Ssciaig Dept.,
Bex8?Q
Xbapel Hill, N.cV
Weather
68 years of 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 baccoone
of an academic community.'
Partly cloudy and mild.
J' .
Volume LXIX, No. 120.
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1961
Offices in Graham Memorial
Four Pages This Issue
(CDliw 1 tern m
Terns Again Capture
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Carolina's Harkema Goes Over
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Taking It In Stride At The Games
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Chest Carnival . .
ACC Indoor Games
Tar Heels Are Second
To Mighty Maryland
By HARRY W. LLOYD
Maryland's powerful track
team took the lead on the first
event, and built their margin
higher and higher before scor
ing a smashing victory here
yesterday in the eighth annual
Atlantic Coast Conference In
door Games. The Terrapins
scored 81 points by defeating,
in order, North Carolina, Duke,
Clemson, Virginia, South Caro
lina, N. C. State, and Wake
Forest. ,
The Maryland boys also
showed their power in the
freshman division, scoring 40
points. Carolina was a close
second with 32, Duke 19, Wake
Forest 9, South Carolina 4, Vir
ginia 6, and State 4.
But the results in the varsity
event were not so close. The
Tar Heels trailed with 48,
Duke had 20, Clemson 19, Vir
ginia 13, South Carolina 9,
State 3, and Wake Forest, .
Sophomore Tom Belitza was
one of the big stars of the win,
vaulting 14 feet, 6 inches to
win the event and break the
old record of 14 feet. Barry
Peace Corps Group - -Formed
On Cusnpus
A Youth Peace Corps group has been formed on the
UNC campus. Fifty applications for students interested
in service abroad are expected next week.
Jim Wagner and Pat Hunter were elected co-chairr
men of the local group at a meeting last Thursday in the
uaw cnooi beminar itoom.
The Carolina committee will
serve as a liaison between the
UNC campus and national head
quarters in Washington.
Youth Corps information will
be released to the campus
through this group.
It will also compile data and
information concerning activi-
YWCA Officer's
Slate Nominated
The Executive Committee of
the YWCA has completed the
slate of YWCA officers for 1961-
62. The following girls have
been nominated:
President Jackie Day and
Tuck Walker.
Vice President Betty Brown
and Maxine Greenfield. .
Recording Secretary Connie
Davis and Karen . Nelson.
Executive Secretary Barbara
Fletcher and Prissy Wyrick.
Treasurer Anne Hawkins.
Program Chairman Norris
Johnston and Nursen Menco.
There will be an open meet
ing for nominations from the
floor Tuesday afternoon, March
21, at 4:00 in Gerrard Hall. This
will afford an opportunity for
all those interested to take an
active part in the selections of
next year's officers.
All who do have . additiona
nominations are urged to attend
and to add these names to those
slated above. The elections will
be conducted in all women's
residences Thursday, March 23,
at 11:00 p.m.
Ingmar Bergman
Tonight's Flick
"Brink of Life," an Ingmar Bergman film, will be to
night's Sunday Cinema presentation. This is the first time
it has been shown in this area.
As "The Seventh Seal"
"Brink of Life" is a treatise
Liz Has Setback
LONDON (UPI) Elizabeth
Taylor had a "bad night" Fri
day but is now back on the road
to recovery from her near-fatal
siege of pneumonia, her hus
band and doctors reported Sat
urday. .
The film beauty's husband,
singer Eddie Fisher, saia tne
brief setback had only one ef
fect to postpone the removal
of the breathing tube from Miss
Taylor's throat. It originally
was scheduled to be taken out
Saturday.
Tiedcmann, the Carolina hope
ful, finished in a tie for second
at 14, but received a bad ankle
sprain on his final try. The ex
tent of Tiedemann's injury is
not fully known. -
Two Maryland jumpers, Estes
and Bland, finished in a tie for
first place at 6'5", which ties the
old mark.
The. Terps had eight first
places. Carolina had three, and
Duke, one. John O'Bannori won
the broad jump with a 22 feet,
Vs inch effort. 'Rett Everett ran
away with the field to-win the
two-mile in 9:27.5, and team
mate Jerry Stuver romped home
in the 800 in 1:54.7.
Duke's winner was Gesswin",
who .captured the shot put.
The other Maryland first place
men were Spiegel,. 60-yard dash;
Wells, one-mile; Stauffer, 600
yards; Bill Johnson, , 70-yard
high hurdles; Smith, 70-yard
low hurdles; the 2-mile rela5'
team of Foskett, Raier, Tucke',
and Patrick; and the mile re
lay team of Grey. Smith. R.
Smith, and Stauffer.
ties on campus and return it to
national headquarters. ,
- All studentg interested in-the
Youth Peace Corps are- urged to
attend the meetings to be held
each Thursday at noon in Le
noir Hall.
For information contact: Jim
Wagner, 205 Joyner; Pat Hunter,
KD House, or Sissy Carpenter,
113 Spencer.
Nigerian Student
Guest On Campus
For Three Days
: A Nigerian student enrolled
at Friend's University in Wichi
ta, Kansas, is. the guest of David
Grigg, President of the student
body, this weekend.
Victor Oloronsolo, moved by
the curiosity to visit the South.
arrived here Friday night for
a three-day stay in which he
will tour the campus and ob
serve UNC in action. Oloronsolo
was attracted to UNC by re
ports he had heard of the pro
gram for foreign students here
On a scholarship, Oloronsolo
enrolled at Friend's last August
and is majoring in political
science. He plans to complete
his education i n eighteen
months, wants to go to Harvard
to earn a Ph.D., and plans ulti
mately to teach in his native
country. His father is a teacher
there now.
was a treatise on death, so
on birth. The setting of the
"I story is a maternity hospital
where three women are await
ing the birth , of their children.
One," an intellectual woman
looking toward the child to save
her crumbling marriage, loses it
in a miscarriage. Another, an
unmarried adolescent, has al
ready tried an unsuccessful self-
abortion. The third, presented
as the essence of maternal wom
anhood, loses her child in pro
tracted labor.
The latter role won Eva Dahl
beck the Best Actress Award at
the Cannes Film Festival. Berg
man won a Cannes award for
Best Director as a result of this
film.
. Showings are in Carroll Hall
at 7:30 and 9: 30 p.m.
ii w n w
oiMica.
The Y Executive Committee puts its
best fool forward. Pictured are: First row
(1 lo r) Connie Davis, Karen Nelson, Tuck
What Candidates Are Saying
I . .....
Bill Harriss . : r Presidential Candidates . . . Bpb :; Sevier
Bill Harriss, Student Party's Presiden
tial candidate, discussed international
student relations in yesterday's DTH re
lease. His full statement follows:
The Student Party has attempted to
stress the increasing importance of in
ternational programs and
awareness in its platform.
SP Pledges
In one of the planks we
pledge "to cooperate enthusi
astically with departments on
campus seeking institution of
summer credit programs
abroad while looking toward
the establishment of an over
seas section of the Univer
sity." This would enable Carolina
students to spend a year in
study abroad while immersed
in a foreign culture.
It will be the concern of my
administration to be actively
working for the establishment
of projects and programs in
the field of international af
fairs. Has Suggestions
I . have some definite sug
gestions to make concerning
several programs now being
carried on and others which
could be initiated.
The first is greater student
support for the vigorous work
of the Cosmopolitan Club, an
(Continued' on page 3)
arriss.
H
y ...
Campaign Issues Tuesday
Bill Harriss and Bob Sevier will debate the major issues in the current campaign
for President of the student body in a public meeting Tuesday night. .
Sponsored by the Di-Phi, the "Big Two" debate will be the only chance of the cam-
paign for the student-at-large
the issues at the same time. Alir
students have been strongly
urged to attend and find out
"what each man has to say when
confronted with his opponent's
position."
Nol Revealed
Questions, which have not
been .revealed to the candidates
in advance, will , be posed by a
special panel of two Di-Phi
members.
Each candidate, in alternat
ing order, will be given three
minutes to answer each ques
tion. The panel will select ques
tions carefullv in order to bring
out forcefully the important is
sues involved.
Audience Allowed
The audience will be allowed
q ask questions when the panel
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Cubans To Decide
Fate Of U.S. Boy
HAVANA (UPI) The Swiss
ambassador Saturday forwarded
an American mother's appeal
in a last-minute bid to save the
life of William Morgan, a sol
dier of fortune from Toledo, O.,
who was doomed to the firing
squad by the Castro regime that
once hailed him as a hero.
The fate of the 34-year-old
former U.S. Army paratrooper
hung in the balance.
Although the government-
controlled press and radio
broadcast that the "Yankee
traitor" Morgan was to be shot
for aiding anti-Castro rebels,
court officials said they knew
of no such sentence.
nn
sevier 10
to hear the presidential candidates iace eacn otner ana
.. . tc;c
tencies which have arisen from
Handbook Chief
Taps 5 For Staff
Carolina Handbook Business
Manager Bill Townsend yester
day named five students to tne
business staff.
Bruce Huggins, Peter Hawes,
Gary Dalton, Jim Barnhill and
Woody Harrison will assist
Townsend in selling advertising
for the book to be published in
a few months.
Nancv Barr has been added
in thp pditorial staff of the
handbook.
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Walker, Jackie Day, and .Belly Brown.
Second row NoNo Menco, Ann Hawkins,
Barbara Fletcher, and Prissy Wyrick.
r
The eighty per cent rulei and deferred
rush were discussed by Bob Sevier, the
University . Party candidate for Student
Body President, in yesterday's DTH re
lease. Sevier stated that the penalty for fail
ing to comply with the eighty per cent
rule was "unrealistic." He
suggested a replacement rule.
His statement follows:
Regulation Placed
The strict scholastic regu
lation placed on fraternities
in the fall of 1959 was an at
tempt to have them put more
emphasis on academic en
deavor. Presently, any fraternity in
which eighty per cent of the
active members fail to main
tain a C average for two suc
cessive semesters will suffer
loss of rushing privileges.
More Realistic
The rule" requires of frater
nity men a higher academic
standing than is maintained by
the campus at large.
Most of them, I feel, are
willing to accept this chal
lenge; however, if unable to
meet it, they do not wish to
be penalized s in a way that
socially and financially threat
ens their existence."
The rule is good, but the
penalty for non-compliance is
unrealistic. Its intent is to in
crease academic emphasis
(Continued on page 3)
TFh n
ijejjaie
the panel's questions can be
ironed out then.
Di-Phi President Stan Black
stated yesterday that:
"The Di-Phi feels that state
ments in the Daily Tar Heel by
each candidate, while useful, do
not serve the same purpose as
an open debate, for which pre
pared statements are useless.
"First impression answers to
questions are often more re
vealing than answers which
have been carefully thought
out."
Black emphasized that all
students would find the debate
very enlightening and should
attend if possible.
The meeting will be held
Tuesday in Di Hall, 3rd floor
New. West, at 7:30 p.m.
.Due
Aver ell
Arrives
Todc&y
TEHRAN, Iran (UPI)
Reports of political rioting in
the interior that left eight
persons dead and 20 injured
reached Tehran Saturday as
the government prepared a
welcome for U.S. roving Am
bassador . Averell Harriman on
his fact-finding tour.
Shah Mohamed Reza Pahlcvi
personally invited President
Kennedy s touring envoy to
Tehran and Harriman was due
here Sunday from Rome.
Riols Erupt
Reports from the interior said
political rioting which has oc
curred in Iran during the last
several months erupted in the
town of Borujan Friday.
Four rioters and four police
men were reported dead. All 20
injured were reported in criti
cal condition.
The rioters set fire to a gaso
line station, and the flames
spread through six adjoining
buildings.
Forced To Flee
The local governor was forced
to flee from the town.
Borujan is a town in south
central Iran, 225 miles south of
Tehran.
The demonstrators . were re
ported to have been opponents
of the government under Pre
mier Jaf ar Sharif-Emami, who
organized a caretaker regime
last August to pave the way for
national parliamentary elections.-
...
Resignation
Sharif-Emami handed h i s
resignation to the Shah as a
formality. The Shah was ex
pected to name him Sunday to
head a new government.
Political quarreling has been
heated in Iran. Neither of the
two major political parties, the
Nationalist Party and the Peo
ples Party, took part in the for
mation of the Sharif-Emami
government.
World
Newt
tt
:
Harold Macmiilan
MIk Mani?i!j
MANSFIELD ON EDUCATION
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sen
ate Democratic - Leader Mike
Mansfield predicted Saturday
Congress will resolve the aid-to-education
dispute by consid
ering the issue of loans to paro
chial schools in a separate bill
from President Kennedy's school
construction bill.
The Montana Democrat, like
Kennedy a Catholic, said the
two-package approach would
let members of Congress "stand
up and be counted" and clear
the way for a Supreme Court
test on the legality of private
school aid.
it ir
MacMILLAN TO FIND
JFK TOUGH
WASHINGTON (UPI) Brit
ish Prime Minister Harold Mac
miilan is going to find the Ken
nedy administration consider
ably tougher on the issue of ad
mitting Communist China to
the United Nations than some
pre-inaugural speculation indi
cated. Kennedy and his State De
partment aides, it can be re
ported, are ready to fight to
keep the U.N. from accepting
Communist China's terms for
membership ouster of any in
dependent Formosa delegation.