Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 28, 1964, edition 1 / Page 1
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Harriman Talks Russia Tonight 13 Bos 07Q Freshmen candidates for class offices invade Stacy at 8, Eve rett at 9, and Lewis at 10 to night. Sophomores hit Joyner at 8, Alexander at 9 and Winston at !, and juniors in Avery at 8, Parker at 9 and Teague at 10. Home Stretch Presidential candidates are galloping down the homestretch of the campaign trail. Keep with them daily in DTII wire reports. ?unded Feb. 23, 1893 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1964 Associated Press Wire Service in Mm HARRIMAN viet Changes Feature Under : Secretary , of State for Political Affairs W. Averell Har riman will . address members of. - ' - - - 1 the UNC com- munity at 8 ID night in Me- morial Hall. , He will hold a press confer- ence today at 5:20 p.m. at the Raleigh- Durham Air- port Harri- man will S' ,'W W. A. Harriman speak tonight on the recent changes in the So viet Union power structure which toppled Nikita Khrushchev earlier this month. He will also comment on the Sino-Soviet split and the possible effects the Soviet changeover will have on it. A distinguished elder states man, Harriman has been Gover nor of New York, Ambassador to Great Britain and the Soviet Union, Secretary of Commerce under President Truman, Direc tor of the Mutual Security Agen cy, and State Department Am-bassador-at-Large. Harriman was named by the late President Kennedy to head a special U.S. negotiation team in 1963 which helped, draft and sign the limited nuclear test ban agreement in Moscow. Sponsored by the Carolina Forum, the Harriman address is the highlight of National Issues i-.W.W.WAV.SVW. Issues Week Checklist ' . - ' - - " . -a TODAY 11:50 a.m. Y-Court Democratic rally 8:00 p. m. Carroll Hall '. Averill Harriman speech THURSDAY 11:50 a.m Y-Court Republican rally 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall Richard Staar speech FRIDAY . 8.00 p.m. Memorial Hall Herbert Philbrick, speech 9:00 p.m. Morehead Lounge, CPU discussion with Philbrick MONDAY 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m mock election TUESDAY election returns GM Lounge S Campaign. Trail Shortens PITTSBURGH (AP) President Johnson said last night Sen. Barry Goldwater "has voted to cut out or ; cut down almost every program of common responsi bility for anything." ' " Johnson said Goldwater voted against urban renewal, ' against low income housing, against area redevelopment, .- ;a f ,,tion has voted 25 times in the past CLgcUIKM dlVA I." -"- "But these are things that have helped rebuild Pittsburgh," Johnson said. "They will help . build the great society. And we are for them." The day's first stop was at Boston, a city which loved John F. Kennedy, and Johnson pledged there to follow the example of courage and judgment he credit ed to the assassinated President in the Cuban missile crisis. Lauding Kennedy's judgment after the Cuban showdown, Johnson said "We did not press our victory to try to humiliate the Soviet Union. Instead we seized the chance to move toward , meaningful and lasting settlements w"hich might lessen the danger of war. One of Gthe results was the Test Ban. Treaty." " "He voted against the nuclear bomb test ban agreement. We believe in making .the world safer." Johnson said the most serious issues have been drawn "in our votes and his." In this connection , he listed Goldwater as voting against the Civil Rights Act, the Trade Ex pansion Act, the Mass Transit Bill, the Wilderness Bill, the Anti-poverty Bill: "These are the issues," John son said. ". . . The opposition candidate in this campaign Speech Week, which began last Monday and will continue through the mock presidential election on Nov: 2. Forum Co - Chairman Bill Schwartz praised the office of Governor Terry Sanford and the emocratic National Committee for tneir aid in securinS e Under Secretary for tonight's ap- pea"ce- v, " Although he has been very busy wm recent international developments," Schwartz said, -'Governor Harriman was parti- cuiariy anxious to aaaresstne University community at Chapel Hill." Workshop Set The Carolina Quarterly, under the leadership of Editor Wade Marlette and Associate Editor Norwood Pratt, recently organ ized a writer's workshop to en courage creative writing among students. The workshop is planned to serve as an extension of the English Department's creative writing courses. The group will meet at 8 Wed nesday nights in' Grail Room under the direction of Dave For ster, Bill Happel and Sam Blate. Interested students are invited to bring their work for discussion and criticism. four years against major pro posals which were in the I960 Republican platform and were supported by a majority of Re publican senators." -k it Humphrey, As Election CINCINNATI (AP) Sen. Hu bert H. Humphrey went from Manhattan to the Ohio Valley Tuesday, declaring that the major conclusion - of this campaign is "the American people do not Tvant Barry Goldwater's . finger on the nuclear trigger." "And the American people," he added, "are absolutely correct." The Democratic vice presiden tial nominee banged away at this mushroom cloud theme in speeches in . New York, Charles ton, W. Va., and Cincinnati yes terday just as he has done at practically every stop,' from, street corner rally to campus, in the stretch run of the campaign. "In no area are Sen. Gold water's views more dangerous to the safety and welfare of all Americans to the safety and the welfare of all mindkind," said Humphrey in remarks prepared for a Democratic rally in Cincinnati. British Soothe World Anger Over Tax LONDON (AP) The new Brit ish government responded Tues day to mounting world opposition to the 15 per cent protective tax it slapped on imports. A top cabinet minister Doug las Jay of the Government Board of Trade pledged immediate consultations with Britain's clos est trading partners to head off any resultant damage to their own economies. The new surcharge, imposed on all imports but food and raw ma terials, is intended to narrow the trading gap which results from falling exports and soaring im ports. It went into effect at mid night. Nobody liked it. Some of Brit Viet Nam Border SAIGON, Viet Nam (AP) Rival charges of. hostile intru sions heated up the centuries old frontier dispute between Viet namese and Cambodians Tues day. The enmity complicates South Viet Nam's U.S.-backed war against the Communist Viet Cong. The Saigon defense ministry protested that three Cambodian fighters strafed and bombed a Vietnamese area Monday on the Plain of Reeds, a largely flooded region 85 miles west of Saigon. In Phnom Penh, Cambodia's English Get Tough On Rhodesia LONDON W Britain told Rhodesia Tuesday it will be guil ty of treason and banished from the Commonwealth if it declares itself independent. The white rul ers of the East African territory reacted angrily. Prime Minister Ian Smith of Southern Rhodesia accused the new British Labor Government of breaking an understanding work ed out with the Conservative Gov ernment. He told the Rhodesian Parliament the British want to see African Nationalists lead Sou thern Rhodesia. Southern Rhodesia's High Com missioner (Ambassador) in Lon don said Britain and his country are "rapidly getting to the point LONDON, Ky. (AP) Republican presidential can didate Barry Goldwater stumped in the hills of Tennes see and Kentucky Tuesday before making a last effort to swing crucial Ohio to his side. To thousands standing in autumn's Indian summer at airports in Bristol, Term., and here, the Arizona Senator stepped up his tough-talking at- elected, "He wants' to be crown- tacks on President Johnson. He called Johnson the "most power-hungry man in American Politics," and said the Presi dent didn't just want to be Miller Active Date Nears CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) The Johiison Administration is "cod dling Castro" when firm policies "could seriously cripple the re- gime of this Communist tyrant," Rep. William E. Miller, the Re publican candidate for vice presi dent said Tuesday. In a new attack on President Johnson's foreign policy. Miller asserted that the Administration lacked the will and the leader ship to organize free world na tions into an economic boycott that could "hasten Castro's down fall." The election of Republican Barry Goldwater as President is a vital prerequisite to ending the communist menace in our hemis phere, Miller asserted. The Republican vice presiden tial nominee moved into the Mid west in the second day of a wind-up campaign swing taking him across the country. WORM) . NEWS -BRIEFS' ain's partners in the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) called it a violation of Britain's trading agreement with that or? ganization. West Germany was openly angry. Sweden was perplexed and depressed. Japan feared the con sequences to its overseas trade. Common market and common wealth countries were unhappy too. But pressure on the pound sterling eased slightly on the for eign exchange market and the stock exchange reported rising prices. Whatever the reaction abroad, there seemed to be con fidence at home. Dispute Flares avowedly neutralist government charged South Vietnamese fight ers shot up the village of Am Long Kres Sunday. The regime declared it will respond blow for blow to any further "aggressions" by U.S. and South Vietnamese forces it has accused of attack ing border communities in the hunt for Viet Cong guerrillas. Furthermore, it said that if the hostilities continue it will break relations with the United States and recognize both communist North Viet Nam and the Viet Cong's political agency, the Na tional Liberation Front. of no return." Commissioner Evan Campbell told reporters: "Frank ly, at the moment I cannot see a way out." Southern . Rhodesia is the last remnant of the now dissolved Central African Federation. It is an East African territory of 3.6 million Africans and 221,500 whites under white rule. The British Government, Con servative as well as Laborite. has demanded that the entire population of voting age be allow ed to select a government, as was done in the case of the two other members of the old federaation that achieved independence, Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia, and Nysaland, now Malawi. ed." "He wants total trust, total love, total power, over, your total lives," Goldwater declared, asserting someone should re mind Johnson "Freedom is a gift of God and not from the government no matter who runs it." His audiences shouted, "No," when he asked: "Do. we want raw and naked power and ambition in the White House . . . power strip ped of humility ... common honesty . . . devoid of any morality except the morality of get . . . grab . . . and gifts for the favored few?" Sen. John. Sherman Cooper, R-Ky., in introducing Goldwater, predicted, "Kentucky will go without fail" to the GOP nomi nee. Goldwater said he wanted no mandate, only an "opportunity to prove that we are still wise enough and strong enough to govern ourselves." "Remember," he told his audiences, ."no one but your conscience can check on yu when you get in that voting booth." He offered the voters a choice of himself, a man who "will promise you everything," he cause "I cannot give you everything. Castro Guests Named In 3 Federal Suits Passports Of Former Students Are Sought Legal action has been start ed by the federal government to recover passports of three former UNC students on claims they knowingly defied the State Depuartment ban on American travel in Cuba by visiting the island during the summer of 1963. Named in State Department suits are John Franklin Salter of Greensboro, Larry Wilford Phelps of Burlington, and Dorothy Mae Denton Salter of Chapel Hill. The three were among 57 American students who made a five-day flying trip to Cuba at the invitation of Prime Minister Fidel Castro. Phelps graduated from UNC in 1963. Mrs. Salter graduated in 19b2. Salter was forced to drop out of UNC in 1962 be cause of grades. While at the University, . Salter and Phelps helped to found the Progressive Labor Club and the New Left Club which met to discuss Marx ist - Leninist doctrines and American politics of "anyone left of Kennedy." Both organ izations have since been dis banded. In the 1962 Student Gov ernment elections, Phelps and Salter were independent candi dates for student body presi dent and vice-president. They compaigned on the platform of complete U.S. disarmament, integration, and abolition of intercollegiate athletics. They were defeated by a wide mar gin. The three are named in sepa rate suits filed in U.S. Middle District Court in Greensboro pending court actions. 80 Selected For UN Trip The UNC Collegiate Coun cil for the United Nations has selected 80 students for its UN seminar trip during Thanksgiving vacation. The group has planned a tour of the UN building, stu dent reports on key countries and a meeting with the U.S. mission. It will meet with either a secretariat member or Dr. Frank Porter Graham, former UNC President, now a" UN mediator. Delegates will leave by .bus from Y-Court parking lot at 1 p.m. Nov. 25, and will arrive in New York about 1 a.m. the next day. They will return Nov. 29. Three briefing sessions have been scheduled and background meetings have been assigned to delegates. Sessions will be held in Gerrard Hall at 7 p.m. Monday and Nov. 9 and 16. McGill Quits Fair Practices Committee NEW YORK (AP) Publisher Pialph McGill resigned yesterday from the Fair Campaign Prac tices Committee on the ground that a critical letter sent to Robert F. Kennedy had cast the committee "in the light of being unfair." McGill, publisher of the Atlan ta Constitution, said the letter sent by Bruce L. Felknor, the committee's executive board di rector, gave the impression that it was a committee action. "This is not true," McGill said in a message to Felknor. "Cer tainly I was not consulted. I think you have seriously embar rassed the committee and made it suspect." Kennedy, former U.S. Attorney General, is the Democratic-Liberal Party nominee for the U.S. Senate, opposing the re-election of Republican Sen. Kenneth B. Keating. Keating had complained to the committee that Kennedy distort ed the Republican's record on federal aid to education and the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. ' - It : - , - . . - rk,V - rrr:- ' - A s ' Cv f T ' - V1 r: ; y : :tVcr; :' ' : V; , T - n? - js:-v - v v U JL x' x v r" I V f - v k 1 : y; - - x , v : - , v . " m t V " ':' . .. . . -XL' "a c-y .-i- I . fc J Z Z.. ltf.i!2Vifmr ,r..i , ..r - WIIIRLYBIRDS Photographer Dan Givan and pilot Jim Parris stand fccside the helicopter that buzzed them over the campus yesterday while they took pictures of the University. Givan Raid On Student Party rings Three men arrested in connec tion with an incident at an inte grated student party here Sept. 19 were found guilty of misde meanors and fined yesterday in Chapel Hill Recorder's Court William Earl White of Chapel Hill was found not guilty of re sisting arrest. A charge 6f first degree burglary against him was lowered to - f orceable r trespass. In another case resulting from the same incident, Tommy White and Earl Holsclaw, both of Chapel Hill; were found guilty of simple assault on an officer. W. E. White was fined $25 and court costs. Tommy White and Holsclaw were fined $15 each and shared the costs of court. The burglary charge was brought against W. E. White by Ed Causey Jr., UNC student from Southern Pines, who said White broke into the house he was occupying ' in University Heights. The break-in reportedly oc curred near the end of four hours of harrassment of a party of stu dents at Causey's house. The resisting arrest, charge was brought against White by Bingham Township Constable Hugh Wilson, who attended the party. Wilson said W. E. White entered the house, wrestled with Bill Seeks NS A Vote As Final Word A bill which would make the results of a student body refer endum the ultimate deciding fac tor of whether the University will continue its affiliation with the National Student Association was passed out of Student Legisla ture's Ways and Means Commit tee yesterday. The bill will be voted on by legislature tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in New East. This new billwritten and in troduced by Student Party Floor Leader Arthur Hays, is the suc cessor of an amendment reject ed by the body at its last session. "I voted against that amend ment because, as finally offered, it was poorly written and uncon stitutional on its face," Hays said. Hays' resolution reads: "The results of the referendum con cerning affiliation with the Unit ed States National Student Asso ciation shall determine whether the Student Government of The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shall continue to re main affiliated with or be dis-af-filiated from the United States National Student Association." T?ie original amendment car ried the clause that the results of the referendum "shall be binding when the 1965-66 budget is adopted." . B Fines F or. Causey over a loaded shotgun, and fled after Wilson told him he was under arrest. Wilson also brought the assault and battery charges against Holsclaw and Tommy White after 100;TJiii$erjity . P.R. Men To Gather For Workshop Over 100 college news bu reau writers, development men and other campus public rela tions officers will attend the Gommunications Research In stitute here Nov. 11 to 13. The Institute is , a national workshop to benefit college and university public relations programs. Sessions will be held at Carolina Inn and Pea body Hall. Consolidated University President William C. Friday and Chancellor Paul F. Sharp will take part in the workshop. Friday will address a luncheon Nov. 12, on "What a Univer sity President Expects of In formation and Development Officers." Chancellor Sharp will be a speaker oh a panel, "Messages That Help Change Images." . Dr. Wayne Danielsonr Dean of the School of Journalism, heads a group of faculty mem bers who will lecture on ap plying communications re search findings to college news office efforts. Danielson will be assisted by Professors John Adams, James Mullen and Kenneth R. Byerly of the School of Jour nalism. m Around The Campus d Scholarships Open To Churchill College UNC is one of 20 universities in the nation whose students will be eligible for scholarships at Churchill College, Cambridge Uni versity, England. The Churchill Scholarships are offered to graduate students in the field of science, and cover tuition and expenses for the stu dent and his family for one year. Interested students should con tact Assistsnt Dean of Arts and Sciences Frank Duffey. He will recommend two appli cants to the selection committee. Services Held For Lihrarian Funeral for Miss Georgia Hicks aiscn. librarian at Wilson Li brarv for 33 vears. was he'd ves f rdav in Clinton. Se died Sun day at the ase of 73. The late Miss Faison eraduot ed from UNC at Greensboro and t2ught for several years before entering her long library career. After her tenure here she worked is from Buckhill Productions of Charlotte who have been working on a promotional film about the University for the Morehead Foundation. Photo by Jock Lauterer Trio the two struck him when he was leaving the party. Wilson, Deputy Sheriff W. E. Clark, Jr., and Patrolman Earl Allison were chief witnesses for the prosecution. Other specialists in related fields, will take part in the lec tures. Prof. James Gaskin, . chairman of the Department of Linguistics and Slavic Lan guages; Edward Rankin of John Harden and Associates in Ra leigh; Professors Gerald Bell and Harry Crockett, Sociology; Professors John Scholper and Herbert Greenwald, Psycholo gy;' and University News Bu reau Director Pete Ivey and writers Charles Clay and De mont Roseman. Kins; Plans Durham Visit Civil rights leader Martin Luther King will be in Durham Nov. 13 as a guest at the annual meeting of Southern Political Science Association. The winner of the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize will be a guest at a J2:30 p.m. luncheon at Jack Tar Hotel. King is the 12th American and the third Negro to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. at the State Library in Raleigh for six years. In 1949 Louis Graves, founder and first editor of the Chapel Hill Weekly called her "God's gift to a newspaper editor uho wants to find out something." Gthers described her as "God's gift to anybody who wants to know anything" and "God's gift to everybody." Retarded Children Theme Of Workshop The UNC School of Education's workshop series on "Methods and Materials of Teaching the Mental ly Retarded Child" began yester day and will continue with an other session this afternoon and two more next week. "Arts and Crsfts" will be the subject of tnis afternoon's work shop, utiich will run from 4 to 5:20 at Peabody Hall. Building units in language arts end arithmetic will be treated in next week's sessions, scheduled Tuesday and Wednesday at the same hour. Miss Julia Woodson of the School of Education staff is conducting all four workshops. i 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 28, 1964, edition 1
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