleeve. '
But you didn't have to look
hard to notice the abundance of
freckles on his face and neck.
In an informal gathering, Rusk
seldom wears his brown and
black frame glasses. But when
he's on the stage making a
speech, he very seldom takes
them . off.
The first impression of Dean
Rusk is an impression of dignity.
He stands erect at all times,
usually with both hands in his
pockets or crossed in front of
him.
Periodically he toys with his
chin with his riht hand while
staring into space as if think
ing about Viet Nam or Cuba or
Red China.
But it was obvious to everyone
around on this sunny Monday
miorning that Dean Rusk, if
. only for a matter of three hours,
had left these worries behind
him at his State Department
desk.
During the past four years,
Rusk, along with the late Presi
dent Kennedy and President
Johnson have faced what Rusk
terms "several major wTorld
crisis." " And Rusk is quick to
cite the Crnan Crisis Missile as
vthe most far-reaching.-
"I think the Cuban Missile
Crisis is . something unique,"
Rusk said.
"This was a time when we
had to look operationally at a
nuclear possibility. No other
She forgot her hat a dainty
little thing of beige velvet trim
med in black.
What to do with the hat of the
wife of the Secretary of State
posed quite a problem for Uni
versity officials.
"Let's radio ahead and have
them hold the plane," volunteer
ed UNC President William C. Fri
day. Everyone agreed on this
Continued on Page 3)
)
between South Building and Memorial Hall, where
Dean Rusk spoke on "Nature and Man.".
.Photo by Jock Lauterer.
president has had to face such a
possibility. No other country has
had to face such a possibility.
"In the most literal sense,
this was a unique experience."
It wras time for Rusk to don
his robe and join the academic
procession to Memorial Hall.
But he couldn't seem to find
the front of the robe.
"Who's responsible for these
things?" Rusk asked as he
laughed out loud. Quickly, an
aide helped the Secretary with
his robe.
"Say, how's everything over at
Woman's College?" Rusk asked
a bystander.
"Well, it's coeducational now
and they've changed the name
to the University of North Caro
lina at Greensboro," came the
reply.
"That's fine," Rusk said. "But
there's a lot to be said for a
girls' school. I met my wife at
one. As a matter of fact she
was one of my students when I
was teaching at Mills College in
Oakland, California.
"But Greensboro has some
fine memories. I worked two
summers in a bank there. It
folded up during the depression.
But I don't take any credit for
that."
Sharp Speaks
Here Tonight
Chancellor Paul F. Sharp will
speak tonight at 8:30 in the Nur
ses' Dorm lounge on the relation
ship between the chancellor and
students, sponsored by the YWCA
Dorm Speakers Program.
The availability of the Carolina
Coed for social events will be
discussed by a panel Thursday
right in Ehringhaus Green Room.
The panel will includ two coeds
End two men.
The speakers program may
eventually establish a pool of
speakers to rotate among the
reven residence college areas.
Only Ehringhaus and Nurses
Dorms are now in the program.
However, Committee Chairman
Sandy Hobgood hopes to extend
the program to several mere
residence' halls by next semester.
It is expected to involve most
residence halls by next fall.
y .Action
University Marks
1 71st Anniversary
By JOEL BULKLEY
Secretary of State Dean Rusk cautioned against any
irresponsible act that might trigger a nuclear war dur
ing ceremonies here Monday marking the University's
171st birthday.
Rusk, who received an honorary doctor of laws de
gree, declared "We and our allies are determined to deter
and defeat aggression.
"At the same time," he said, "we search for agree
ments with our adversaries to
control and limit crisis.
"This is done," he warned,"
to reduce the danger of thermo
nuclear war from miscalcula
tion or misunderstanding. Nu-'
clear war is tNe easiest thing in
the world to think about. It may
be only five minutes away."
In an apparent reference to
Republican presidential nomi
nee Barry Goldwater, Rusk
warned that with war so close
"we cannot have carelessness,
misunderstanding or glandular
action." Rusk has frequently
criticized the Arizona Senator
for his views on U.S. foreign
and defense policies.
"We must try to reach even
small agreements with our ad
versaries to turn down the arms
race," he said. "For an accum
ulating sum of small agreements
can move the world closer to
peace."
Rusk, whose speech was billed
as a major foreign policy ad
dress by University officials, re
ceived a standing ovation from
the 1,700 persons who jammed
Memorial Hall yesterday morn
ing. An estimated 2,000 others
listened outside.
The Secretary of State com
plimented the Russians on yes
terday's space achievement, but
added that America must not let
such undertakings "become a
monopoly of those who might
destroy our freedom."
He suggested that the "hot
line" of communication between
Moscow and Washington "may
be only the prelude to interna
tional consultations by tele
vision." . -
Rusk said the Soviet Union's
' 'accomplishment in orbitting a
space ship with three men
aboard "is another very sub
stantial achievement in space."
"I know all Americans" join
in the compliment, he told stu
dents and faculty members at
ceremonies celebrating the
birthday cf the oldest state uni-
Continued on Page 3
Sec. Of State
ft
if
war
Hon. Degrees
Go To Three
In Ceremony
The University yesterday con
ferred honorary degrees on the
U. S. Secretary of State, a world
famous scholar of Latin litera
ture and retired professor of Eng
lish. The citation to Dean Rusk read
in part, "he has, by word and
action, displayed those qualities
of statesmanship which will for
ever place his name among the
great Secretaries of State in the
history of this republic."
Dr. Berthold Louis Ullman, Ken
an Professor Emeritus of Clas
sics here, was recognized for "his
contributions to the humanities
and to the fame of this Univer
sity." Ullman, who was chairman of
the UNC department of classics
from 1944 to 1959, was called "a
living example of the virtues of
the great Roman writers he so
eloquently portrayed."
Dr. Kemp Malone, Johns Hop
kins professor of English from
1924 to 1956, was cited as "an in
spiring example by his sound
scholarship, unflagging energy,
and total dedication to the study
o our linguistic and literary her
itage." Chancellor Paul Sharp presided
over the ceremonies, as Rusk
vas awarded the honorary Doc
tor of Laws degree and Ullman
and Malone received honorary
Doctor of Letters degrees.
ACCADEMIC AFFAIRS
COMMITTEE
The Academic Affairs Commit
tee will meet today at A: SO p.m.
in the Grail Room of Graham
Memorial.
Rusk Speaks
Photo by Jock Lauterer