U.!I.C. Library Jscr C7 years of dedicated aerrlce t a better University, a better state and a better nation by one ot America's great college papers, hoee motto states, "freedom of expression is the backbone of an academic community." WEATHER Fair, little change in tempera lure: high 45-53. VOU'UME LXVIII, NO. 124 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, MARCH 19, 1960 Complete iff) Wire Service Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE STaf 3w Movie Society Will Present Film Classics Movie lovers will have the op porlunity this Sunday afternoon to take part in an innovation in the cultural lile cf the Carolia commu S J .4 .", W WW 5 y. s. tt "k i i m I w r)vl r a o if r is 5 "YMCA CABINET Lewis Rush (front row cenrer) was ejected president of the YWCA. Back row lft fo rght John Snyder, Pete Longcnecker, Richaid King, and Ed McCormick. Front row Bill Plitl, Lewis, Rush and Wallis Williams. Photo I Charlir Ulumonthal Gen. Gavin, Dr. Holton For Coming Symposium Set Talks nity. At 3 p.m., Sunday, March 20, the first meeting of a newly organized film society for both Carolina stu dents and townspeople will be held in the Fellowship Hall of the Pres byterian Student Center. Sponsors and advisory board for the group are: Paul Green, Betty Smith. Phillips Kussell. John Ehle, Winer Oeitingcr, Kenneth Mcln .yie, Klus Scroggs, Foster Fitz Simons, Walter Spearman, Maggie Dent, Bill Morrison and Jack Har gett. Thj purpose of the society will oe to present for its members the j claries of the cinema, which will j represent a sort of history of th-e art of the film, along with new and old experimental short subjects. The film to be shown this Sunday in Itene Clair's masterpiece of comedy, "A Nous la IJberte", which was made in 1931 and re-released in .his country in i:rfi. Clair, the first nftlic truly great directors of the mtL mm Iw MM Year The third main topic of the Now retired, and vice-president Carolina Symposium "Techni- of a noted research organization, logical and Scientific Society" : General James Gavin was for me r ill bo presented by two main j ly chief of Army Research ami speakers. mi p. V i Pevelopment. He is the author of j two hook:;, "Airborne Warfare." i and 'War and Peace in the Spate Age." ! At Seventeen, Gavin enlisted in ;the Kegular Army, arid a year la i ler earned an appointment to ! West Point. In 1941, he became a 1 paratrooper and spearheaded the : ;ssault on Sicily as commander of !lhe 5()5th Parachute Ci-mbat Team v member of the Harvard facul ty for seventeen years. Dr. Gerald Holton is now active in three fields physics, teaching, and scholarly editing. He is also edi- (7i ii A GEN. JAMES GAVIN He was Airborne Adviser t; General K;enhower and landed in Normandy on I) Day as Assistant Commander of the 82nd Airborne Division. He kept this position throughout the remainder of the war. Since the war. General Gavin has been Army Member , of the , Weapons System s Evaluation Group and Chief of Staff of the They are: Genera! James M Allied Forces in Southern Europe. Gavin, foimer t'. S. Army Chief H- has been decorated with the of Research and Development, and Distinguished Service Cross, the Dr. Gerald Holton. Professor ot Purple Heart. Silver Star, and the physics at Harvard, and editor-in- Distinguished Service Order (lirit chief of Daedalus. ,ish). Editor Candidate Sums Up Paper Objectives IpimmiiUJLJ w IW tfm'"'..'Wl.-PWJ'inn'mi'l . Jjf v X II m hi k ' j h -y:j j ... ' .1 r'a 1 : c I - v. A v u'tikJf! . , . DR. Rush Elected Y President For 1960-61 Louis Rush, a junior from Ashe boro, was elected 1960-61 YMCA President Thursday afternoon. Vice-presidents elected to serve with Rush include Willis Williams, publicity; Jolni Synder, program; Pete Longenecker, fraternity mem bership; and Bill Piatt, dorm m-em-bership., Richard King was elected secre tary, and Ed McCormick, treasur er. Rush, a math major, is a More head Scholar and past s-ecretary of the "Y." Williams is also a Morehead Scholar and member of the Fresh man Honors Program, corhairman of the GM Publicity tommittee, a D:-lta Upsilon pledge and a mem ber of APO service fraternity. He talkies", reached his high point ! is from Robbins, N. C. in creativity with this satire on modern industrialization. "A Nous la Libert e" is one of du? few examples of pure craema. The World-Telegram hailed it as a perfect picture, characterized by the "only new and genuine methods created by th talking picture." It is consistently seen art top-ten lists for ,hc all-time great motion pictures. Sunday's program will also in clude a new experimental short by the internationally known Norman McLaren. The humorous piece is A .PiKA. Pete Longenecker has been active with the Freshman For um and Freshman Camp activities, as well as serving as co-chairman ofthe "Y" finance drive this year. He is a junior. Piatt, a freshman from Washing ton, D. C, has been active in the "Y" Orphanage work. He ' is a member of the track team and a St. A. pledge. A junior from Chapel Hill, Syn-d.-r is past chairman of the "Y" Current Affairs Committee iid a A i -y i ft JH ,x . '4 .' GMAB OFFICERS Pictured above Graham Memorial Activities Board officers. Towers, and R. V. Fulk. are the newly elected (l-r) Inmsn Allen, Anne Fhoto by Ron Cunningham Everett Honor Group nducts New Members Three charter members entitled "The Chairy Tale" it's member of the Westminister Fel about a guy and a chair. lowship. At each of the society's showiiafts. Klchard King is a member of the lull programs will tell about each film, its director, and its contribu tions to the development of the art ofthe film. Membership fees and prcgramming will be on a quarter ly basis. GERALD HOLTON tor-in-chief of Daedalus, the journ al of the American Academy of Arts and Science s. His books in the field of physics and the history and philosophy of science include "Introduction to Concepts and Theories in Physi cal Science," and "Science and Orientation Deadline For Men Nearing Sunday is the deadline for turn ing in applications for Men's Or ientation Counselor, Jack Mitchell, orientation chairman said yester day. The applications may be ob tained at and returned to the GM Information Desk or the Reserve Freshman Honors Program. A freshman from Chattanooga. Tenn., he has been active in Wrestminister Fellowship and International Em phasis Week. Ed McCormick, junior from Ra leigh, is a member of Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity. After more than thiee weeks of campaigning. Jonathan Yardley. candidate for the cditr.-.liip of the Daily Tar Heel, yesterday summed up his objectives lor the student pj-, I r u.:d thjnked these who have helped him during the campaign, i "I made a promise to myself a 1 lew weeks ago." the candidate not- : .d, "that if elected I would have a list ol all my campjign promises printed and wculJ keep that list : pos'ej in my office until eery one; of those promises is k .pt. 1 'That promise sliil holds," Yard ley continued. "I think that in the! past too many candidates have ' made empty promises and v. 'er j kept them. The editor of the Daily j Tar HCel is re-sponsib!:- to every studcru in the University, and I con- the Modern Mind." He is prcsent- , .i t ty pursuing experimental i esearcn ; Ueading Room of the Library on properties of materials under! - hi:h pre.'-sin e. Foreian Coeds To Attend Tea The Chapel Hill Altrusa Club will entertain with a tea honoring the foreign women students of the University on Sunday, March 20, at 3:30 p.m. An open invitation is extended to all women foreign students. The tea will take place at the home of Mrs. James II. Davis, 206 North Boundary Street. were in- passed by ! none; he was Fulk Named To Head GMAB For Next Year R. V. Fulk has been named pres ident cf the Graham Memorial Ac iivitie.s Board for the coming year by the GM Buard tl Directors. Inman Allen as vice-president and ' Awn Towers as secretary will work with Fulk. The original nominating commit tee included Student Body Presi dent Charlie Gay, current GMAB President Argus Duff and Student Uriion Director Howard Henry. Fulk Ls a rising senior from Wil mington. He is presently vice- pres ident of Chi Phi fraternity, a mem ber of the Men's Honor Council and this year he served GMAB as chairman of both the Music and GM Concert Series committees. A rising sophomore from Atlan ta. Ga., Allen is a member of the University Dance committee and Symposium committee. He is vice president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledge class. Also a Morehead Scholar, he is an honor roll student. Miss Towers .is a rising senior -from Jacksonville, Fla. and a mem ber of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Sec retary of the junior class, she is the UP nominee for senior class j see- -fury. j She has served as Pan-Hel rep rescntalhe and on the House Cou'n- playin ducted into' the Evei ett Durniitory j coach of Everett I basketball team, ' c:1 ho:n- Honorary Society in a midnight i undefeated dorm-.tory champions: 1 1- new president staled that he ceremony Wednosd&y. he shares his talt.iis unseUishVv was V.?. M. ' he great challenge and is well-liked and appreciated by all wh3 make his acquaintance." Presentations were made by Bob Bontrmpo, dorm president, and Tom Mehl, IDC representative. The dorm president, IDC repres entative i-.nd do. m guidance coun selors were exempt from society membership since they will have the opportunity to be honored in ether sock ties. far his aid during the campaign. "Run has been of immeasurable he.p to me." YardLy said, "and .hr-u-h hi.s willingness to give time and eiiort I led 1 have been abb la .see more students than I had e r heped to." Chairman Erwin Fuller remind- As chief campaign manager Shu-! ed all Carolina gentlemen yester male has been responsible for ar-jday of the Consolidated Univcrsi-iv..-;ng speaking appointments tor ' Lv Night activities scheduled at CUNC Program In Greensboro Planned Today Rinet Cites Questions Posted In Campaign me candidate and lor establishing .schi dules in dormitories, fraterni ties and sororities. Resides Shumate, Yardley ex pressed his thanks to those who "have given me their whole-hearted support and have been willing to do some ef the small tasks ne t .ssary in a campaign of this na lu e." Among those mentioned by .he candidate were Sandy Trotman, WCUN'C for this evening by the Consolidated University Student Council. Open houses at the individual women's residence halls from 7:30-8:30 will lie followed by an informal dance in Elliott Hall, the WC student union building. A great deal of work and plan ning has gone into making this event a success, and 1 sincerely good This tider keeping campaign promises Bob Bingham. Mary Stewart Baker, I hope that there will be part of thut responsibility." Yard! 'y again stressed his desire to btlng campus events to the fere in the paper and to at the same time b"oadcn the scope of the cam pus reporting. "The most important thing for an editor to remember," Yardley said, "is that the pap-r does not btbini to him; it .belongs to the .'' iden's of this University. The edi- Dixie Jackson. Russell Hollers, ' response here on campus. Charlie G.aham, Bill Davis, Frank ' should really a very interesting Craighill, Rip Slusser, Ken Fried- J and enjoyable occasion," Fuller man, Nancy Baker, Larry Smith stated. and "all th ;se who gave of their j The dance admission is $1 per own time to put up my posters gentleman, with or without a date. arouv.J the campus and town." ttt G.M. SLATE The only activity on schedule at tcr th old not l)e the mouthpiece of t,c Graham Memorial Student anyone, but he should always re-( Union today is a dance in the number his responsibility. " (Rendezvous Room, 9-12 p.m. Al- The risrug senior from Chatham, mission to the dance is free, aifd nell, Robert Cannon, Garv Vaushn INFIRMARY Students in the Infirmary Fri day included Ellen Pemberton, Elizabeth Hardin, Sallie McCorry, Nancy Himleck, Ralph Dotson, Brant Bernstein, Frederick Sch- Vu.. slngM out Ron Shumate, as sistant, editor a the Daily Tar Heel. music will be provided juke box. by the Larry Martin, Landrum Brown and Chandler Van Orman. Ed Itiner, candidate for the edi torship of The Daily Tar Heel, did not issue a formal statement yes terday, but gave his answers to some of the many questions "which I have been asked during the course of the campaign." "Many questions have been raised by individuals and in group meet ings, wnicn i unnK deserve to oe answered publicly also," the jour nalism major stated. According to Riner, the questions most frequent ly asked, are as follows: Q. Can't you do away with some of the advertising in the Tar Heel? A. No. Approximately 50 per cent ($25,000) of the paper's income comes from these ads. The remain der comes from student fees and subscriptions. Threfore, because student fees cannot be increased, the Tar Heel must have the amount of advertising it is currently selling. Actually the paper is crowded with Ihis amount of ads, but there is not enough revenue to allow us to print a six page paper. Printing costs are too high to make tliis financially feasible. However, spe cial sales Orientation, Christmas, Dollar Days increase the volume of ads so that more than four pages can be printed. ' Q. Will you keep "What About hich lieT before me." "Our program needs to be far leaching a goal which can be ac- ecmp'.khed through wider partici I pa.icn in derm, fraternity and town ! aieas." he said. He said that the immediate prob- lem will be the selection of com ! ir.it ee chairmen. Ou'gcing President Duff, speak j ir.g for the nominating committee, I said. "W fee! that next year's slate ! of officers is as capable as any Calls Special Session S'"cup which the board could haye Speaker David Grigg has called j Possible compiled." a special session of the Student j v- I::man and have 311 Legislature for Tuesday night. The 1 proven their ability to- handle with i? wi ho he d in Phi s I e.w.Mf.ne anv iyuuauuu wiiu.ii The newly formed society honors the outstanding loader of dormitory principles from each floor. Inductees and their citations are as follows: JIM LcCOMPTT: for his out standing representation of his dorm and his university; he is dorm sec retary, a persuer of a more ad vanced social program and a re spected member of the varsity foot ball team." LeCompte is a sopho more from Gaithcrsburg, Md. HOWARD GARNER "for pos sessing a strong interest in intra mural atmciics ana wing a mem ber of Everett II basketball team, nrmfvotn.rl in rr.ri'il-n r-vl-nr. mfctinc he is an advocator of quiet hour; at 7:30. This action by Grigg was m'S-H develop," Duff continued, regulations', an outstanding student i necessitated by the absence of ai 110 added that each has a wide who is popular among hiscompan-! quorum Thursday. , spread interest in student union ion." A freshman. Garner is from Grigg urges all legislators and programming and "each has a deep Greenville. ; persons concerned with pending realization of the need for effective I bills to come Tuesday night. At work through GMAB and of the L. EUGENE TRONDSEN 'for that time the Judicial Bill, the influence which a well-rounded ac his strong desire that his dorm Elections Board appropriation and j tivity sehedu'e will have upon our gain campus-wide recognition; his: the New By-Laws will be con-i dunces of procuring funds for a leadership in the dorm was sur-' sidered. new facility. This?" A. No. It is a policy of the pres ent -editor which I would not con tinue. Q. Are you a crusader? A. I don't know. A crusader must have an issue, and it is hard to say what issues will arise in the com ing year. I shall work diligently for a new student union and General Assembly approval of the Univer sity budget, but as for "crusades" in the usual meaning of the word, my editorial policy would be to pre sent the facts objectively, as well as opinion. Q. How will you have time to handle the job of editor and to study? A. If I be elected editor, I shall drop active membership in most organizations with which I am now affiliated, with the exception of the Graham Memorial Board of Direc tors. I knew the 'responsibilities of the editorship and am willing to de vote as much time as is needed to editing the paper. Symposium Panelists Named The l'!f0 Symposium yesterday i fessor or phdosophy at Georgetown: announced the panelists for John ; University. Desan was born in Wild's address Sunday, March 27. j Belgium and studied in France. He Wild, noted Harvard professor, will taught for several years at Kcnyon lecture on "The Concept of Man, j and was a Carnegie Fellow at Har- The procedure adop'.ed for the : vard. Q. Ar e you planning to go into the newspaper field after gradua tion? A. Yes, I am. Having been as sociated with the newspaper busi ness for the past seven or eight years, I definitely plan to continue a journalistic career. Symposium calls for one speaker on the evenings of March 27, 23 and 30 followed by a discussion be-' t.veen the speaker and a panel. Serving a panelists for Wild's ad dress will be: Wilfrid Desan: An associate pro- Maurice Natanson: The recipient of two Ph.D.'s, Dr. Natanson is an associate professor of philosophy at UNC. A native Now Yorker, he re ceived one Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Nebraska ar.d the other in social science lrom the N.'v School for Social Research lie ais j holds degrees from Lincoln Memorial University and New York ' University. William Poteat: He is a profes sor of "Christianity and Culture' at Duke University Divinity School, whD.-e interests include philosophi cal anthropology and the philosophy cf literature. Before going to Duke, Poteat taught philosophy at UNC f ir 15 years. nmv.s tMMw).. nmmnuil t..J ,-yww ; V "f .. W" mil in., juw-pm mi im p m aija a V"' '7: , ii ;V - r j u , 8 - -J i DR. MAURICE NATANSON DR. WILFRED DESAN DR. WILLIAM POTEAT

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