Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 15, 1960, edition 1 / Page 1
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4 WEATHER Continued clear, with tempera tures a little colder than yester day. High in the upper 50. 7 jean of dedicated wrrlce to a better University, a better state and a better nation by one of America's great college papers, whow motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 83 Complete W) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1W0 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Final Tabulation On Vote oviet Forces Vs Following die the tot.! ly di-.tiict, of votrs m Tuesday's Honor Council Refcrcnd um: Khrushchev Cuts Allielld. Section ." I or Ar.iiin.,1 Section G For Against Section 7 For A;:;ni( Sf't t IMIl ,", Tor A:.;.iin.! 11! I 17 DMII UMIII lMI IMV DMVI INT. 'I Ml i Mil TM1II TMIV DWI DWIl TW TOTAJ mi u p; i:;:: 1 1 ll 2i;;j 17 21;; 21 2HL If) r7 in to Ki: HI) :i loo 11 VI 10 ti ll 12 11 127 i:i ;; C7 i 10 10 12. t;; 101 in 4 n -) 1 1 15 10 2(i :j 17 12 73 171 18 182 7 77 112 no 192 18 20-1 5 113 94 20 49 G2 7 03 4 19 49 1331 G0(, 167C 255 173G 177 eciares IKockefs ssiles Make usssa ..j Student Fined For Wearing Mask In Raid ran aest Nat n 1016 904 Tar Heels Will Faco Irish In Kenan Stadium Nexf Fall . i file I iii'I !"!' I.'k ere n; liiKi'.-. rm ttrd.iy liv Clunk i;.us,(n. '! he tnh ;,-hI T,i, Him ! in Ki'ii.ui Stadium u:i Or -;! !'( (l tin' mm - on I lu ll nie - i en-, a; i w r.!i . in th'.' m;i. m's opcaer. Woke Finest. MaryLn.l ; "' Notre I) ;:;. 1 lute i.rt ,i:nv r i rt' 1 i.,) ;r v..i. i o: Cat , i'li' -In. i', anriouac ctl yes Diuvtur ot AthU",:.s . !',, Ill id j our ( tn r j ( . S:..':- 1 :i'l Inke i :i !! Explosion May Be Cause Of Plane Crash 'H;;Kk v..t!i- s.niih 1 " ,!' Si:i:iin..-. Expected ! ''-' ., 1. v l!(l.',.-UT. at.' S.lliK' 21 I v. i;:clau..i Ios WASHINGTON (AP In vest i- vKiii-. iiilib it ks l'.ob K.il :..:t ! i gating Senators were told tnrl.nv I)ai.. h..lliKK-k Skip Clement. that noary $900,000 worth of in H -u lei iMik Kay FarrN. en.l .L.lm ' slirance bad been issued on the ot one of the 34 passengers ila ti. .J.m (iio!i:i.i h,i, in-e;-0. line .11 til,' ni.ie -.,in t ! i J'M1'(1. 10 111- t He i id l, j;; , I'll l U4. k.U ;i ol i e i tii.y !; . i i it S i'i' i ': iii!. Mi" In h li,,e rppeucl Hi ce ti:i,e, in Keiuin SLi.lium. 'llk-y .urn here 0y 'JV-7 ;n pr,-,. by 11 ! in r.C.3 aivi by J2-7 i;i PVi". L. I i.ie eiose.i .score th,'y li.ne (; fi' l I hy the T.ir IlceN. S.nee OjUMisifnni .li m 1 : i i u ? ' I.' v "'li I.ei':.!iii;e . , i u i Pi.'k .i.'.:;iity .i;.d !;;! (;,.:-i-!!,t. 1 iv V.m SclieiJuli v i'' 2 - . C. stjtc at Ui:.,,o! 1 1 : 1 i i'L- Miami at .Miami ni.l.i i i-l. I'.-X.itiv D.uue at Cliapel lliii ':. !." Wc.ke l-'uicM at Chi:,..! II,. I c! 22-S'.uiii Carolina at C'olum- J'la. S ('. M 2'i -TcnncsMv Knoxvil.'e. Tfiti. Nov. .", - rit iiisoti at Clemx)!!. S. C Nov. IJ-.Marjlaiid at I'hapel H:!l Nov. V.l -l)k... ;,t Cl'.ijiel 1 1 1 1 1 Nov. 2d-Virginia at Charlottesville. crash near lite killed in the plane Uoiivia. N. C., Jan. G. Oscar T.akke, head of the Safe ly Division of the Civil Aeronau tics Board, said the heavily in sured victim was Julian Andrew Frank. The body of Frank, 32-year-old West port, Conn., attorney, was iii.'id on the beach near Ft. Fisher, N. C, Saturday lb miles from where the plane crashed three clays earlier. Bakke described as unusual the laet that Frank's body fell far A UNC senior has been fined $10 and costs in the Chapel Hill lxecordcr s Court on charges of violating the state's anti-masking laws. The case against Eddie Maynard of Raleigh stemmed from an at tempted "panty raid" on women's dorms before Thanksgiving. All lo cal police were called out when about 300 shouting and firecracker j shooting students staged a two- nour demonstration. Maynard changed an earlier pica of not guilty to nolo contendre. His attorney argued that the anti masking law was applicable only to members of secret societies. Judge William S. Stewart noted that he had earlier fined another student $10 and costs on identical charges in collection wilh the same event. Detective Howard Pendergraph said the two were agitators in the generally leaderless crowd at the unsuccessful raid. Hi-Fi Addict Raids Kemp's; Steals Discs A music-loving- do-it-yourself burglar treated himself to $1,829 worth of the best in home Hi-Fi equipment from Kemp's early Thursday morning. Owner Kemp B. Nye reported the theft to the local police short ly after arriving at his store yes terday morning. Entry was gained by breaking a back door lock. Police said the door was checked at 2:30 a.m. the previous night. Nye reported that 195 records worth about $800 at retail were missing. There was a motive in the thief's method. After he carefully chose a large selection of good jazz and semi-classical records, including 75 stereos, he picked up enough equipment to put together a com plete top-notch home hi-fi set Kemp's Record Shop is the well known home of music located at 205-207 E. Franklin St. State in vestigators are working on the case. ion I Tells Supreme Soviet Scientists Developing A 'Fantastic Weapon" Uy PRESTON G ROVER MOSCOW wi - Xikita S. Khrushchev declared today the Soviet Union is so strong it can cut the number of men in its armed forces by almost a third and rely upon the greatest firepower-lockets and intercontinental balistic missiles-ever possessed by any nation. And more aueome power is to come, the Soviet Prem ier told 1,300 Deputies of the Supreme Soviet (Parliament) xuc vtuLicu .uinniiLiee 01 ine Communist Party and the Soviet History 1 1. in, (I !( -, . The I lie .-aiiu opponents n( 1 jii I".,'! wil. '. ,,( .-d b Nor Ji Ciroii'ia 11..: li a 1 a 1 ar .; ": 1 1 l"ar K'-.'iv 11.1 K'i- iv.v t" '( h Jim II ( key, h ! ;, 5 ,(V. or. I l.i,t s(i.,in. iIomi.- i,i.r. v. '!i a 1 - hi uii-; .')( 4 i'i , ,. ,.'.i Di.kc ..tT opiiuii', wtii . lae I ih !., , y ,, a in ,ii :, inn' in F, i ! iv 1 1 .1 ' '''' 11 l'1 r ,1 a ,iy ; Scii'li ; ir,l,n , -'Oil t 1 1 e! , .. it I. fr,iri lk . r a. uk uwmvs 01 ine otner vic tims. He said it bore different type of mutilations than the other j bodies. j .'M.M". cluoniicn inns! 1 11 1 n in 1 their .MMn.,!cr reports by iV1.,. .' to me o.i-i; (,!:,ct. President Angus I'a; h.i., 1 eir.iiided. M ! IV.il S'-i'e :ni lo,' -1 1 1 i ( 1 A t 1 1 III He did not ;it nncc whether he suspected Frank had been blown from the aircraft by an explosion of .some sort. i He said Ihe body had been j "deeply penetrated" by fragments j of metal, wood and paint. Such ! penetration often occurs in injur j ics from explosions. Students in the inl'inii;ry Thurs- i ,5akkc ave his story at a public day wen- Patricia Pearson, c lar-: ,,earin l'lilk(i by the Senate Avia ncc Dunn. Mudiael Durr. Prtice i ' lon S,,I,- niinitt-c, which is in- ;atcman. ().(;, r Harris I.leuelleo i V('sl1"'1"11 safety problems. H- INFIRMARY vim. ,111 I Vi li:e I tr ill my 1.; 1,1 iii Y 1,1" o in.:;. eai A: ill on., ; l.'ia. k idstc .' 1 a .111 i'l.iM ; k Ciiiii I 1 ' . 1 .' 1 k Wells. Jerry Fi..lier. Charles Favv selt. Cbienic Arm, Iron;:, Douglas h'Wy , .buy Ib lins, Joseph rr kins, Leslie Siilorius, Marhara Sniith. i:(iin.ui Atvvater and Kirl.-v J lies, juiid James II. Durfee, chairman of the CAT., had reported first to the I Senators at a closed door hearin;;. I'.akke did not say who took out uie lug insurance policies Frank. Placement Service Book Is Available on Playmakers Present I hree Student Authored Dramas Tin- Carohnj Playmakers will pre-, .'cut three om-acts Fii lay air! S ,1 i" 'l i.v. Jan laiy 1.1 and hi at 7 ":i P in in tlie I'iaymak'.Ts 'J he.itre. All 'luce plays we.'e vvri.ten by , st'iden's in Hie playwriii'ig cl. s ! o.'fert-l by the Department oi j Drania'k' Art. I "lirandon House" by Marjorie H I! ot Hcautort, S. C. is the story 'i' .M,s. I'.r.-.ndon's cl!orts to save iier house ;rom being burned fry the Nf.rthern Army. It is a civil war story centered around a Soudi Car "'ina Plantation home. The play is directed by Car Hin- i T, V- 'Ml! I I I 1 . V- if 4 L V i y v. ( A THREE YOUNG PLAYWRICHTS-Shirley Dixon, Charles Nisbet nd Marjori. Hall look over .cript, of one act plays to be presented th.s wstktnd in Playmakers Theatre. All three are students here lichs. Cast members are: Isabella Davis, Louise McGce. Bill Smith, Rob Cofad. Jerry Walker, Ed Live ly, arid Rill Gay. Bobbie Hicks is stage manager and the set design er is Bob Lott. '.'The Return," by Charles Nisbet of Charlotte, tcILs the story of four men who are shipwrecked on an island inhabited by a goddess. John K. Stockard is the director and S.d!y Pullen the stage manager. Cast includes: Bob Lott, Ira Marks, Frank McDonald, Wade Burley, John Chase, and Debbie Ives. The .set designer is Gordon Clark. A Carolina folk play, "Half Moon," by Shirley Dixon of Green vide, fills out the bill of one-acts. It tells the story of a mountain girl who goes to the city and falls in love with the local revenuer. It is directed by John Sneden. Bill Han nah designed the set and Mimsey Guy is the .stage manager. Cast members are: Mimsey Guy, Susie Cordon, Darwin Solomon, Boh Thornburg, Edith Davis, Geoige OTIanlon, and Gene LaNier. General stage manager for all the productions is Bob Merritt. Cos tumes are by Bob Thornburg, lights by B.ll File and Properties by John Chase. Barbara Jinks is house man ager. The public is invited to attend each evening and to participate in the discussion of the play which will be conducted at the conclusion The annuals are here! No, the Vackety Vacks haven't, arrived yet, but the 1900 College Placement Annual is available free to all Seniors and graduate students at the University Placement Serv ice, 200 Gardner Hall. This annual and its companion volume, "Careers For the College Man," contain valuable and impor tant articles on the employment prospects of the next year, as well as vital information on many and varied careers open to the college graduate. Placement Service Di rector Joe M. Galloway announced yesterday. "These two publications contain a variety of information for studems seeking employment in busir.cso, in dustry or government, and we feel that they are extremely useful man uals lor our students," Galloway- said in urging students to pick up their copies of the books and utilize the many opportunities and advan tages offered by the Placement Service. Both yearbooks are cross-indexed for easy reference to geographical employment, types of occupations, and the companies offering recrirt ing programs for qualified people, Gailoway pointed out. The College Placement Annual is published by the College Placement Council, a non-profit organization. "Career 10" is the official publica tion of Careers Incorporated, and is distributed free to accredited uni versities and colleges. Through the efforts of the Place mcnt Service many Carolina gradu ates have obtained excellent jobs The Placement Service has proved itself indispensible to the college graduate. Vice President Eisenhower? Maybe Not, But He Could Start A Constitutional Storm By ARTHUR EDSON AP Newsfeatures Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Of this, we can be sure: If Dwight D. Eis enhower should decide to run for Vice President, he would set this country off on one of the greatest Constitutional binges in its his tory. Eisenhower himself suggested the strange possibility at his news conference yesterday. The tran script reads: ', "The only thing I know about the presidency the next time is, I can't run. (Laughter). But some one has raised the question that if I were invited, would I con stitutionally run for Vice Presi dent, and you mieht ask vnsi might find out about that one. I don't know. (Laughter)." Well, this is a laughing matter now, for everyone knows Eisen hower isn't about to run for the vice presidency. But he did raise a point that seems to have been overlooked by those who remodel the Constitution. The last amendment, the 22nd, reads: "No person shall be elected to the office of the president more than twice, and no person who has held the office of president, or acted as president, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected president shall be elected to the office of the president more than once." In short, Eisenhower has had it, so far as elections go. But what if he ran for vice president? And, if elected, could he step up if the president were to die? In all the discussions no one seems to have thought about a president, having served his legal limit, getting another potential whack at it by serving as V-P. Presidents seldom run for an other office. John Quincy Adams later served in the House with dis tinction. Andrew Johnson was elected to the Senate. And thpn there was James Monroe. For a time after he left the White House he served as Justice of the Peace. So far as is known, none ever thought about running for vice president. government can inform you, Com rade Deputies, that though the wea pons we have now are formidable weapons, the weapon we have in the hatching stage today is even more perfect, even more formid able," Khrushchev said. "The wea pon which Is being developed is, as they say in the portfolio of our scientists and designers, a fantastic weapon." Khrushchev did not elaborate on the "fantastic" weapon in his ad dress but he said that "now it is quite clear that the United States of America is not the world's most powerful military power." Krushchev spoke for three hours and five minutes with a half hour break before a special session of Supreme Soviet Deputies from all parts of the vast nation which oc cupies a sixth of the earth's land surface. He proposed and automatic Par hamentary approval is certain a cut of 1,200,000 men in the armed forces, reducing the total to 2,423. 000, the lowest figure since 1937. But at the same time he told the Deputies Soviet military firepower exceeds anything known in history and Soviet defense never has been so strong. "In cutting the number of our armed forces wc are not decreas ing their firepower," the Com munist Party Chief said. On the contrary, in a qualitative' way tfw firepower will bn increased many, many times. I am sure the west ern powers know this and, if they don't, I have to warn them." In fact, Khrushchev said, the shift of emphasis from "manpower to ultra-modern weapons would save the Soviet Union money, and "this will be a plus for our country, for the growth of our economy and for the material well-being of our population." Khrushchev- devoted much of his ' speech to a discussion of prospects Legislature Takes Break; No Meeting Student Legislature took its usual breather last night and did not meet because of the end of semester and upcoming exams. Legislature by-laws provide for regular Thursday night meetings except during the last 2 weeks of both semesters, the fall fraternity and sorority rush week, and ses sions falling during recesses. The body will re-convene Feb. 4. At least 3 bills will be on the dock et for consideration at that time. One is the Daily Tar Heel appro priation bill and another concerns a $350 appropriation for this spring's UN Model General Assembly. Legislators will also consider a proposed resolution which calls for ihe granting of equal rights at down town restaurants and theaters to all UNC students. CORRECTION The machine mentioned in yesterday's paper that is housed in the addition to Phillips Hall s Remington machine, not IBM. Kennedy May Oppose Brown In Cal. Test WASHINGTON, m Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass) said today he is "entertaining the idea" of running against Gov. Edmund G. Pat Brown in the California Presidential Primary. Kennedy told the National Press Club at a luncheon that he expects 10 meet ben. Hubert H. Humphrey 'D-Minn), the only other avowed candidate for the Democratic pres idential nomination, in one primary or another. But the Massachusetts Senator indicated this may not be the April Wisconsin preferential vote which his brother, Robert Kennedy, has said would involve an un'air test because the state borders Hum phrey's home grounds. Kennedy suggested it might be possible to work out an agreement with Humphrey under which Hum phrey would enter the March 8 New Hampshire primary in exchange for Kennedy's entry in Wisconsin. Those matters came up in a ques tion session. for the Soviet economy. He reported significant increases in production of both heavy industrial and con sumer goods and in labor produc tivity, all of which he said exceeded the planned goals for the first year of the current seven-year plan which began in 1959. But the fireworks in the speech concerned Soviet military prospects in advance of East-West disarma ment talks and a Summit meeting of the Big Four powers opening May 16 in Paris. One of the outstanding questions before the Summit meeting will be the twin problem of West Ber lin's future and that of divided Germany. Khrushchev once again repeated the statement which touched off a crisis in November 1958. He said the Soviet Union would demand that the powers sign peace treaties with both West and Communist East Germany, and if this did not come to pass, "we will sign a peace treaty with the German Democratic (Com rrmcigt) Republic only, with all the consequences that might fol low." Khrushchev then launched into a bitter attack upon Chancellor Kon rad Adenauer of West Germany, j comparing some of the German : kss leader's activities to those 0: H:t:er. Adenauer is firmly opposed to any Western concessions at the Summit to the Communists on the German and Berlin issues. Khrushchev also assailed Presi dent Eisenhower's recent decision o end a moratorium on nuclear csts. in ine existing situation." he, said, "if any one country resumed I tests, it would be followed by other j aiuiea possessing nuclear weapons. The country which resumes tests first will thus assume a grave re sponsibility. "I would like to stress again that the Soviet Union will also in ihe future adhere to its pledge not to resume experimental explosions, providing nobody else docs so." The Premier's speech ranged far and wide over a great variety or subjects, mingling grim warn ings with glittering promises. There was something for everybody For j the home front, he announced that ! ermcfriir.( ir,n f C , 11 . 1 ri I ... a luu-sLdie U'm-;ber ...lf,,n . munist society with plenty for all! , hp r , " "..a. began with the year 1959 xbe j. tice Department men coli- eu lor me r coeval Jury session. None Indicted In Parker Case; May Be Over BILOXI, .Miss., ijp) a special federal grand jury ended its inves tigation of the Mack Charles Park er lynching today without returning indictments in the nine-mor.th-old case. Charles Long, of Gulfport, the jury foreman, read the decision to U. 3. Dist. Judge Sidney Mize that "on the basis of the evidence pre sented, we were unable to arr.ve ai any true bill-;." The action apparently has the ef fect of ending the Parker case 11 n- authoriues uncover new wit nesses or new testimony. Mize congratulated the jury on its work du.i.ig the deliberations which started Jan. 4, saying he thought jurors conducted themselves "dilig eatly and iaiiiy." He then receded the jury entil iiie reguLr Feo. 23 term ol Federal Cuui., cautioning mcmac; s .night oe failed back .sooner to take up atiier mat.e.s. A mob oi hooded men dragged Paiker, 23-year old Negro truck driver irom Luniocuo;;, out oi h.s secon-J-Joor cell at Peplai ville last April 2o and killed him. HLs ouLet-pierced body was recovered from the Pearl River 10 clays later. The lynching came two days be- '"i airwti i sciieuu.f j uiai on charges of raping a pregnant, white mother. The woman und her small daughter had been left in a stalled aUo near Lambert on while her husoand sought a mechanic. A Pearl River county grand jury inveslgated the case last Nuvem- ircl'Ctinen.s. the year 1959. For a world thirsting for peace, he repeated his blockbuster proposal for total disarmament. For the underdeveloped countries, he touched upon his forthcoming visit t0 Asia and Soviet aid to such areas. For the French, he had praise for President Charles De Gaulle as a hero who fought for the country's honor. Kkrushchev visits France in March. For the West, he had praise for President Eisenhower as a. man apart from those who pursue a "cold war policy of positions of strength." The announcement of the pro spective cut in the Soviet armed forces came as no particular sur prise to 'Western diplomats, but it did point up the fact that Western In his report to Judge Mize, Long said the jury of 20 white men and one Negro heard 32 witnesses dur ing nine days. He said the 3 were all the witnesses called by attor neys involved. Also available to the j-iry was a 378-page FBI report on ito mon:h long investigation of the lynching The same report was available to the county grand jury last Novem ber. FBI agents stepped out of the case after reporting they -,vr,e unable to uncover any evidence of feJeral violations in the abdjeaon and lynching. G. M. SLATE The only scheduled activity in. Graham f . i experts actually had underestimated ,s a ree c . Juke box dance, 9-12 p.m in thp Sowet armed strength last spring j Rendezvous Room.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 15, 1960, edition 1
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