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Box 870 Hill, I 6S years o 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." Could be cold Sileni Sam dropped his gun and put his hands in his pockets today. Volume LXIX, No. 38 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1960 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issui Athletic Ruling Goes T o NCAA Group UNC Action On Irregularities Delayed; N.C. State Removed From Probation By Wayne King Chancellor William B. official word yesterday of the NCAA's action against the University and head basketball coach, Frank McGuire, concerning charges of recruiting irregularities. The NCAA met in San lifted its four-year probation bation imposed for similar Carolina have been referred mittee. An informed source here vealed that the charge would probably remain in committee for some time for consideration. The decision of the NCAA council apparently means that UNC will not be punished with more than, a reprimand and a warning, according to observers. State was placed on probation November 13, 1956, for illegiti- Mrs. Mo r eh end Suffers Heart Attack In N.Y. John Motley Morehead's wife suffered a heart attack sometime Wednesday, but she was resting well yesterday. Mrs. Leila Morehead is is an oxygen tent at Blandwood in Rye, N. Y. Because of her ill ness her doctor advised cancel lation of the Morehead birthday party planned for Nov. 3 at Rye. Morehead will be 90 next Thursday. Mrs. Morehead's age is not known. Roy Armstrong, director of the Morehead Foundation here, was notified yesterday by John L. Morehead of Charlotte, vice chairman of the foundation. Armstrong said Mrs. More head has been ' in good health, and Morehead's health is rated excellent. You Eligible Then Register Saturday Saturday is the last day of registration for the No vember 8 presidential election. If you can fulfill the re quirements for registration, you can vote, but you can't auiremen vote unless you are registered. If you cannot go to your poll ing place Saturday, you may go to the home or office of your registrar on weekdays by ap pointment. The precincts, polling places and registrars are as follows: Precinct No. 1, Town Hall, Mrs. W. H. Fogleman; Precinct No. 2, Estes Hill School, Mrs. Paul Shearin; Precinct No. 3, Wool len Gym, Mrs. C. S. Logsdon; Precinct No. 4, High School Auditorium Lobby, James E. Wadsworth; Precinct No. 5, Glenwood School, Mrs. Lindsay Neville; Carrboro Precinct, Carrboro Town Hall, W. Benson Ray. Duke Students Pick Nixon In Mock Election DURHAM (UPI) A mock election at Duke University, graduate school alma mater of Vice President Richard M. Nixon gave the Republican presidential nominee a majority of more than 800 votes. Of the 3,111 persons marking the printed ballot yesterday, 1, 027 voted fur Nixon and 1,184 for Kennedy. Undergraduates at the Mctho- iisi scnool voted in favor of Mixon, with 1,711 casting their I ) filets for the GOP ticket and i voting for Kennedy. Aycock expected to receive Francisco Wednesday, and against N. C. State, a pro charges. The charges against to the Rules Infractions Com re-.mate recruiting practices, which, according to the NCAA, consist ed of offering excessive aid to Jackie Moreland, one of the most sought-after basketball players in the country at that time. Stale Charged State was charged particular ly with offering to give More land's girl friend a seven year medical scholarship along with cash gifts to Moreland himself, if he chose to attend State as a player. Moreland now plays profes sional basketball. The NCAA Policy Making Committee at their San Fran cisco meeting also ruled to place a two-year football probation and a one-year basketball pro bation on the University of Kan sas KU will not be able to par ticipate in any post-season com petition, such as bowl games, NCAA tournaments and such. The Kansas track . v and ; eld team, was unaffected by the rul ing. KU's track and field squad has won the NCAA champion ship for the past consecutive two years. Council Restores The Council also restored Wyoming to full participatory rights after a one-year post season and TV ineligibility. The University of Mississippi was also restored to full rights Kansas University was the only school to receive a penalty at the council's meeting. To Vote? For further information on registration or voting procedure call Clyde Carter, Secretary of the Orange County Board of Elections at 9-9736 or George Tindall at 7-2331. : filial mm:?-. vf wmti'- :: ii .,:.' SYMBOLIC SCULPTURE IN STEEL Two UNC stu dents gize at a metal creation of Robert A. Howard, associate professor in the Department of Art. The work is entitled "Growth." The outer figure is composed of intersecting tri angular pieces which enclose aa inner figure (not visible) gin El I What They're Saying fcfS3ia!M United Press NEW YORK Sen. John F. Kennedy carried his presi dential drive to the sidewalks of New York Thursday with an appeal to cheering gar ment workers at the biggest rally of his campaign to join him in "sweeping the Repub licans all the way back to California." "My chief; disagreement with Mr. Nixon and the Re publican party is that I don't think they have the vaguest idea of the kind of times in which we live," he said. Kennedy's appearance in New York's garment district brought out crowds estimat ed by Frank Doyle, executive secretary to Mayor Robert F. Wagner, at a total of 350,000. Wagner predicted Kennedy would carry New York City against GOP presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon by a margin of one million votes in November. Democra tic State Chairman Micharl Prendergast predicted Ken nedy would take the entire state by a margin of 400,000 votes. Adlai E. Stevenson lost the state by a margin of 1, 400,000 in 1956. ENJOYMENT, EDUCATION, EXCITEMENT: Seminars Enjoyment, education and ex citement! All three in one pack age labeled Seminars Abroad open to all Carolina students. France, Switzerland, Italy, Austria, Germany, Denmark, Holland, England and Ireland are the nine countries included in the Seminars Abroad 1961 two month itinerary. The pro gram includes a full week's stay in Paris, Florence, Berlin and London. Seminars Abroad is planned purposely on a second and third class level which has proven a much easier and relaxed way of traveling. The hotels are not fancy but are adequate and comfortable, and give a person much more feel for the coun try's atmosphere and a real break from tourists. A meeting will be held Nov. 8 in the "Y" Cabinet Room at 6:45 p.m. for all students interested in the Seminars Abroad. There will be members from previous Semi nars programs to give more de Symbolic Sculpture In Steel rlf f International SS30S3is ABOARD NIXON TRAIN Vice President Richard M. Nixon, carrying his whistle stop campaign across job hungry Michigan, pictured Sen. John F. Kennedy Thurs day as a rich man's son who never had to worry about where the money came from. He told rear platform and trackside audiences in a one day swing through the state that Kennedy has a natural tendency to react to all prob lems by spending more money. At Monroe he called this an "obsession." The result of such spending if Kennedy got into the White House, he said, would be higher prices and taxes and as he put it at Jackson, which claims to be the birthplace of the Republican party pos sibly "runaway inflation.". The Republican candidate, increasingly hoarse and ap parently in danger of losing his voice, drew good crowds and manifest enthuiasm as he traveled north and west across the state in what most observers agreed was an up hill fight for Michigan's 20 electoral votes. e saw a few more Ken nedy signs than he had in Ohio Tuesday and Wednesday. 3 Abroad Are Open tails and to answer any ques tions. Seminars Abroad is distinc tive in that it stresses educa tional opportunities and advan tages in addition to the usual sightseeing highlights. Led By Professors Seminars, led by well-known professors, newspaper and gov ernment officials, are scheduled in Paris, Bern, Florence, Rome, Goettingen, Berlin and Dublin. The best guides available will be chosen to conduct tours of these and other cities. In addition Seminars Abroad features special events through out the trip: a performance at the Paris Opera; festival days, such as St. John's celebration in Florence with a Medieval soccer game; Music festival in Salzburg; ballet and orchestral programs in Copenhagen and other cities; recent plays in London; and a Shakespearian play performed at the Shakespeare Memorial made of intersecting arcs and straight lines. Professor Howard, along with Professor Kenneth Ness and Associate Professor George Kachergis are exhibiting their art at Ackland Art Center ihrough November B. I SOUT Legislature Names Group The Revised Student Consti tution was referred back to Committee last night in Student Legislature, in accordance with the suggestion of Joe Oppen heimer. In other action last night a bill requiring "all organizations desiring funds in excess of their aoDrooriated budget to submit a detailed account of all anticipated expenditures for ap proval" was -passed. "This," asserted Pete Thomp son, "eliminates the practice of some of these organizations coming to Legislature at the end of the year requesting to be bailed out of debt." The bill to appropriate $2700 to the Yackety Yack to print 750 more copies was tabled over the controversy as to how many complimentary copies would be given out of the extra copies to be printed. A bill to establish a Student Credit Commission was passed last night. This bill provides for a committee to be formed to supersede the old Bad Check Committee and expand the functions of the old group for the purpose of establishing good relations between students and the merchants. theatre in Stratford-on-Avon. Meetings To Be Held During the spring semester meetings will be held on campus every other week to instruct and prepare students for the summer in Europe. Highlighting this preliminary program will be a three day visit in Washington, . D. C, where meetings are planned with Edward P. Morgan, with the State Dept. and with the German and Russian Embassies all in preparating for for the week-long seminar in Berlin. Organized on a non-profit basis Seminars Abroad makes reservations and arrangements directly through a London agent and provides speakers of greater quality at less cost. Estimated Cost The estimated cost of the pro gram is $1300.00 which includes reservations, food, tips, trans portation, everything but per sonal gifts and baths in a few hotels. i i 5 . I I, t i 1 1 ..-"iV s I A H PACIFIC MUSIC HERE t - . - x ill S; ! L BLOODY MARY the raucous Tonkanese of the Carolina Playmakers production of "South Pacific" which opens tonight in Memorial Hall at 8:30 p.m. is portrayed by Marilyn Zschau. She sings the popular numbers, "Bali Hai" and "Happy Talk" in the Rodgers and Hammerstein Pulitzer Prize-winning musical play. Tickets will be available at the Memorial Hall box office each night at 7:00 p.m. ; World News in Brief .: ..- - :: ::- j:; j Atlanta Mayor Declares J j No Charges On Dr. King j DECATUR, Ga. (UPI) Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Negro integration leader, was taken to the state prison in the dawn hours Thursday. He was ordered to jail Tuesday on grounds that he had violated parole on a minor, traffic charge by taking part in a sit-in demonstration. Mayor William B. Hartsfield of Atlanta issued a statement, which he asked wire services to distribute, declaring that the "city of Atlanta has no charges against any of the sit-in demon strators, including Dr. King, and has no one in custody. "We want the world to know this. The trial and incarcera tion of Dr. King is the responsibility of DeKalli County and the state of Georgia," Hartsfield said. "We have nothing to do with it." . Reports Say U. S. Prestige Declining WASHINGTON (UPI) Two newspapers reported today that a government survey showed public opinion of the United States as a world power declined in Britain and France after the May summit collapse. . The dispatches were published in the New York Times and Washington Post and Times Herald amid angry Democratic criticism of the White House for refusing to make public a secret U. S. Information Agency USIA poll reported to indicate U. S. prestige abroad has dropped. The Times and the Post said a USIA study prepared in June found an overwhelming majority of those questioned in Britain and France felt Russia was ahead of the United States in space progress. The Times said the study also showed a majority felt the Soviet Union was the world's strongest mili tary power. Alerted Cuba Fears Invasion HAVANA (UPI) Cuba went on virtual war footing Thursday as invasion jitters spread throughout the land. Army troops were held in barracks and civilian militia units reported to army posts. Government propaganda agencies fanned invasion fears by reporting an armed attack from abroad was imminent. Street rumors were allowed to circulate that Saturday is "D-Day." Eisenhower May Attend NATO Meet WASHINGTON (UPI) President Eisenhower may attend the Paris meeting of the NATO Council in December to bid official farewell to the Western defense alliance which he served as first supreme commander. TONIGH i - -u . :::-::::. VA-ss. -yy.-y.-y.-.-y.- yyyyjyyy. yyyy v&&:i::&:&&:i AT. 7-rr-V Play Runs 3 Nights The melodious music of Rodg ers and Hammerstein's famous play "South Pacific" will ring up the curtain of Memorial Hall stage tonight as the Carolina Playmakers present their first show of the season. "South Pacific," an adaptation of James A. Michener's Pulitzer Prize-winning book "Tales of the South Pacific," will be pre sented tonight, Saturday and Sunday at 8:30 p.m. by a full scale company of actors, danc ers, soloists and chorus. Thomas M. Patterson is di rector of the show. Designs Sets Lynn Gault designed the set. Foster Fitz-Simons and Dot Silver staged the dances, and Gene Strassler of the Depart ment of Music is diretcing the 27-piece orchestra. Joel Carter, Associate Profes sor in the Department of Music at UNC, will be seen in the role of Emile de Becque, an exiled Frenchman turned planter in the islands. Mr. Carter appeared with the Playmakers several years ago in the role of Fred Graham in "Kiss Me Kate." In "South Pacific" he will sing the beautiful songs "Korn Enchanted Evening" and "This - Nearly Was Mine." Appears In Role Jane Page, a UNC Junior from Richmond, Va., will ap pear in the role of Ensign Nel lie Forbush, a Navy nurse from Arkansas who falls in love with the Frenchman, de Becque. Others in the cast include Ed ward Robgins, Jr., as the lieu tenant struggling against preju dice in his love with a Ton kinese girl; Elaine Chang as the dainty Tonkinese; Marilyn Zschau of Raleigh as her raucous mother who beckons on the lieutenant with her haunting paean to a tropical island, "Bali Ha'i"; Frank McDonald of Char lotte as the "bib-operator" Sea (Continued on page 3) Interviews End For Delegates To SSL Meet Intercollegiate expression will flourish in December when the State Student Legislature meets in the state capitol building in Raleigh. Composed of representatives of many North Carolina colleges and universities, SSL is an an nual assembly devoted to discus sion of state, national and in ternational affairs. UNC's representatives will be selected from interviews which close today. Interviews are scheduled 2-5 p.m. in Roland Parker II, Graham Memorial. Students will be selected on basis of interest, knowledge of current affairs and parliamen tary procedure. This will be the 23rd session of SSL. Since it meets in the legislative halls of the capitol, this year's assembly will be Dec. 8, 9, and 10 and not in the spring when the North Carol ma General Assembly will be in ses sion. SSL caused statewide contro versy in 1953 when it approved a bill calling for repeal of the state law barring members of different races to marry. News men and government officials labeled SSL an assembly of radicals with the intention of creating unrest and bad public ity for the state. However, SSL was not cen sured, for the act. Delegates and alternates will be announced next week, and the group will begin to draw up a bill for the UNC delegation to introduce. 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 28, 1960, edition 1
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