U.UC. Library Serials Dept. Bor 870 Cfcapei Hill, N.C. c 68 years of dedicated serv ice to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, whose motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." Weather Partly cloudy and mild. Volume LXIX, No. 78 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, 1961 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issue (CD rfi ' ) lin iiTi'P(jl sitp jm rpn if 4-'L' World News -Vl I if JT - " In Brief : ;...'i fc- CoSdwotvf Laotian Forces Regain. Province VIENTIANE, Laos (UPI) The pro-western Laotian gov ernment reported Thursday it has defeated Communist forces around Xieng Khouang and that Soviet transport planes are evacuating Communist North Vientminh troops from airfields near the city. Information Minister Louavang Norasing said loyal troops are battling other invading Vientminh and Communist troops near the border north of Vient Nam. The Laotian army reportedly is fighting well and has seized the offensive in several places. Goldwater Re-elected Campaign Chairman WASHINGTON Senate Republicans unanimously re elected conservative Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, Ariz., as their election campaign chairman Thursday in a harmony move despite a sharp Goldwater attack on New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. Goldwater was renamed to the post at a party confer ence after he and liberal Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York, a Rockefeller supporter, engaged in an "air clearing exchange" and agreed on an armistice. Turkish Court Finds Menderes Guilty YASSIADA, Turkey A special high court Thursday found former Premier Adnan Menderes guilty of organizing the anti-Greek rioting which swept Turkey in September, 1955. It found former President Celal Bayar innocent of the same charge. Sentence on Menderes and two others found guilty with him is to be pronounced later. Court officials said the sen tences probably would be prison terms ranging from six months to two years. Havana Embassy Staff Comes Home WEST PALM BEACH The staff of the American Em bassy in Havana came home Thursday, crowded aboard a freight ferry like so many refugees. The accommodations were of their own-choosing. Most of them passed up an opportunity to return Wednesday by airliner, giving up their seats to Cuban nationals anxious to escape the powder-keg island. Anti-American Riots Erupt in Uruguay MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay Anti-American rioters burned a UvS. flag, threw stones and battled police in downtown Montevideo Thursday at the climax of a leftist rally in sup port of Fidel Castro. Police repeatedly charged the rioters and fired tear gas grenades to break up the Independence Square demonstra tion in clouds of eye-stinging smoke. The rioters, mostly stu dents, and workers, replied with a barrage of stones. c Eichmann to Hang If Convicted JERUSALEM, Israel An Israeli ministerial executive committee has decided that accused Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann will nang if an Israeli court sentences him to death, it was learned Thursday. The decision was necessary because although the Israeli legal code provides for the death penalty for treason and Nazi ' war crimes, there is nothing to say how sentence should be carried out. N. C. PIANIST WILL APPEAR ON SUNDAY A young accomplished pianist, blind since birth, willmake his homecoming performance at 8 p.m. Sunday in Hill Hall. George Bennette, a native North Carolinian, will appear under the auspices of Graham Memorial Petite Musicale. His first performances were before Chapel Audiences. After graduating from the Oberlin Conservatory and the Juilliard School of Music, Ben nette went to London for further study at the Royal Academy of Music. Admission to the performance ii free. Compositions by Bach, Schumann, Liszt and Debussy are included in the program. Times Critic New York Times critic Har old Schonberg said of Bennette's recent Carnegie Hall recital: "George Bennette . has been blind since birth. Ordinarily one makes allowances in such a case, but he docs not need them. He has overcome his handicap to develop into a fine pianist." Another critic, Allen Hughes of the New York Herald Trib une noted that he was "astound ed by the efficiency of . the pianist's work," and wrote that Bennette ' possessed "commend able sensitivity, vigor and sty listic awareness." Adnan Menderes Jiirgensens. To Give Scenes From Famous Plays Ilk If "BETWEEN US TWO," an will be presented by Kai and 8:30 p.m. at the Hillel House. Y ontMel Sauafwd Pledges N.C. Education eeoiaciL 10 none in it it it Cm ba Fortifies Sea Wall In Attempt To Declare HAVANA (UPI) Cuba (sea wall) Drive facing the with big guns in an. apparent attempt to convince the people that "war" is imminent. Howitzers, anti-tank guns, and anti-aircraft "pom poms , were roiled into place along a nve-mile strip oi the erstwhile "lover's walk" in a not previously an nounced operation during early morning hours Army and militia men started digging trenches. Sandbags were strewn about. The entire area, stretching from downtown Galiano Street to the Vedado suburb, site of the now-closed U.S. Embassy, was declared a military zone. Pedestrians were' permitted to use the ocean walk, but vehicu lar traffic was detoured around it. The embassy, where a few American staff members labored to get files and packing cases out and the big building offi- MED SCHOOL PROFESSORS GET GRANT Two UNC professors were awarded a grant of over $11,000 this week for research study by the North Carolina Society for Crippled Children and Adults. Dr. R. Beverly Raney, pro fessor of surgery in charge of orthopedic surgery, and Dr. George K. Sumner, assistant professor of pediatrics, were awarded the grant for research study in "metabolic factors' in the causation of esteoporosis." This is the fifth of a series of five grants to Dr. Raney and Dr. Sumner. Previous and present grants total $67,000. . The grant was awarded on behalf of the Easter Seal Re search Foundation of the Na tional Society for Crippled Children and Adults. 4 .1 5 ) evening of dramaiic readings, Jo Jurgensen Wednesday- at Kai is a member of the UNC it fortified the famed Malecon Gulf of Mexico Thursday cially closed, was under the "protective guard" oft a group of 50 gray-uniformed militia women. The women carried Czech made submachine guns nestled in the crook of their arm. They were friendly and did not block access to the 10-story structure. The railroad car ferry City of New Orleans, meanwhile, ar rived in West Palm Beach, Fla., from Havana with 64 U.S. Em bassy staff members and their wives. Three American residents also were aboard as were seven Cuban nationals fleeing the country. U.S. Charge d'Aff aires Daniel J. Braddock and 8 to 10 other embassy officials remained be hind until the weekend. They were completing details involv ing the' diplomatic break" and preparing to turn over Ameri can interests to the Swiss Em bassy. The Cuban cabinet, mean while, blamed the Eisenhower government for the break in re lations and implied that condi tions might improve .under the incoming administration of President-elect John F. Ken nedy. Infirmary Students in the infirmary yesterday included Susan Hend erson, Pricilla Bennett, Donald Reynolds, Jean Farmer, Thomas Welch, David Parlier, Don IWhisnant, Richard Singer, Allen Clay, Clemment Ford, Glenn Glasser, Marilyn Sim mons, Rodney Johnson, Sally Alle, Jane Damon and Stewart Ticheman. f w t: s 4 f $ i drama department. Admission Harry's) it it 'War Is Imminent Y Y r-h - t : . I - ' s mmmt . - , . FORMER GOV. HODGES Mclver Fire Scare i Sends Coeds Racing BY SUSAN LEWIS '" A fuse shortage left Mclver dorm in darkness Wed nesday night. Dorm light went out around 10:25 p.m. when shorting fuses burned through wires For 30 minutes the burning wires smouldered until the alarmed graduate counselor, Audrey Naigraw, called the local fire department. Galvanizing into action, the firemen rushed with siren blar ing to the dorm and combed the halls in search of the source of the burning smell pervading the corridors. Within five minutes the speedy fire-fighters had located the troublesome switch box, pulled out the plugs and plunged the dorm into darkness. Check Halls Checking the halls to see what damage had been done, one fire man discovered a startled and half-dressed coed in his flash will be $1. (Photo Courtesy of inangimra. it it it aren , j l GOVERNOR SANFORD in Mclver's main switch box light beam. Girls raced from one end of the hall to the other to , the east end to smell the smoke, to the west end to watch the fire truck and bystanders tripping over suitcases and trunks in the darkened corridors on the way. While the dorm was in dark ness, couples in the parlor took advantage of the situation. But coeds typing term papers or taking showers didn't enjoy the "blackout. When the emergency lights (Continued on Page 3) 'BETWEEN IIS TWO' CHARITY PRODUCTION "Between Us Two," a series of dramatic scenes from famous plays, will be presented' by Kai and Jo Jurgensen at the Hillel House on Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. The program, which will con sist of selections from such well known plays as "Picnic," "The Glass Slipper," and "The Rope Dancers," is being presented by the Hillel Women's Group as a charity benefit. Tickets will be on sale at the door at the Hillel House on -Wednesday evening and may be secured in advance from Martha Stoffer at 28 Hayes- Road (phone: 2-1946). Admission price is $1.00. . ! First CH Performance The Jurgensens have present ed their programs at several out-of-town engagements tfut this will be their first Chapel Hill performance. Kai Jurgensen is a member of the staff of the Carolina Play makers and the Department of Dramatic Arts at UNC. In 1953-59 he returned to his native Denmark on a Fulbright teaching fellowship. Mrs. Jurgensen has trod the boards of the Playmakers stage on many occasions Ex-Gov. Hodges, Robert Kennedy, Hollins Also Present In Raleigh RALEIGH (UPI) Youthful Terry Sanford became governor today amid' glittering inaugural ceremonies and , pledged his public life to make education in North Caro- lina "second-to-none." 4 In a 30-minute inaugural speech. Sanford said "We are not going to forget that no group of our citizens can I be denied the right to partici- pate in the opportunities of I first-class citizenship." He is the first southern gover nor to send his children to an integrated public school. He said his 11 -year-old daughter would be enrolled in Raleigh's only integrated school. The incoming governor was Sl - flanked by -silver-haired out 4f" jjf going Gov. Luther H. Hodges Willi CIS tlliCi. CACtUUVC longer than any man in the past 100 years. Hodges leaves office after six years to become Secretary of Commerce in the administration of President-elect John F. Ken nedy. Also on the platform with Sanford was Robert F. Kennedy who will be attorney general in his brother's administration. Others in the inaugural party included Govs. J. Lindsay Al mond of Virginia, Ernest Hol lins of South Carolina and Bert Combs of Kentucky. Faith In Education Sanford said he would put his faith in universal education (Continued on Page 3) On The Campus There will be faculty Club Luncheon Tuesday at the Caro lina Inn at 1 p.m. Dr. Henry T. Clark, Jr., administrator of the division of Health Affairs, will speak on the subject, "Some Observations of a Fraternity Adviser." The luncheon is $1.40. Three UNC bands" partici pated in the ceremonies for the inauguration of Governor Terry Sanford in Raleigh yesterday. The Air Force ROTC band and drill team and the Navy ROTC drum and bugle corps marched in the parade. The University Band also played for the cere monies. Free Flicks SnoH Rob D ots PETER LORRE, BOGARTSTAR IN 'FALCON' A detective thriller and a n . 1 At . science nction mm are ims week's free flicks sponsored by Graham Memorial Activities Board. Friday night the "Forbidden Planet," starring Walter Pid- gcon, Anne Francis and Leslie Nielsen, will be shown at 7:30 and 9 p.m. in Carroll Hall. "Forbidden Planet" is ihe story of a group of men who land on the planet Altair-4 in search of a party of earthlings who disappeared there many years before. They run across a surviving scientist and his lovely daugh ter, who are served by a re markable robot. To add to the deep mystery, a vanished race had lived on Altair thousands TVTl Top Hat, Tails Spotlighted In Capital Hoopla RALEIGH (UPI) Boyish- looking Terry Sanford and dis tinguished Luther H. Hodges rode to Sanford's inauguration today attired in top hats, tails and striped trousers. Sanford, doffing his hat for photographers, remarked, "I think I should wear one all the time every day." Then he quipped, "I look like I'm in a minstrel. I was in one one time." Salute to Hodges The traditional salute to the governor and military honors to Hodges started the inaugural march on time at 10:30 a.m. ; Massed Army, Marine, Air Force and National Guard troops snapped to attention at the Executive Mansion at the call of Maj. Gen. Edwin Griffin, commandant of the 30th Infan try Division. Sanford and his wife, Mar garet Rose, appeared on the porch of the mansion with Gov. and Mrs. Hodges, escorted by State Adj. Gen. Capus Waynick. Hodges, who went to , his of fice at the Capitol for a short time prior to the inaugural cere monies, wore his traditional carnation in the lapel. The ladies wore black suits. "I don't think it could have been a prettier day," Hodges remarked to Sanford as they awaited the salute on the steps. "Neither do I," replied Sanford. In front of the mansion were the honor troops, with colored helmets. In another block near by were tanks, armor and artil lery. At Griffin's call and about face, the troops snapped to at tention and presented arms. The division band played "The Old North State." elective of years ago, but had somehow been wiped out. Wow. Saturday night "The Maltese Falcon" will star Humphrey Bcgart, Mary Astor, Peter Lorre and Sidney Grecnstreet. The "Falcon" has been called a "masterful suspense" charact erization of a group of homi cidal adventurers after a for tune in hidden gems and a not-too-honest but clever Sam Spade, private detective, who plays both ends of a deadly game. Shades of Spade plus Lorre. ryw Walter FisfjseeaM .O: