Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 14, 1959, edition 1 / Page 1
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U.TT.C. Library G:rial3 Dopt. Box 870 A '1,,1 HI1L. II. C, r ' WEATHER Cloudy wMh occasional rain. Showert and tcatterrd thunder howers louthrast portion. High low to middle 70'i. 67 years of dedicated service 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." VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 23 CompUte W Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH, CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1959 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE (CO nlif Sit) iTin P(CuTtr ol ff 21 Quiz Winner, Van Doren Ready To Accept Subpoena NEW YORK. jP Charles Van i Dorcn's lawyer said today the big-1 money teleision winner will accept a subpoena to testify at a Congres sional probe of fixed quiz shows. The lawyer, Carl J. Rubino, de nied Van Doren has been dodging the subpoena and notified federal authorities he'll set up a (kite with his client for tomorrow. Added Rubino: ' He could not evade a subpoena hich he did not know had been Issued ... if the committee wants to serve him. 1 11 arrange it. I'm making no secret of the fact that Charles Van Doren knew nothing rbout the subpoena. He first knew about it last night. He didn't know one was issued and he hasn't been aoiding on." The subpoena was issued last Fri day. Yesterday. Rep. Oren Harris 'O Arki, chairman of a House sub committee conducting the TV probe, accused Van Dorn of evading it. The House inquiry now is in re cess until Nov. 2 and the subpoena presumably will call for Van Do rm's appearance then. Van Doren. a Columbia Univer sity English instructor, dropped from stent last week when the sub committee first sough this testimony at the Washington inquiry. But Ru bino said of his disappearance: ' He had no thought of evading anything. He just became distressed ; when NBC took him off the air summarily last Thursday. He was DTH Staff Member Posts Bond In Hit And Run Case M'Lou Redden, a Daily Tar Heel faff member, was found guilty of hit-and-run driving by the Chapel Hill Recorder's Court Tuesday. Her lawyer, John Manning, im mediately put In an appeal for the December term of Superior Court in Hi'lsboro. She was released on a $250 bond. She was driving a staff truck of the Daily Tar Heel oftice Sept. 21. when she hit Deputy Sheriff Avery C Maddry in front cf the police sta tion. The main issue of the case was whether or not she knew that she had hit the man. Judge William S. fctewart ruled that she knew that khe had hit him or that she should have known it. The prosecutor was Roy Cole. G. M. SLATE Activities scheduled in Graham Memorial today include: Carolina Symposium. 3-5 p.m., Woodhouse; Publications Board. 3 30 6 pm.. Roland Parker I; For- fign Student Board, 4-5 p m., Grail; pLnhellenic Counri!. 5-fi Dm.. Grail: IDC Honorary, 6:30-7:4" p.m. Woodhouse; CWC. 7-8:30 p.m.. Grail; Chess Club. 7-11 p.m., Rol and Parker III; Petite Dramatique, 7:30-11 pm, Roland Parker II; Di-Phi. Ml pm., Main Lounge; Eanbirds. 9-11 pm, Woodhouse. NC High School Press Institute Held In Chapel Hill Saturday Three hundred high school news paper and yearbook editors, with their faculty advisers, are expected In Chapel Hill Saturday for the 18th annual N. C. Scholastic Press In stitute. The full day's program includes lectures, panels, demonstrations enl "buzz sessions" on how to im - prove high school publications. Student officers this year are Dick Ranson of Charlotte, president; Mike Waters of Charlotte, vice pres ident; Mary Womack of High Point, secretary; Marguerite Harris of Roxboro, treasurer. Faculty adviser for newspapers is Mrs. Robert oung of Durham. Advisers for yearbooks are Miss Gordon Free man and G. Ieslie Brown of Char lotte. The Institute is sponsored each October by the School of Journal ism, the Extension Division of the University. The Daily Tar Heel end the N. C Department of Public In- disturbed and just went off. He telephoned me last night and I told h;m that allegedly there was a sub' poena out for him. I heard it over IV." In Washington, however, Harris tnallenged Rubino's statement that Van Doren had not been evading a subpoena He said the committee last Sat- i uiday advised the attorney that a subpoena had been issued. On Ru bino's contention that Van Doren cMd not know of this until today, Harris said: "That's trying to beg the point." He pointed out that the committee sent Van Doren a telegram last Wednesday inviting him to appear ind that although it had been wide ly publicized, the committee had 'Carousel' Production Rights Hard To Come By: Red Tape Great How did the Carolina Playmak ers acquire the rights to present Redgers and Ibmmerstein's "Ca rousel?" The first step came last spring after it had been decided to produce the famous musical drama. Produc tion rights had to be obtained be fore any work could be done. Rodgers and Hammerstein em ploy a team of attorneys, Reinheim er and Cohen, to handle the licens ing of their shows. A letter was i written to them by John Parker, i Liisiness manager of the Playmak ers, asking for the rights to present Carousel." Reinheimer and Cohen sent the Playmakers a questionnaire for a license. The license had to be ob LlK" "M?- struction. Walter Spearman of the School of Journalism is director. Among the professional newspa per and yearbook speakers are Harrie Keck of the Observer Print ing House in Charlotte, Vincent D Ambrisio of Delmar Studios in Charlotte, Roy Thompson of the j Winston-Salem Journal, C. A. Paul. columnist for the Greensboro Daily News, Holley Mack Bell, associate editor of the Greensboro Daily News, Mrs. Margie Bartlett of Bart lett Creative Services in Charlotte and J. A. C. Dunn of the Chapel Hill Weekly. Staif members of the School of Journalism assisting with the pro gram include Dean Norval Neil I.uxon. who will welcome the stu dents; Kenneth Byerly and Jack Adams, who will conduct a panel on "How to Make High School Newspapers Readable"; Stuart Se chriest, who will discuss makeup: and James Mullen, who will dis '" " A7 J?"'- r 'J.'Vf'-vH wtMiwAk.44bMMk '' 6"... frl T-B imp ir 1 wl tit niii i n in i 'r 'i-"fr till rtiini MiWuniirtiit iiniiniJ -f ,;r :-,:;iiiiw'tii-iiiriY; received no reply. He said he believed Van Doren had received the wire because the committee requested that it be in formed if the message was not de livered to Van Doren. NBC suspended Van Doren from his $50,000 a year network consult ant's post pending the outcome of the Washington hearings. Van Do- ren was given the job alter he won $129,000 in 1957-57 on NBC's "Twenty-One" quiz show. The lawyer said Van Doren spent the weekend in New England, in cluding the farm home near Corn wall, Conn., of his father, Mark Van Doren, and was now en route to New York from Connecticut. Van Doren obtained a week's leave of absence from his teaching post at Columbia University. tained before the contracts could be signed. The Playmakers had to answer such questions as the nature of their organization, the place in which "Carousel" would be pre sented and the dates, the capacity of the theatre, the admission price to be charged. They also had to state what musicals they had pro duced in the past three years and the royalty paid for each. The questionnaire was filled in and returned and a license was ob- tained, stating the royalty fee being asked by Rodgers and Hammer- siein. There is no set royalty charge j , , for an R&H show. Royalty charges ! ccpend upon the nature of the or ganization presenting the show and cuss advertising. The Daily Tar Heel staff mem bers include Editor Davis Young, Feature Editor Mary Alice Rowlet te. columnist James Harper, sports writer Rusty Hammond and News Editor Ed Riner. High School students presiding over discussion groups are Genie Ball of Charlotte, Susan Doak of Chapel Hill, Sally Seibert of Salis bury, David Nance of Charlotte, Barbara Hinkle of East Mecklen burg, Larry Sawers of Grensboro, Elaine Morris of Albemarle, Patt Betts of Grensboro, Mary Womack of High Point, Tom Cameron Jr. of Raeford, and Edward Clayton of Roxboro. W. C. Burton of Reidsville, colum nist for the Greensboro Daily News, will address the concluding banquet on Saturday night in Lenoir Hall. He will speak on "If I Work for a Newspaper, What Do I Get Out of It?" - YACK The following students are to have their pictures taken for the 1960 Yackety Yack Monday through Friday, 1-6 p.m. in the basement of Gra ham Memorial: Juniors, Dental students 1, 2, & 3 Dental hygien? Pharmacy Extension ($1 late fee): sopho mores, nurses, graduates and law 1 & 2. Remedy Suggested To Halt Helping Quiz Contestants By MARGARET GWATHNEY A UNC professor who once ap peared on the TV Quiz show "Twenty-One" suggested a remedy a year 2nd a half ago for the TV quiz show (See REMEDY, Page 3) the expected box office receipts. This policy enables many univer sity and community theatres to produce the popular Rodgers and Hammerstein shows. The entire royalty fee had to be paid before the contracts could be signed. The contract, a legal docue inent, states specific previsions for the production. All musical scores and scripts had to be purchased from the Wil liamson Music Company, a firm owned by Rodgers and Hemmer stein. Tickets are now on sale at 214 Abernethy Hall and at Ledbetter- Pickard. All seats are reserved at An "Carousel" curtain time is 8:3. Oct. 23, 24 and 25. The villainous Jigger Craigin (Charles Nisbet II) sneers, "Car nival Woman! Coming between a man and his wife," to the bois terous "Carousel" owner Mrs. Mullin (Louise Lamont) in the Carolina Playmakers Oct. 23-25 production of the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical play "Car ousel." INFIRMARY In the Infirmary Tuesday were the following: Mary Montgomery, Judith Hun tress, Nancy Himelick, William Milstead, Alfred Smith, John Wlialey, John Southard, Clifford La Barge, John Mayo, James Keys, Kehar Kenan, Jonathan Yardley, Thomas Tull, Floyd Ackerman, John Griffiff, George Ricks, David McKallister, Forrest Pollard, Inez Constant, Paul Le Basseur, Charles Lee, Lee Kettridge, Henry Manning, Randall Rouse, William Stence. hbis MmWWWIW':www.m.mvwMWM I WM ?M J& $ H W 7 0m -imL bv Most Reverend Services Held At 5:00 In Chapel Of The Cross The Lord Archbishop of Capetown will preside and preach at the Holy Eucharist today at 5 p.m. at the Chapel of the Cross. The Wednesday afternoon service which is usually held at 5:30 has been scheduled for 5:00 due to the participation of His Grace in the Eucharist. Music for the Service will be pro vided by the combined choirs of the Chapel of the Cross and St. Philip's Church in Durham. Ministers of the Eucharist will in clude the Lord Archbishop-Metro Cobb Charters Bus For the first time in UNC his tory, a bus is being chartered by a dorm for transportation to a football game. Swag Grimsley, president of Cobb dorm, made the announce ment Tuesday that a bus has been chartered exclusively for Cobb students for transporta tion to the Wake Forest game. The bus will leave Cobb at 11:15 Saturday morning for the game. Expenses will be $2.25 for the bus and $2 for a ticket to the game. The bus will return to Chapel Hill right after the game is over. English Club Lecture "Chaucer and Gower: Biographi cal and Literary Relations" will be the subject of a talk to be delivered before the English Club Friday, 8 p.m., by Dr. John Hurt Fisher, English professor at Duke. Dr. Fisher has recently returned from England, where he did ex tensive research on the two major fourteenth century poets, Geoffrey Chaucer and John Gower. He re ceived his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania and served on the faculties of Yale and New Univer sity before coming to Duke in 1955. The lecture Friday night will be in the Library assembly room and is open to the public, u y Joost de Blank politan attended by Robert Pace, Robert Fcxworth, Anthony Dees, Patrick Browder and Fred Roper; the Right Rev. Robert E. Gribbin, Locum Tonens of the Chapel of the Cross, attended by H. C. McAllis ter Jr. and Hobart T. Steele Jr.; the Rev. Clarence Parker, celebrant of the Eucharist, the Rev. Alan Reddick, deacon of the Eucharist and Thomas Garner, sub-deacon of the Eucharist; and a colytes Mike Sprinkle, William Smith, Tommy Kehayes, David Mundy and Walter Hooper. Directors Conference Held Het Industry training directors from North Carolina and Virginia will hold their annual fall conference here Friday and Saturday to dis cuss such areas as problems of old er workers, new labor law and ex ecutive' mental health. The two-state chapter of the American Society of Training Di rectors will begin its gathring here Friday morning in Carroll Hall. President Sidney March will wel come the group at 9:30 a.m., fol lowing registration. Dr. LeBarron Mosley of Roan oke, Va., staff psychologist with the Veterans Administration, will speak on "The Executive and Mental Health." Other Friday speakers will be Martin Bauman of Glasgow, Va., training director for James Lee and Sons Co., and Ralph V. Metz of Covington, Va., training director for West Virginia Paper anl Pulp Co. A Friday night dinner at the Car- clina Inn will feature a talk on "Im plications of the New Labor Law," hv Dr John Barrinser Jr of Jferent locations and the necessity Blacksburg. Va. He is a professor. tQ house Us instructor in a sepa. of business administration at Vir-rate building without phone con- ginia Polytechnic Institute. Chapter members will hold a bus iness session Saturday morning and hear two more talk before adjournment. South Africa's most controversial figure, the Lord Archbishop of Capetown, will address studenu and townfolks this evening at 8:3o in Hill Hall. The talk is under the au spices cf the Di-Phi. Famed for his outspoken and uncompromising opposi tion to the apartheid (racial discrimination) policy of the government of South Africa His Grace, the Most Rev. Joost de Blank, Lord Archbishop of Capetown and Metropolitan of South Africa will speak on the racial policies of South Africia in his address here. His Grace will be introduced to his Chapel Hill audi ence by Chancellor William B. Aycock. Aycock will be ir troduced by Robert Pace. Dress Will Identify Visiting Archbishop On Street, In Church The Anglican Lord Archbishop of Capetown is a man of many differ ent attires. Three things at once identify Joost de Blank as an archbishop the episcopal ring, the pectoral cross and the scarlet vest. For street dress, he may wear the or dinary black suit worn by any priest or bishop or he may wear the frock coat and gaiters of English Court usage. He is normally attired in cope and miter for church services. These are the traditional vestments for bishops of the Anglican and Roman Catholic Churches. For public occassions such as his address here on the campus, he may wear street dress or he may wrear a Disnop s cassocK ana zucnene. The zuchette is a skull cap of red. As Lord Archbishop and Metro politan, His Grace is the head of the Anglican Church in all of South Africa. He is addressed as "Your Grace" entitled to a 19 gun salute, and is generally greeted by having the episcopal ring kissed. University Expanding: Needs Money, Personnel By BERNIE GHISIELiN Back in 1922 when Murphey Hall was built the entire student en rollment at the University wai about 1800. At that time Murphey Hall housed th? departments of Eng lish. Dramatic Arts. German. Clas sics and Romance Languages. And for good measure in room 214 w-a fhe Bulls Head bookshop. One by one they had to movr out starting with the department of English, followed by the Ger man Department and Dramatic Art, leaving the departments 0' Romance Languages and the Clas sics in Murphey. Since then the departments o? foreign language have elevated themselves to among the country": best. They offer a comprehensive doctors degree requiring the study of a major language, literature anc' two minor languages. Instruction has begun this semester in Arabic; graduate instruction in Hebrew is due to begin in the spring. Now with a high of 50 graduate students doing major work in either French, Spanish or Italian with minors ranging through Por tuguese, Catalan, Irish, Welshe, German or the Classics, the langu age departments now turn out a leading number of doctors, now enjoy the best reputation in the south. And it is carrying a total load of 2,595 students. In this surge to the top the lan guage departments have outgrown their boyhood clothing, and in the post-Sputnik era, finds itself in the limelight. But as the study of languages becomes increasingly stressed the University is beginning to suffer i ; from poor laboratory facilities, the j necessity of holding classes in dif- j of necessity of holding classes in dif- nection to Murphey Hall. In recent years a laboratory for language instruction has come to mean as much as a laboratory for science. Needed today are class rooms with audio visual equip wn ems David Mathews will p iia at the address. The Archbishop's Tar Heel sched ule includes a luncheon at Duk8 University and a tour of Ligget & Myers Tobacco in Durham this aft ernoon. Arriving in Chapel Hill, His Grace will make a brief tour of the campus. He will pontificate and preach at a Solemn Eucharist at the Chapel of the Cross at 5 p.m. He will make a public address in Hill Hall, 8:30 p.m., and be honored at a recep tion at Graham Memorial following the address. Hosting the Archbishop in Chapel Hill will be Dave Matthews of Winston-Salem, president of the Di-Phi, and Robert Pace, a Chapel Hill res ident and member of the National Council of the American Church Un ion of the Episcopal Church. The Archbishop is in the United States under the auspices of the Ameri can Church Union. One of Joost de Blank's first acts after his election and enthronement as archbishop-metropolitan in Soutb Africa was to become co-chairman of the Treason Trials Defense Fund. This fund provides legal aid for those citizens of South Africa who ere accused of treason for opposing the apartheid policy. ment. screens and projectors for films. And by means of a speaker system, from a central control point different records can be clayed into different classrooms at the request of the instructor. At present the LTniversity has a language laboratory that would erve the purposes only of a small dberal arts college. It has improv ed only slightly from when it was one of the first built in the na tion. And the University is mrv Egging behind Davidson College, "Duke and Elon College in its labor atory. On the 10 pcint program for UNC in the statewide capital im provements bond issue the foreign, language departments are request ing $750,000 on which they are mposed to erect a new building. This, of course, will not be near 'y enough. "I don't see how it can give us what we need, said Dr. S. A. Stoudemire, chairman of tha department of Romance Languag es. Dr. Stoudemire stressed that be sides a modern laboratory, there is now an urgent need for centrali zation of all language instruction into one building, including Ro mance and Germanic languages, as well as the classics. If enrollment continues to climb, and it's safe bet that it will, there will not possibly be room in Mur phey Hall for the French and Span ish classes. The growth of the staff has pre cipitated similar problems. No-.v with 19 full time professors and 35 full time instructors, the lan guage departments are being squeezed for office space. Sine World War II the staff has not been housed in one building at one time. The white barracks, j "gnam a, iebs xeiepnone service, t : i -v j t is tne saving grace. One might add to these pro blems the need for a microfilm reading room and other items, but let's not belabor the point. The point is to see what can - be done about the problem at the - polls on Oct. 27.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 14, 1959, edition 1
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