tl.n.C. Library Serials Dept. C7 yean of dedicated errlce ( a better University, a better state and a better nation by one o America's great college papers, hoe motto states, "freedom of expression Is the backbone of an academic community." WE A THER- . rterU Snow or a mixture of rain and sleet and snow spreading over the state today. High In 40s. y MAR 1 6 19S0 VOLUME LXVIII, NO. 121 Complete W Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE Y 1 I I J I lilt II I l fma 1 III jTH III YJ I I I I f I f II Candidates For DTH Editor Outline Their Basic Ideas Willi cUition (l.i (hawing mar. Id Rimi i i IK I i l.i 1 1' I'm editor ol I he D.iih Tar I led. ( ui I i in ( I tlit- in. tin points ol his phitloiin Tuesday nioon. l.isi( j)o!i(N is to In in;.; the papn bai k to (.Ii.ijkI Hilt wline il iau le a newspa per for students. This moans the purpos.- of tho p;ipor is to prosont cimpus news ;md views first, and thou it m;iy coor t In world news and i.-Mios," Rimr said. The following an a few of the things he would do to make the 1)11! a "first-rate campus pa- 1 More campus no as 2 A no . s :n brief ci.!umn to run tin- front p.-go to present the stale. national and intcriutional news in a concise torm. :$. More editorial comment on campus news jnd ivuos plus odi tori.il comment on world isue.s as pace and impel tatic proscribe A -Tar Heel of ihe Week" to rcc:gnie some outstanding stulent, pioiosxir or tow nsp.-rsun. j. An "Inquiring Photographer" to run once a wwk to -give stu dem Hii opportunity to speak on IH-rtinent campus subjects. (J To continue ue ol "Togo." "Peanuts," Herblock and the daily crossword, but not akl any other syndicated material bvcaus.' of t'i-naaccs. 7. Try to enlarge the sports staff , grams, .so that more coverage can bo giv- j Labor is not a part of any p:li n to minor sports, intiamurals ! heal party, says Hoyman. and w ill and features on athletes, coaches I present its views to both political and others aspects o! .sports at Car-: conventions. el;.. a I'ublNi a -('heck Lit" ol exents on campus each day. 9. To balance the editorial page between the light and the serious columns ia addition to editorials and letters to the editor. 10. Work o i rv ultra lively make-1 up throughout the paper in addi-! t.on to redesigning page two to make it look fresh and inieresting. by labor, as will an appeal for a "Those 10 important points arL I higher and a more widely used just part of my plan for the paper nnimum wage. Labor, says Hoy if I be elected. In addition to these man. would favor an increase in are thv circulation survey and the ! minimum wages from $1 to at I a tt t off l internal improvements which I named in Saturday's paper." the former Dili co-news editor said. "Thes. ainl other plans can be! explained more fully through per-j sonal contact during my campaign, j I am open lor questions and sug- i gvstions because, ' I believe this is j the on'y way for my fellow students 4.. t I . . I u unu oui more aooui me anu ir ; ,1(yman In otht.r Wl)rds thtTC me to knu.v what tiny think of the should be federal standards plac Tar Heel." he concluded. , Vi on unemployment . compensa- 'tion and disability insurance. NOTICE Between now and March 27, all letters-to-tht-c ditor must be confined to a maximum of 250 words. No letter exceeding that length will be printed during that period. , . ii i i iiuii w. ,, mim mi..iuii nm pium in m.i..i inn mw""""' m rf Y"'MM'L ' '' ? '4 V -Kv.k -'. . vW-',!- H-t'- 'j - ' jL " ' J Y NOMINEES are (I. to rt., seated above) Louise Loomis, membership chairman; Anne Way, record ing secretary; Sharon Sullivan, president; and Elizabeth Green, executive secretary. Standing (I. to rt.) are Hannah Hart, program chairman; Joan Pinkerton, executive secretary; Jane McLennon, membership chairman; and Linda Pfaelier, vice-president. "I do not believe that change in itsell is the solution to the problems lacing the Daily lai Heel." said Jonathan Yardley, candidate lor the editorship ol the Daily Tar Heel yes terday. The rising Party Promises Differ Tarty promises to Congressional labor lei labor and islation of- tl" differ, according to Scott Hoy- inan. area director of ArL-CIO, in a speech given Monday night to a Mock Democratic convention study group. Thercfore in this election year labor will favor an enforcement clzuse for party platforms, pledging par ies to work hard er a', accomplishing what they promise. Ilovnum. who spoke to dclega- tion and platform chairmen for J tho Mock Democratic convent ion, ' was associated with the (TO in j Aew I'.ngland before coming to Greensboro. He is a graduate of Monmouth College, has done grad uate work, and has been an avid participant in bbyr education pro- It will probably be asking the parties to include . in their plat forms -the right of American workers to organize and bargain collectively" (especially for unor- S ganized workers). Hoyman cited I sections in the Taft-Hartley Act that allows states to forbid union t.hops by prohibitive legislation, A stepped-up rate of national economic growth will be sought dn ,luur A man shouldn't have to leave his home town to get a job, ac cording to the director. He fa vors help for "depressed areas" via technical assistance and medical care for those receiving social security. "A leg should not be worth more in one state than in another." says Labor will ask the political par ties to include in their platforms national standards for federal aid to education. It also will ask for orientation counselors may be ob stimulution of private and public tained in the reserve room of tho programs for building the 35.000.- j library, the information desk of housing units which will be need ed by 1975. senior added, however', that he fooLs that if additions and torrid ions are a part cf change then -chances must 1 bo made." lie emphasized that most ; of the changes he ha.s in mind are of minor significance but "'would add immeasurably to the inlorma- tive qualities of the paper and at I the same time greatly enhance the enjoyment students will derive irom il. Yardley listed the alternations and additions, major and minor, which he. intends to bring to the paper if elected: 1. The daily printing of television schedules fi.r channels 4, 5 and 11 and a daily listi;1;: of all motion pic tures playing in both Chaiel Hill and Durham. 2. F.-atn.e articles on people in and aruind the University who.se contributions have been not only loeugized but also who have, made steady. imotie.'J contributions to the students. :i. The replacement of "Cover ing the Campus" with a new for mat which will allow organizations releasing information through this tiutl.'t t: get better, more read able publicity. This might be run on the front page if day to day space permits. 4. Adai.iolial capsule features on the spurts p:'go. such as major league s'.aadiugs and leading foot- ball and basketball scores, which would serve to inform the student body more broadly about the wot Id of sPrls and ilbtHlt Carolina's place ' in the national sports scene, whiie at the same time not taking up j much space. ?: Thetlimination of "What About This'.'" horn the editorial page. "This is not ;i iK.liev of th-:' naoer." I - - - i i i " Ya;dley commented. "It is the cdi J tor's policy, and the right of the j succeeding editor is to change any j policies he wishes to." 6. The inclusion of a "World News In Brief" column daily to replace the current "confusion ! that exists about world news po licy." ! Yardley added that there are i many ideas he has in mind for the ! paper which he has been expressing to indiv idual students. Wi. said that i his primary interest is in making the Daily Tar Heel a newspaper which' "conforms to the ideas con ceived when the paper was found ed, thu.se of informing the students about the campus." NOTICE Application blanks for men Graham Memorial and the YMCA office. ii x I , 4 - -4 I 1 li2- I HEADS UNC TALKS Vital topics in world affair will be covered in a two-day conference here Thursday and Friday. Hol ley Mack Bell, (above) associate editor of the Greensboro Daily News, is chairman of the 10th annual Conference on World Affairs, which opens at 10 a.m. Thursday in Carroll Hall with an address by Rep. Chester Bowles (D-Conn.). Frost Reads To Capacity By ADELAIDE B. CROMARTIE wi,,. a n ,.rrif9 whv I do people go to the North Pole to see if they can get back. A man writes poetry to see if he can get out." This was Robert Frost speaking last night before a capacity crowd in Carolina's Memorial Hall for his fourteenth consecutive year. "A poem is a feat of perform ance," said Frost. "First comes the feat of association . . . And then comes the performance of wrN , , Ml Q near Sanford Talk Here Tonight ... i Terry Sanford, candidate for governor of North Carolina, will address the Young Democrats Club tonight at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of Carroll Hall. His appearance is being spon sored jointly by the 'Terry San ford Young Voters Committee and the University Young Democrats Club. Bob Futrelle, president of the Young Democrats Club, ex tends an invitation to all students and the public to attend the meet ing. A question and answer period will follow his talk. Prior to the address in Carroll Hall, a reception will be held at 3:30 p.m. for Sanford at the Am erican Legion Hut. This reception will be sponsored by the Sanford Steering Committee of Orange County. Members of the Young Democrats Club ire invited. After the address at Carroll Hall, a public reception will be held in the Main Lounge of Gra ham Memorial. Sanford plans to make the ad dress one of his major campaign speeches. Crowther Says Voters Suffer From Indifference, Unconcern Rodney Crowther, Washington cor respondent for the Baltimore Sun, told a Faculty Club luncheon Tues day that "no time in memory have we as a people seemed to under stand less what is at stake or care less," about the upcoming Presi dential race. "Not only are we confronted by collossal misunderstandings both in high places and low but we have the misfortune to be suffering from ... an attitude of indifference and general unconcern among the voters about issu- .s oi the very grav est import," he said. Crowther said that one reason for this is that Americans are too com fortable, to smug and self-satisfied, j Most of us are simply not yet aware that we are living in a new age, in a world as different from the world into which we were born and grew up as the worid of our fathers dif fered from the world of Sir Isaac Newton," he noted. Speaking on, "Presidential Poli Aide Given Shakespeare's '"Comedy ol Kirovs," a rollicking revel of mistaken identities and amorous mix-ups, Avill be presented by The Players Incorporated at 8 o'clock tonight in Me morial Hall. . Students will be admitted Tree to the performance, which is being sponsored by the GM Concert Series. The Players production of Come dy of Errors," one' of Shakespeare's rarely produced works, has re ceived critical acclaim throughout the current tour. Poetry (Crowd the verse But a poet has got to show himself a master of sen- timent . . . and not be a senti mental slob." Frost interspersed the reading of his own works with antimated commentaries. "The land was ours before wc were the land's," read Frost, stop ping to explain that he wrote this work for the British. He began reading "Tuft of Flo wer's." Finishing, he commented, "This was long before anybody got up that terrible word 'Toge therness' ... I don't write free verse, he went on. inis couplet summed up his feelings, "I'd just as soon write free verse as play tennis 'with the net down. - Said he, "Witchcraft is just as common in the world today as it ever was." recounting a seance he once at tended, Frost told of his attempt to "show 'urn up." Before he could uncover any shady facts, "two big black men" confronted him with "You better get out of here." Frost added, "They could smell my lantern." "The air is big with ideas now," said Frost as he introduced "Now as I Out Walk." Some miserable kind of pessimists think everybody died for nothing in war, he said, and that to die for ideas is noth ing. "What do you want to die for, but ideas?" says Frost. The lone couplet fascinates Mr. Frost. He shared this example with the audience: "It is from having stood contrasted that good and bad have always lasted." Frost cited a reading of the line. "I felt my standpoint shaken" to a college group to which the young men replied "Oh! You've been reading Karl Marx, too." "Do you feel yours shaken?" Frost asked the audience. "I don't. If I do I think it's fun." tics and the Economy." Crowther observed that "there are Democrats w ho loudly proclaim that we are de stroying ourselves by being too lib eral in heloins the rest of the world." "There are Democrats who equal ly loudly proclaim that we are threatening our own security and the security of the free world by our pinch-penny "treatment of our allies and by our parsimony to ward the uncommitted and develop ing peoples." "There are Republicans who are strongly internationalist and almost belligerant in their demand that we keep our commitments to the world,, and there are Republicans who are dj ed-in-the-wool. protectionists and Isolationists whose whole philoso phy is 'let's hoe our, own row, and hang the rest of mankind.' " Crowther noted the "terrific din in Congress" to cut Iback on mili tary aid to foreign countries and Acclaim Production As a New York reviewer said "It was refreshing to see and hear young actors, playing their roles: such people as the Bard of Avon must have had in mind when he wrote the play." A Wisconsin critic termed The Players as "one of the finest tour ing attractions in the field today." Billed as the nation's longest-running classical repetory company. The Players Incorporated are cur rently cn their eleventh national tour. They have also made six trips i to Europe and the Far East for the J Department of Defense. The fifteen members of the com-1 pany are associated with the Da- J partment of Speech and Drama of The Catholic University of America, Washington, D. C. Rev. Gilbert V. Hartke, head of the de partment is the founder and direc tor of the troupe. In the past ten years the com pany has given over fifteen hun dred performances of Shakes pearean plays, as well as major works of Shaw and Moliere. Last spring The Play-ers made their New York debut with a lim ited four week engagement at Car negie Hall. The Broadway critics unanimously praised the company as "the best of any small company performing the classics." The Carnegie Hall engagement climaxed the first decade of the company's existence, which was founded by Father Hartke in order to bring the classics into areas never penetrated by New York com panies. CASTONIA GETS BASEBALL TEAM GASTONLV N. C (AP) A 40-ycar-old restaurant operator and former teacher has bought a team franchise for Gastonia in the Class D. Western Carolina league and will organize a team here. George Lublanezki says he hopes to interest other civic-minded persons in giving the team ad ditional backing. The team will use Sims Legion Park as its home. The newly organized Western Carolina League will be composed of eight teams in western North Carolina. They will play a 122 game schedule between April 30 and Sept. 5. to reduce sharply our economic aid. To this he replied: "To cut off military and economic aid would not merely defeat one of our best i bulwarks against the Communists engulfing the developing nations, but we would be betrayig millions of people who look to us for lead ership and improvement of their economies." , Crowther said, that all the lead- j ing Presidential candidates in the! field are liberal in one degree or another and none is an isolationis or a backward looker. "It's not the Presidency in the coming election that worries me. It is that w hile the people of the United States may choose a Pres- ident w ho sees the world w hole and as it is the people may return a worse Congress than the one we now have which is nothing to brag about a Congress too full of illib eral, ill-informed, stubbornly anti foreigners, unreasonably protection (See VOTERS SUFFER, Page 3) n ETa r n D!l(pt j ( Mrsf estate I j. 1 f N W 1 I ' s PLAYERS Joan Murray (top left) plays the abbess, Barbara Krajenka (bottom right) is the courtezan, and Rudolph Caringi (top right) and Nicholas Bedessen (bottom left) are the twin dromios in the Players Incorporated production cf Shakespeare's "The Comedy of Errors." Harvard Prof Slated To Give Senior Address Dr. John Wild, professor of philo- ( sophy at Harvard Univrcsity, will ; be the first featured speaker at the Senior Address, of the Carolina Symposium, March 27, Ills general Feld of discussion will be "Concepts of Man." A recipient of twe Guggenheim fellowships, Dr. Wild has taught and lectured at the Universities of Michigan, Washington, Chicago and The first speech of the 1960 Symposium is being sponsored by the senior class and is called the Senior Address. "The senior class, recogniz ing its leadership of the intel lectual life of the campus, is participating in the 1960 Caro lina Symposium through the Senior Address," stated Wade Smith, class president, yester day. According to Smith, this is one of the activities the class is sponsoring this spring in an ef fort to improve the intellectual life of the campus. It's the first attempt by any senior class for a program of this type. Honolulu. He was a PoacII Lectur er at the .University of Indiana. His interest in the history of philosophy ranges from early Greek . saurc s Ontilcgy." and "The Social and medieval ti.-n-.-s to the present j dynamics ol Gec.ge II. Mead." He developments o; phenomenology and j nas taught at the University of existentialism. Among hus writings Nebraska, the University of Hous are s'udics of Plato and Spinoza; in j tcn anrj lectured at the New School 1S5S h ; published "The Challenge ! , or Social Research. of Existentialism," and in 195'J, ' Human Freedom and Social Or der." Previously, Dr. Wild served as president of the Association of APPLICATIONS DUE All education students who plan to graduate in June or Aususl I must turn in applications for the National Teachers Examinations by Friday, March 18, to the Edu cation Department. TRYOUTS SET j j j The Petite Dramatique. sponsor ed hv OMAR will hnlrl Irvonts ! Friday in Roland j,arker l from ; 2 t0 3;30 p m for a productioii of .The Misunderstanding" bv Al- bert Camus. The play will be di- j "The Open Society and It's Am rected by Anthony Wolff. Male j bivalent Friend." and "The Incar and female leading roles are avail-, nate Word and the Language able, i Culture." Realistic Philosophy n4 Metaphysical Society. Presently, he is president of the eastern sec t:on cf the American Philosophical Assce'ation. He has been a member of the ilrvari faculty since 1927, and a pi cesser since 1947. He studied at .he University of Chicago in 1926, then taught at the University of j Michigan for a year before joining j .he Harvard Faculty. Dr. Wild is a native cf Chicago .nd lives in Cambridge, Mass. Panelists appearing on the pro- gram wuh Dr. Wild will be: Dr. Dcinard Glueck, Dr. Maurice Na taasoii ard Dr. William II. Potest. j Dr. Hu::ck. a leading authority ji psjchujjia'sis, criminology, and j jhAi guiJar.ce, is prolessor of psy I .hiar.y at the University of North Carolina SrhccI of Medicine. He has .aught and pracliced psychiatry for i a half-century. Dr. Glueck knew i .iiscnully i uch men as Freud, Ad j .er, Jung, and Abraham. He is au ! .lu.r of "Forensic Psychiatry," has ! translated several books, and pub- iished a large number of papeus on sychiatry and al'iej subjects. Dr. Natnson. associate professor of philosophy here is author of nunv erous ai'ticl.'s in professional jour : nals and recently published two bocks "A Criticism of Jean-Paul Dr. Natanson is a member of the American Philosophical Asso cialicn. Southwestern Philosophi cal Confereace, the Southern So ciety for Philosophy and Psychol ogy, and the American Sociologi cal Society. Dr. William Poteat, now Associate ! prc eiSC'r of Christianity and Oil -ure at Uuke .Universuy, taugnt philosophy at UN'C from 19477. He has lectured at Washington and Lee and the University of Missis sippi, and was Associate .Editor of "The Christian Scholar" in 19G6. His interests include philosophical theology, philosophy in literature, and philosophical anlhrcpolo-gy. He is author of several articles including "Faith and Existence," -1

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