* The Daily. Ghowanian *
Volume 1 — Number 34
Murfieesboro/ North Carolina, January 28, 1960
Associated Press
Tar Heels Uncertain Yet Whether
Doug Moe Can Play For Them Or Not
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. AP —
Official word on the eligibility of
University of North Carolina bas-
kelball star Doug Moe still was
lacking shortly before noon today.
Coach Frank McGuire, eager
to havf? the Brooklyn, N.Y., junior
back in the lineup, said he had
heard nothing and referred furth
er questions to Dr. Oliver K. Corn-
well, faculty chairman of athlet
ics.
Oornwell said, “I don^t think
anyone knows more about it than
I do-and I don’t know at this
time. The boy’s grades haven’t
been announced yet. I checlcd
the central records offfice this
morning and was told the grades
were not yet processed.”
He said he has received two
Bs, a C and a D in four courses
and an F in one which -he dropped
midway through the semester.
However, improvement as well as
grades waj listed as a primary
factor in determining whether he
will be able to return to the line-
up.
Moe who missed the first se-
r"( >3ter because of a university
imposed probation, completed his
examinations two days ago, Mc
Guire said. Moe’s marks were not
the only factor in the case. Other
r0quirements were attached to the
probation.
He woikcd out with the team
Wednesday and McGuire said he
expected Mos to be at this after
noon’s practice, as well.
McGuirp said he didn’t expect
Moe to step into a starting role
if he is restored to the playing
Use in time for next Wednesday’s
game at Maryland.
He’j got to gradually play him
self in.‘o top shape,said the Tai
Heel coach, adding, “right now
Dcug is about 7 points over his
best playing weight of 205. ’
In Moes absence the team has
vifon 9 out of 12 and leads the
Atlantic Coast Conference. It
ranks 12.h in the Associated Press
national poll.
McGuire said another sidelined
star of last season, 6-9 Dick Kep
ley, will remain out for the rest
of this campaign if Moe is able to
return.
Kepley suffered a badly sprain
ed ankle on the first day of pre-
seison practice last Novembei
and it has been slow to heal. If
he is held out, the Roanoke, Va.
serjor wouid have another year o'
eligibility.
Lieutenant Governor’s Race
Takes Shape; Henkle To Run
Hatteras Island To
Get Improvement
KALEIGH AP — Some $325,-
000 in highway surplus money has
been earmarked to improve the
travel situation, both air and auto,
on Hatteras Island.
The Highway Ebpartment an
nounced Wednesday a portion of
the funds had been allocated by
Gov. Hodges to resurface the ex
ist ;ng Outer Banks road from Ore
gon Inlet to Hatteras Inlet
The rest will be used to con
struct an emergency landing strip
near the village of Frisco.
The Research Triangle park got
$50,000 in surplus funds for addit-
ioi'ial access roads.
Hodges Tells Group That Political
Parties Should Help Out People
NEW HAVEN, Conn. AP —Gov.
Luther H. Hodges of North Caro-j
lina says minority groups, what
ever their race or creed, should
not be used for political purposes.
Hodges told the Greater New
Haven Chamber of Commerce
Wednesday night that political
parties should “come
majority of the people, rather
than “appease the minority for
political ends.” ,
The Democratic governor s re
marks about minority
at the end of a speech that told
of North Carolina’s industrial
^ Hedges warned the New Haven
businessmen against falling into
misconceptions about other parts
of the country. “People in Nprth
Carolina not only wear shoes, he
said, “but make them.”
Civil Rights Bill
WASHINGTON AP — Con
gress v.bs told today that bills
to authorize appointment of fed
eral voting registrars carry the
danger of putting the federal gov
ernment into federal, stat^ and lo
cal elections.
Sen. lohn Stennis D-Miss said
that catling the pending bills civil
rights legislation “does not change
thtfir effect nor conceal the grant
of unprecedented power to federal
otiicials in supervising local elec
tions.”
He criticized the bills as un
constitutional in testimony at a
Sr-nate Rules subcommittee hear
ing.
In more than six hours of de
bate V-^ednesday No \ | n and
Western Democrats changed Re
publicans with maintaining a coal
ition with Southerners to delay
or defeat civil rights proposals.
Hodges’ speech here ended a
one-day tour of Connecticut. Ear
lier in the day he met with a
group of industrialists at Water-
bury, and in the afternoon he vis
ited the Choate School, a prepa
ratory school in Wallingford.
At Wallingford Hodges told a
newsman that Sen. Lyndon John
son D-Tex. “has a better chance
of winning the Democratic presi
dential nomination if Congress
passes civil rights legislation dur
ing this session.
The governor will address a din
ner meeting of the Assn. of Cot
ton Textile Merchants of New York
in the metropolis tonight.
He ends his Northern good will
and industry-hunting swing Fri
day at Cambridge, Mass., where
he will speak to the Harvard
Business School and a Harvard
Law School forum.
Hunt Begins For
Kinston Bandit
KINSTON, N.C. AP — The
lunt was on Wednesday as soon
IS a masked bandit left a Kinston
branch bank with $5,723 and sped
iway in a stolen car.
Bank Manager A1 Owens was
on the telephone as soon as the
gunman left. Local police and the
Federal Bureau of Investigation
joined in an intensive hunt.
The robber brandished a .45
caliber automatic pistol and or
dered tellers to stuff paper mon
ey into a brown bag. He was dis
guised by a stocking pulled over
hi; face
The par he used had been stol
en from a parking lot about six
blocks irom the bank. It was
found abandoned about five blocks
away.
By talking with bank employes
and a customer, officers we'^e
able to determine that the bandit
was in his 30s, aboit 5-8 and
weighed 170 pounds. He wore
brown trousers and a tan wind-
breaker jacket.
They did not know whether he
’lai an accomplice in another get
away car.
The lobbery occurred at mid
morning Wednesday in the Park
vitw Shopping Center on the
northern end of Kinston. Th^
branch was affiliated with Com
mercial National Bank.
After ordering the tellers to fill
up the paper bag with folding
money, he made his getaway
leaving behind son>ie $10,000 to
$15,000 in the tellers’ cages.
Three employers and a customer
were in the bank at the time.
Coach and His Son
Receive Penalty
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. AP —
The St:;te High School Athletic
A'isn. has slapped the sharpest
penalty in its history on a coach
and one of his players, his son.
Tixec'jtive Secretary L. J. Perry
rej orted that Myron Hams, coach
at Jasper High School, had been
suspended for the season, and his
son. Buddy Harris, has been ruled
ineligible for the season. Jasper
is a higti school in Craven County.
Perry reported that the two
w‘'re accused of striking a refe
ree during a game between Jas
per and Vanceboro on Jan 16.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The race of lieutenant gover
nor is rapidly taking shape.
One anti-administration candi
date already is in the running
and a staunch administration
supporter is ready to make his
candidacy official.
Two possible candidates bow
ed out Wednesday and another
said he definitely would run.
Two others still have not com
mitted themselves.
State Rep. Cloyd Philpott of
Lexington, taking his cue when
former Sen. Thomas White of
Kinston bowed out, said he
would announce himself in the
race Friday.
White, a close friend of Phil
pott, said he had received offers
of support but was turning them
down. He is head of a commis
sion which is making plans for
a new Wi million dollar state
'egisl-’tive building.
State Sen. Robert Morgan of
“^holh’- -''so a-nounced he w a s
out of the race because of the
press ot personal business.
MacMillan Calls
U.S. Debutant In
Management
JOHANNESBURG, South Af
rica (JP)—Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan called the United
States today a reluctant debu-
t a n t e in the art of world
management.
Touching on world problems
at a luncheon in his honor, the
touring British Prime Minister
said the Soviet Union is a buoy-
int and imperialist nation but
the United States is a reluctant
Philpott represented Davidson
County during the last four Gen
eral Assemblies. He will oppose
State Sen. C. V. Henkel of
Statesville, who made his candi
dacy for the May 28 primary of
ficial Tuesday. Philpott helped
enact much of Gov. Luther Hod
ges’ program during the 1959
Legislature.
Henkel was a leader of anti
administration forces in that
General Assembly. He said he
would campaign independently
for the lieutenant governorship.
Budget Officer Dave Coltrane
refused to tip his hand Wednes
day as to his intentions. How
ever, he is considered a poten
tial candidate.
Charlotte attorney Dave Mc-
Conell is expected to join the
race with an official announce
ment this weekend.
The heutenant governor is the
state’s second highest executive
official. In addition to succeed
ing the governor in the event of
death, he presides over the State
Senate. Concord lawyer Luther
Bamhardt now holds the job.
debutante.
Indirectly mentioning Presi
dent Eisenhower’s coming visit
to the Soviet Union, Macmillan
said:
“My visit to Moscow recently
was not well received, but it
seems nowadays everybody is
visiting everybody else.”
Goldminers here gave Macmil
lan a practical addition to his
collection of hats.
Inspired by his eye-catching
white fur hat which he wore in
Moscow last year, the miners
gave him a fiber mining helmet,
painted white, with a safety
lamp attached.
College Students Have Food Strike;
Wear Sweat Srirts Instead of Ties
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. AP — The] orivatelv endowed school. Tues-
sweat-shirt rebellion against Drury “ ‘
edict
College’s dress-for-dinner
gained momentum Wednesday
night. Outside agitators, armed
with french bread and soup, joy
ously joined the revolt.
Undergraduates from Southwest
Missouri State College, across
town from Drury, set up a ‘‘come
as you are” soup line on the Drury
campus.
Attracted by signs reading
“have soup, will feed Drury in
need”; and “SMS foreign aid,”
spurned the steak and potatoes
served in the college dining hall
to partake of the soup line’s spare
fare.
Uniform of the day was sweat
shirts, sweaters and bobby sox.
The dining hall served only 12
diners and most of them were
faculty members of the little
Lawyers Need More Instructions On
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Finances
DARIEN. Ga. AP — Lawyers
for Mrs. R. J. Reynolds, seeking
to learn the size of her estranged
husband’s tobacco fortune, may
have to get further court instruc
tions on how deeply they can
probe into his finances.
Attorneys for both sides in the
divorce action were reported at
odds over whether Reynolds must
reveal how much he has spent
on the support of his six sons by
two previous marriages.
Mrs. Reynolds’ lawyers are in
their ninth day of examining vol
uminous records on Sapelo Island,
Reynoles’ vast isolated estate off
the Georgia coast.
Superior Court Judge Henry
Boy With No Limbs
Named Easter Seal
Child Selection
pBt{ ‘ItjSra
served 62. Its normal quota is 250.
The student strike began Mon
day nisht the dining hall had
James Findlay, president of Drury,
to relax the requirement that
students who eat in the dining
hall must dress for dinner. Men
must wear coats and ties. Women
must wear heels and hose.
In past years, the rule has been
relaxed during the week of final
examinations. This year. Dr. Find- Ifgs and hands manages to play
CHICAGO m — A 10-year-old
North Dakota boy, bom without
hands or feet, has been named
the 1960 National Easter Seal
Child.
The boy, Johnny Kemp, who
has been fitted with artificial
lay ordered it enforced. He ex
plained that dressing for dinner
is part of Drury's “educational
plan to teach something about the
social amenities.”
Most of Drury’s 700 students
live off campus and are not in
volved in the revolt.
baseball, shoot marbles, be
cub scout, and get better than
average grades in school.
Johnny’s selection was an
nounced Wednesday by the Na
tional Society for Crippled Chil-
iren and Adults from its nation
al headquarters in Chicago. He
Durrence gave them 15 days to
examine only some of Reynolds’
records.
Reynolds, 54, sued his third wife
the former Muriel Marston, 41,
for divorce last Aug. 20, charging
cruelty.
Reynolds’ lawyers say he is too
ill with alun g disease to leave his
island home to appear in court.
Mrs. Reynolds’ lawyers took a
sworn statement Wednesday from
Reynolds’ financial advisor, Strat
ton Coyner of Winston-Salem, N.
C. The statement, not released,
was expected to place Reynolds
wealth between 25 and 50 million
dollars. He inherited 25 millions
26 years ago. His wife’s attorneys
estimate he is worth 50 millions
now.
Trial of the divorce suit is
scheduled here Feb. 22.
will go to Washington in
March to meet Mrs. Dwight D.
Eisenhower.
Weather
NORTH CAROLINA: Partial
clearing and warmer today. High
in 50’s mountains and 60’s else
where. Generally fair and cool
er tonight. Low near 40 moun
tains and in 40’s elsewhere. Fri
day increasing cloueliness and
little change in temperatures with
rain likely at night