I i
1 1
U.tt.C. Library
Serials Dept,
Box 870
Chapel Hill. N.C.
; Generally Fair
Warmer
Is Law For
Convenience?
See Ediiorials, Pgga Two.
Volume LXIX, No. 145
Complete (UPI) Wire Service
CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SATURDAY, APRIL 22, 1961
Offices in Graham Memorial
Four Pages This Icrus
Qv & -7
in
Use Of Rockete -
Press Renews Charge Against US.
Of 'Direct Military InterveritidnU
MOSCOW (UPI) In an; obvious warning pn the
Cuban crisis, the Soviet army newspaper Friday said the
Soviet rocket types that hurled, cosmonaut: Yurf Gagarin
into space could be used for military, purposes, " if .neces
sary." The statement was coupled-with charges that the
United States was threatening Cuba with "direct mili
tary intervention."
It accused the United States of "saber rattling" and
said another invasion of Cuba was planned. "The danger
threatening Cuba has not passed
yet, said the newspaper Red
Star.
The government newspaper
Camera
Measure
IsMeM:
A proposed appropriation to
buy The Daily Tar Heel a Pola
roid camera with was postponed
one week at Thursday night's
meeting of Student .Legislature.
The. bill was taken from . Fi
nance Committee and . consider
ed by the body sitting as a
"committee of the whole" be
fore the postponement proposal
was made by Robin Britt (SP).
Harve Harris (SP-UP), the in
troducer of the bill, argued for
its consideration and passage.
Arthur Merrill (SP), Finance
Committee chairman and Bill
Whichard (SP) spoke against
the bill's passage at . that time.
Agrees To Request
The 5body agreed to request
Pete Thompson, the , treasurer
of the student body,, Qrnake
report at next week's session
regarding the remaining: money
available for legislative appro
priation. ."
In other action, George Ros
en tal.(SP) was appointed chair
man of the newly created Judi
cial Committee of Legislature,
and Rufus Edmisten was ap
rjointed representative to the
Student Athletic Association.
- There were no new bill intro
duced at the session.
A letter from the Carolina
Publications Board recommend
ing that Parlance, a new stu
dent-published magazine which
appeared for the first tune this
spring, be recognized as an
official publication of the Uni
versity was , read by Speaker
Hank Patterson.
Formal legislation regarding
the Legislature's passage of
a recommendation is expected
to be introduced in a week or
two.
irborne
Contest
egms
Dean of Women' Katherine K.
Carmichael : has announced that
application blanks are available
to coeds who wish to enter the
"Miss 82nd Airborne. Division"
beauty contest to be held at
Fort Bragg May 23-25.
. Application forms may be ob
tained from Pam Parker, chair
man of the Women's Residence
Council, in 309 Mclver.
.Aaron Gelber, publicity chair
man of the contest ; has stated
that "men of outstanding char
acter and merit will be chosen"
to act as escorts for the division
winners during , their stay at
Fort Bragg.
1 Nevertheless," the division has
also provided expenses to cover
chapcrones accompanying the
beauties. . . ,
. The winner win receive , a
$500. check, in addition to her
paid trip to the 82nd Airborne
Division Convention at India
napolis, Ind., where - she will
reign as Queen. .:
Application blanks may be
sent by the aspirants to any
personal acquaintances they
may have in the division, or to
publicity chairman Gebler.
TO THE FIELDS, MEN
. - i - . , . . -
OXFORD, Enuglanti - tUPD
Miss"' Alice Boycott', who has
organized a croquet team . fbr
girls at Somerville College, s&id
it's the . perfect game- for girls
becausae "it depends t so much
on beastliness and intelligence."
A
7TJI
M3
reaie
Izvesit continued attacks on
President Kennedy, denouncing
his pledge Thursday that the
United States will resist Com
munist penetration into the
Americas. It; accused Kennedy
of "myopia" and making "hasty
decisions."
Red Star, jn an article by a
Soviet economist identified as
Prof. Deborin, declared that the
Soviet Union has mastered the
art of precise guidance of . .
rockets to a : pre-determined
area of the globe. This was evi
denced by the "launching and
returning of the spaceship with
Gagarin aboard.. .
Link. Rocket
- Western observers in Moscow
said it seemed significant that
this was the first time the So
viets have linked the man-
carrying space rocket to pos
sible military use.
Deborin called the spaceship
"a herald of peace and friend
ship." "
"However,". he said, "as long
as the forces of imperialistic ag
gression exist, it is necessary to
maintain the defensive potential
of the U.S.S.R. at a high level.
Upset Aggressor's Plans
The Soviet Union has creat
ed power inter-continenal. and
interplanetary ballistic rockets,
he went on. "The U.S. militar
ists used the boast about their
strategic bombers and military
bases;. ... life has upset all the
agressors' plans."
- The press continued to ex
press jubilation over the "de
feat" of the anti-Castro invaders
by Cuban Premier Fidel Cas
tro's forces.
WORLD
NEWS
BRIE F S
By United Press International
Cooper Taking Cobalt Treatments
; HOLLYWOOD Actor Gary Cooper has taken cobalt treat
ments for cancer that has left him gravely ill and forced his
.confinement to his home, sources said Friday.
"Certainly he knows what he's got," the sources said. How
ever, it was not known whether the grave nature of the 59-year-old
star's illness had been disclosed to him.
The same sources said they understood the two-time Aca
: demy Award ..winner had cancer of the lungs and liver.
:
Ceasefire Details Complete
MOSCOW Britain and the Soviet Union Friday com
pleted details of a cease-fire appeal for Laos and will issue it
within 48 hours, high diplomatic sources said. Both warring
factions in Laos indicated they would honor it.
Diplomats were optimistic the agreement would be signed
and published despite off icial Soviet displeasure over alleged
U. S. intervention in Cuba and criticism by Communist-backed
Prince Souvanna Phouma of the stepped up U. S. aid program
to Laos.
; 1st Peace Corps Team Picked
WASHINGTON President Kennedy announced Friday
that the first, team of Peace Corps volunteers had been assigned
to Tanganyika to help the newly independent African nation
;map and build roads.
- He told his news conference that, at the request of Tangan
yika, a party 'of 20 surveyors, four geologists and four civil
engineers would provide some of the skills that country needs
to speed its highway development plans.
"A "A"
Eichmann Compares Guilt
; JERUSALEM, Israel Adolf Eichmann told the world Fri
day he was more guilty as a mass murdering war criminal
than the Russians who deported Germans from east Europe at
the end 6f World War II or the Americans who atom-bombed
Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
' In his' transcribed statement presented in the Israeli court
trying him for the extermination of 6,000,000 Jews he said he
would admit his guilt as a war criminal if the victors of World
War II admitted their guilt and agreed to stand trial for war
crimes. .
And St
ransre
V
Wif.i.iyiWViTi-rttiinVi.hWiiiW.triftrtWrtTtJnnlllr
A MOST unusual "mummy" steps out of
the Egyptian case in this scene from "The
Man Who Came to Dinner" the hilarious
comedy being presented at r tonight and
Sunday in Gerrard Hall. Graham Pollock as
the unexpected guest greets Blake Green,
Kaufman & Hart
Comedy Is Tonight
. , , - i
9 Man Who Came To Dinner9 Free
To Students At 8 In Gerrard
"The Man Who Came to Dinner," the hilarious George
S. Kaufman-Moss Hart comedy, will be presented tonight
and "Sunday at u p.m. in uerrard nan. ; .
. Sponsored by the GM Petite Dramatique, admission
to the play will be free.
Graham Pollock is cast in the title role ot bhenaan
Whiteside, a famous radio commentator who is forced to
remain in a midwestern house
hold for six weeks due to a
broken hip.
The havoc and consternation
caused by the irascible and
cynical personality during his
unexpected and unwanted stay
i ;!' v-v.:.'
::::-::::: . : :
f s
V '
oA -
Gary Cooper
Mummy
-If :
'0M
mm
forms the basis of the plot.
Seen As Host
Bonny, Wilson and Bob Blood
worth will be seen as the Stan
leys, host and hostess to the
"lovable" Mr. Whiteside. Mariel
O'Dell will portray Miss Preen,
the long-suffering nurse who
bears the brunt of her. patient's
verbal abuse.
Debbie Ives has been cast as
Maggie, the' great man's private
secretary, and John Dole will
be seen as Bert Jefferson, Mag
gie's boyfriend.
Glamorous Actress
Blake Green as Lorraine
Sheldon, a glamorous and wild
actress friend of Whiteside, and
Cole Waddell as Banjo, an old
show-business buddy, also are
featured.
Supporting members of the
cast include Rick Peterson,
Jerry Rcsenbaum, Mary Ruth
Jackson, Cindy Poole, Majorie
Putnam, Newt Smith, Ginger
Swain, Ted Vigodsky, Stewart
Powell and Charles Ericson.
ho Is
Ugliest
ale?
Who is the ugliest man on
campus? .
Next week, April 24th through
28th, the campus will have an
opportunity . once again to se
lect UMOC from among some
of the more unusual faces on
campus.
The event is sponsored by
Alpha Phi Omega, national
service fraternity, to raise
money for. some of the charit
able activities of. the group.
Polling places will be located
in Lenoir Hall, The Scuttlebutt,
and Y-Court. Everyone is in
vited to vote for his choice at
one penny per vote, between 8
a.m. and 5 - p.m. each day.' A
running total will be kept -each
day.
Any money turned in in
sealed envelopes will not be
counted' until all other votes
have been, tabulated in an. ef
fort to add-a little suspense.
In past years, the candidates,
entered by various ..campus
groups, have put before, .the
campus some of the strangest
faces seen anywhere." This year
should not prove to be any dif-
Iferent. ,
Emerges
4 V
CM .
HI-
f
portraying an actress friend, as Cole Wad
dell looks on. Waddell will be seen as
"Banjo," an uninhibited musical comedy star.
Sponsored by the GM Petites Dramatique
Series, admission will be free. (Photo by Ira
Blaustein)
Report;
On Cuhu
Kennedy Speaks
WASHINGTON (UPI) Pres
ident Kennedy said Friday the
United States' is encaged in
Vactive efforts" to helpjAmeri
cajas Arui, other- irwiividuals ,-vvJjo
might be in danger in Cuba.
He did not elaborate in an
opening statement at his news
conference other than to ' say
that this country was consulting
with Western Hemisphere
neighbors on the Cuban crisis.
Kennedy withheld informa
tion at this time on any role he
might have played in the anti
Castro invasion on grounds that
disclosure now would not be in
the national interest. He said
the fact would be revealed in
due time.
Czech Gun
Credited
HAVANA (UPI) Premier
Fidel Castro's army officers Fri
day credited a multiple-barreled
Czech machinegun with beating
back the invaders who landed
in Las Villas Province Monday.
They said militiamen using
the weapon originally designed
for anti-aircraft use held back
the invaders until reinforce
ments could be rushed from
Havana to meet the attack. The
gun, known as the quadro boca,
also shot down the invaders'
aircraft. -
It was a bloody battle for the
beachhead on the Bay of Cochi
nos and losses were heavy on
both sides. Many militiamen
drowned in the coastal swamps
when they tried to escape the
invaders in the early stages of
the attack.
UPI Man Detained
WASHINGTON (UPI) The
State Department said Friday it
has been notified by the Swiss
authorities that Henry Ray
mont, United Press Internation
al correspondent in Havana, was
"detained and held incommuni
cado" by the Castro, govern
ment. Department spokesman Lin
coln White said the .Swiss ad
vised that Raymont was held in
some place other than a jail,
that he was not. technically
"under arrest," and has not
been sentenced.
Earlier information said Ray
mont former Latin-American
affairs expert in the UPI Wash
ington bureau, was picked up
April 16. He was one of several
American reporters detained by
the Cuban government.
BUY OHIO
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Perhaps state Agriculture Di
rector Robert H. Terhune was a
little too enthusiastic on his
latest recommendation for
boosting Ohio farm products..
"We should be so loyal to
Ohio products " he said, "that
when we go to the supermarket
we should sing the state song."
tro
bxel
Re
C 71 H TTTFTTTZ"
mm J Ml
HAVANA (UPI) Denouncing President Kennedy as an "imbecile," Fidel Castro's
government Friday said it captured 400 invaders with its Red-supplied arms and has
Russian rocket support against any U.S. "direct aggression."
Premier Castro was reported personally directing mop-up operations in the area of
the invasion last Monday in southern Cuba, seeking to cut off survivors from joining
other rebels in the Escambray Mountains.
Havana was an armed camp as arrests continued. Troops, militiamen and sand
bags were everywhere. The state-controlled radios filled the airwaves with attacks on
Kennedy and the United States
ana promised xo proauce nve
television interrogations of
. I
prisoners.
Havana radio said a number
of planes were shot down at the
Bay of Cochinos invasion site,
including a B29 Superfortress
and an F86 Sabre jet. Five Sher
man tanks, artillery and ma
chineguns were seized, it said.
Mistaken Identity
Cuban authorities produced a
photograph of a tank with a
tread shot ' off and claimed it
was an American tank disabled
during the invasion at Giron
Beach, Las Villas Province.
U.S. authorities identified the
tank from the photograph as a
T34 Russian tank.
Among the prisoners was Jose
Miro Torra, son of Jose Miro
Cardona, head of the anti-Castro
revolutionary council in the
United States which staged the
invasion.
Army officers publicly credit
ed the "quadro boca," a mul
tiple-barreled Czech-made ma
chinegun for turning back the
invaders Monday. Basically de
signed for anti-aircraft use, the
guns were turned on the in
vaders as they streamed inland.
Admittedly, it was a bloody
battle and casualties were high
on both sides. "
The officers said Fidel Castro
Stewart, Grant,
& Hepburn Star
In Tonight's Flick
"The Philadelphia Story," the
film version of Philip Barry's
amusing play, will be tonight's
Free Flick presentation.
The story concerns the trans
formation of a Philadelphia so
cialite from a self-centered
Puritan snob to a tolerable
human being.
Cary Grant, Katherine Hep
burn, James Stewart and Ruth
Hussey star in the title roles.
Stewart and Miss Hepburn both
won Oscars for their perform
ances in this movie.
Tomorrow's Sunday Cinema
presentation is "Umberto D,"
winner of the New York Film
Critics Award as Best Foreign
Film of the Year.
Directed by Vittorio De Sica,
the story concerns the neglect
and loneliness of an old man
and his mongrel dog. De Sica
presents an insight and feeling
of futility that has rarely been
achieved on the screen.
All showings are in Carroll
Hall at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Stu
dent I.D. cards will be checked.
Internationally Acclaimed Pianist
Janis To Appear Wednesday
Internationally acclaimed
pianist Byron Janis will appear
at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Memo
rial Hall under the sponsorship
of the Chapel Hill Concert
Series.
Students will be admitted
free to the balcony for the con
cert. The young American artist
was originally scheduled to per
form in Chapel Hill on March
21, but an arm injury prevented
his appearance.
Reports from representatives
BRIDE WANTED
CHICAGO (UPI) Lincoln
Park Zoo resumed its search
today for a suitable young mate
for Mike, a 5-year-old bachelor
polar bear.
Zoo Director Marlin Perkins
rejected a $1,250 candidate
Tuesday because she was "all
baggy. Her teeth weren't good
and she even had a dewlap
a sort of vertical double chin."
"We want a bride for Mike,
not a grandmother," Perkins
said.
Meporf i
Are Captared
personally . directed the battle
OT1
U11U O LX11 1. L.lliUlilVU ill t Ul U
ibat zone, interrogating nrisrn-
ers and directing the dragnet
for others who might have es
caped. He was said to be oper
ating 20 miles from the landing
area, near the approaches to
the Escambray Mountains.
UPI correspondent Pedro
Bonetti, a Cuban, was taken on
a government-conducted tour
of the battle area and reported
seeing five fires in the cane
fields. He said police were seek-
On The
Campus
. Tryouts for the new Honor
System film will be held on
Monday afternoon at 3:30 on
the Sound Stage at Swain Hall.
John Moore, director of the
film, has urged that all inter
ested persons try out for the 25
available parts, including
speaking roles for men .and
walk-ons for women.
Specific information- concern.
ing a student's eligibility to vote
in the upcoming municipal ' and
school board elections is avail
able at" three booths located in
Glen Lennox, Eastgate, Shop
ping Center, and on Franklin
Street. Sponsored by the Wom
an's League of Voters, . the
booths will - be open from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
The women's Orientation
Counselors will have their third
training session on Tuesday
night at 7:00 in the Assembly
Room of the Library.
Polling places for the Ugly
Man on Campus contest will be
at the Scuttlebutt, Y-Court and
Lenoir Hall. Alpha Phi Omega
is sponsoring the contest. The
contest will be held all of next
week.
Infirmary
Students in the . Infirmary
yesterday . included Barbara
O'Neil, Elizabeth Faucette,
Katherine Potter, May Binkley,
Mary Laxton, .Harvey Pressley,
Wilson Ward, William Brunson,
Marcus . Perry, Don Whisonant,
Christen Pannell, Robert La
Crosse, Ann Loy, Richard At-
well, William Riley, Dale Robin
son, and Gilbert Machen.
of S. Hurok, noted impressario
sponsoring Janis coast-to-coast,
indicate that Janis has com
pletely recovered from his ill-
JANIS
here Wednesday
4(0(0)
o
9"
Ti OH q
ing a station wagon , which had
opened fire on police.
Aide Killed
One of Castro's aides, a Capt.
Carvo, was killed during the
fighting earlier in the week,
officers said.
Both the officers and the Ha
vana radios said many of the
captured invaders were mem
bers of wealthy old Cuban
families. Their arms were
American, officials said.
In New York, invasion chief
Jose Miro Cardona said he
would light on, and called for
"material and moral support."
But he said his forces had re
ceived no military aid from the
United States.
The radios called Kennedy an
"imbecile" who was afraid of
the Soviet Union, and heaped
invective on the United States
for "imperialist aggression."
Duke Lifts Ban
On Contributions
By Writer Cohen
T)nVv' TTn ivrsitv: - T'lihlir-a
tions Board has removed its re
striction- prohibiting Steve Co
hen from writing for any Duke
student publications.
Cohen is ' the author of ' the
much criticized article, "A
Christmas Story,", which ap
peared in the Duke Chronicle in
December of 1959.
The first article of the five-
part series and the only part
published had been denounced
as "obscene" and "sacrilegious."
In the furor over Cohen's ar
ticle Davis Young, then DTH
editor, cancelled a scheduled
publication in the Tar Heel.
Cancels Decision
The Duke Publications Board
cancelled its earlier decision by
an 11-4 vote on Friday, April
14,
During discussion of the
matter no decision was reached
concerning the Board's general
supervision over student publi
cations.
Some members stated that
the Board was acting only in
reference to Cohen's particular
case, while others declared that
the Board was acting in keep
ing with its general determina
tion to supervise student publi
cations. Further discussion of student
publication control and a reso
lution on the matter arc ex
pected at the next Board meet
ing. ness-and will perform as sched
uled. Wednesday's program has not
yet been released, but it is ex
pected to include a number of
Chopin selections.
In addition to recitals in the
United States and Great Britain,
Janis has toured extensively in
South America. Last fall he
toured Russia as part of the
cultural exchange program be
tween the USSR and the USA
and was accorded tumultuous
and ecstatic receptions at each
performance.
He has been credited with re
ceiving the greatest ovation
ever accorded a visiting artist
(thirty minutes in length) after
his premiere performance in
Moscow.
Great Ovation
Janis was selected by
United States to open
th
the American Festival Week at the
Brussels Worlds Fair. A dis
tinguished Belgian critic noted,
"Great pianists are extremely
rare: Byron Janis is one cf
them."