Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 28, 1961, edition 1 / Page 1
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
U.TI.C. Library Serials Dipt, Eos 870 Chapel Hill, ess us. O .r, ,! f- r PARTLY CLOUDY The Honor System See Editorials, Pag Two. Little Warmer Volume LXIX, No. 150 Complete (UPI) Wire Service CHAPEL ' HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1961 Offices in Graham Memorial Four Pages This Issu 9 I 1 WORLD NEWS BRIEFS By Uniled Press International Heeding Of Cease-Fire Called WASHINGTON The United States' has called on the" So viet Union to force pro-Communist" armies in Laos to halt their offensive and heed the cease-fire ordered by Russia and Britain four days ago. ' . : 1 The State Department disclosed Thursday that; Acting Secretary of State Chester Bowles called in Soviet Ambassador Mikhail Menshikov Wednesday night to protest the delay by the Laotian rebels in abiding by the cease-fire... ' French Police Uncover Vast Plot PARIS French police Thursday- uncovered a vast plot to aid the short-lived Algiers insurrection. By nightfall thous ands of houses had been searched" and ' hundreds of suspects arrested under President Charles de Gaulle's dictatorial pow ers. - . Tshombe Refuses To Gain Liberty COQUILHATVILLE, Congo katanga ' President Moise Tshombe defied his captors at the Coquilhatville airport Thurs day and refused to gain his freedom by returning to a summit conference with other Congolese leaders. He was arrested Wednesday by- Congolese soldiers after he stormed out of a meeting with President Joseph Kasayubu and Premier Joseph Ileo and started to board a plane to fly home to his Elizabeth ville capital. , . .::- " Cabinet To Avoid Segregated Meetings WASHINGTON The White . House, said Thursday that cabinet officers should avoid speaking dates';' at any functions where Negroes are barred. - J The question arose in a news conference after Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges spoke, last night at a Democratic .-fund raising dinner in Columbia," S. C. .1; : . ...... t .' . - Author Of 'The Fountainhead' Ayu M&nd-J$SscMsses Books & Philosophy With a slight accent and piercing dark brown eyes, author-philosopher Ayn Rand discussed topics from the role of government to advertising concepts in a press conference here yesterday. Miss Rand, author of "The. Fountainhead," "Atlas Shrugged" and other works, was scheduled to speak in Gerrard Hall last night. An Objectivist, Miss Rand has created nationwide interest resulting in her latest book, "For the. New Intel lectual: The Philosophy of Ayn Rand" offering the main philosophical- passages from her four novels. "I don't write novels as propa ganda machines for my phi losophy," she said. "What in terested me was the presenta tion of man as he should be." Philosophic Concepts "My philosophy, in essence, in the concept of man as a heroic being, with his own hap piness as the moral purpose of his life with productive achieve ment as his noblest activity and Duke U. Student Presses Charges In Assault Case Bob Purcell, a Duke Univer sity medical student, has press ed charges of "assault and bat tery with a deadly weapon" against two of the three men suspected of attacking him last Monday night in Durham. The third suspect in the beat ing was still uncaptured as of yesterday afternoon, according to a Durham Detective Lieuten ant. Neither of the two men now in custody will reveal the identity of their companion. Beaten With Stick Purcell was beaten with a foot-and-a-half broom stick pro duced from the jacket of one of the three men charged with his assault. This occurred at about 10:30 last Monday night shortly after Purcell left Duke's Giles House. Durham police picked up Ronald B. Rodenhizer, a 20 year-old clerk, on the basis of Purcell's description. Roden hizcr revealed the name of one of his companions, David M. Norwood. , ' After beating Purcell, the three men started a fight with a group of Negroes. Norwood's nose was broken in the brawl and he was admitted to Watts hospital Wednesday for an op eration. ma Chester Bowles reason as his only absolute," she has stated. Asked if she had any chil dren, Miss Rand replied, "No, but I do have a cat." Born in St. Petersburg, Rus sia, and educated at the Uni (Continued on page 3) Club Trades Shoulder Pads it ' i J I i' t. A. ' Brains Replace - C. Or flier 7T uniors, Seniors Honored Order of The Old Well tapped 52 juniors and sen iors in their thirteenth an nual, midnight ceremony last night. The initiates . were chosen on the basis of their contri butions in the areas of schol arship, service and leadership. The Order, founded in 1949, selects its membership on the basis of an equitable point sys tem which evaluates the var ious areas of student participa tion. Initiates included: Judith Ann Albergotti, .Or angeburg, S. C; Wayne Arnold Babb, Brevard; Mary Stewart Baker, Shreveport, La.; Robert Gene Baynes. Greensboro; Bar bara Jane Bell Statesville; . Rob ert Hodges Bilbro, Greenville; Mary Glenn Boatwright, Char lotte; Catherine Ann Bolton, Rich Square; Timothy Brooks Burnett, Greensboro; Judith Ellen Bux ton, Princeton, W. Va.; George Worth Campbell, Jr., High Point; Susie Harwood Cordon, Chapel Hill; Edith Nash Davis, MorristoWn, Tenn.; Michael Ir win Deutsch, Bayside, N. Y.; William , Franklin Farrell, Jr., Winston-Salem; Barbara Elise Faulkner, Wadesboro; Beverly Ann Foard, Char lotte; John Callahan Frye, Hick ory; Katherine Earle Fulen wider,. .Jacksonville, Fla.; Charles Patterson Graham, Jr., Wilmington; James Carlos Gaul den, Jr.,-Durham; Louis Haynes Gump, Johnson . City, Tenn.; Wade Hampton Hargrove, Jr., Clinton; Mary Hunter Kennedy, Charlotte; . Fannie Louise Lacy, Hopkins ville, Ky.; Susan Moring Lewis, Madison; James Patrick Mor gan, Raleigh; Lafeyette Fergu son Norton, Raleigh; Mariel Bryan O'Dell, Birmingham, Ala.; Joe Loveman Oppenheimer, Birmingham, Ala.; Pam Love lace Patterson, Atlanta; David Eugene Price, Erwin, Tenn.; Jong Ward Purrington, Raleigh; (Continued on page 3) Ugly Man Today's totals in the Ugly Man voting are as fol lows: Whit, 208; Yogi Bear, 800; George, 59; Pretty Boy, 81; Jeff, 1741; Lob, 1796; Smokcy, 103; Rodan, 680; Mike, 3235. Sealed bids will be accepted through Friday. J MONOGRAM CLUB MOVES TO 1 If V -s ' Y" ... . ; : - -; . 'mill "i '1 1 1 it nfi"i if' iff t-T 'i irfri' Brawn In Former Monogram Club . (Photo: by -Jini Wallace) T3 FOR BOOKS Students Asked For Permission To Search Homes Students in. an 11 a.m. mathe matics class yesterday, were asked to sign statements per mitting University and . police officials to search their homes for missing library books. The request was made by Kenan Professor A. T. Brauer. The class,' consisting of ad vanced undergraduates and graduates, included students on scholarships' from thej Aca demic Year Institution, Visiting Professor Merrill E. Shanks was conducting the class, but step ped aside for Brauer's request. Several members of the class have reported that . Brauer told them any student refusing to sign such a statement would not receive a favorable ; job recommendation or recommen datidon for admission, to an other school from him." Missing Books Cause 1 . The increasing . number1 of books missing without leave from the Math Library appar ently caused the action. Many . of- the students com plied with the request, and wrote notes stating- that they would allow officials to search their homes. Others, however, told the DTH that they would not and did not sign such a statement. The Daily Tar Heel has al ready received several phone calls and one letter protesting the action. This letter and any others on the subject will be printed at the earliest oppor tunity. SERVES THE PURPOSE LONDON (UPD Sir Chafles Wheeler, president of the Royal Academy of Art, said Wednes day he wore his hair in long flowing locks- "partly to cover my ears" so that it shall not hear all the nonsense spoken." r O Old. Veil .Brow in "s:'::-: - Lou Brown . . . Former Carolina Cage Star Yerby Story Is Flick Two exciting dramas will highlight this weekend's Free Flicks. "The Foxes of Harrow" is to night's movie. Adapted from Frank Yerby' s novel of the same name, this is the opulent story of the rise and fall of a New Orleans gambler in 1827. Rex Harrison, Maureen O'Hara, Victor McLaglen and Gene Lockhart star in the title roles. "The Sweet Smell of. Suc cess," the hardhitting tale of a Broadway columnist with an evil lust for power, will be to morrow's film.. ' A cast of performers is head- WOOLLEN GYM For Ga . BY STEVE VAUGHN The brick colonial structure beside Cobb . dorm traded its shoulder pads: for a cap and gown, recently -when the Monogram Club moved to Woollen Gym and the Faculty Club occupied- its former quarters. University Business Manager J. Arthur Branch called the transition; a "happy coincidence," and indicat ed that the move has benefited all concerned. "Chancellor (WilliSfrrBh) Aycock was responsible for the move," - continued Branch. He stated that the Chancellor found that many of the Monogram Club members preferred to eat at fraternity houses or at home, since many of the members were married, and that the club would actually prefer a club . room at Woollen. c'. .: . i ' ' kThe reason for this was that at the "Mono," the members had access to only one room ;formeetings and a room, at 'the gym would offer a greater proximity to their interests. This m'oVe. was efTcctcd, and the building then being unused, the Chancellor offered the' building to the Faculty Club. ; - . , J . - The Faculty . Club, which has. been more or less a "mens sineprppre,", had been meeting every two weeks at Carolina Inn for luncheons. t Up icy tioys the club has proved a success, with 85 to 105 persons dining there each day, according to Branch, . r ' - The Monogram Dining Room and the Circus Room snack bar will remain open to the students and public. A patio has ibeen constructed outside the Circus Room for the ingestion of edibles acquired therein. A weather proofed structure for this purpose is planned for use in bad weather. Other student conveniences are also planned. Jiao ed by Burt Lancaster as the fa mous columnist and Tony Cur tis as a corrupt press agent. All showings are in Carroll Hall at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. Stu dent identification cards will be checked. NOT UNFRIENDLY LONDON (UPD George Far row, head of a real estate com pany, told the Daily Express today his home is surrounded with barbed wire for the sole purpose of keeping intruders out. "I am not anti-social," he em phasized. . . CttOw 52 At M O ' F"! far- ormer JL XL ii ii i-LJ TFYy o ' C o - G onsp iirat or 9 By Sieve Vaughn Lou Brown, former Carolina student and basketball player, was named yesterday as a co-conspirator in at tempts to bribe college basketball players, in an investi gation by New York authorities. Brown is said to have contacted and was "most suc cessful at St. Joseph's and LaSalle in setting up players" for Aaron Wagman, the prime . mover in the latest eruption of the fix scandal. Wagman was recently indict ed by a grand jury on 37 counts of bribery and corruption of col lege basketball players. According to different sources, nine to ten athletes from five to six colleges were up before the jury. All, however, were grant ed immunity and will serve as witnesses for the state in the case against Wagman. Five other men, including Brown, were cited as go-betweens for Wagman to contact players. Brown has not been granted immunity and is liable to prosecution. Under Surveillance Brown had been under sur- .veillanee. foi some w time, - and was taken to New York on" March 22 by members of the New York district attorney's staff. Another U.N.C. ball player went to New York the next day under subpoena to be a wit ness. Brown returned to Chapel Long Explains Dorm Committee To IDC Members Assistant Dean of Student Affairs William Long explained to the Interdormitory Council Wednesday night the purpose and functions of a Dormitory Executive Committee which the council will consider organ izing in each dorm. "The committee," said Long, "would be a co-ordinating group which would get together once a week to talk about problems (Coivtinued on page 3) TONIGHT AT 8 Vo ice Rec ita I Se & Robert Williamson will give a senior voice recital tonight at 8 p.m. in Hill Music Hall. Williamson, a tenor, is a stu dent of Joel Carter of the De partment of Music, having studied previously with James Brisson at Chowan College. He sang the role of Gastone ROBERT WILLIAMSON ... Carolina Tenor ..... . .:"- :. .: i - - - r ' '''"'''ii t ' v u' - -- - ' "Tf O "71 ."pv? 1 wm I - ! l(UiIIliMifii -w. Case Hill March 29 and withdrew from the University. He was under no pressure from the university, according to Chancellor William B. Ay cock. However, he may not re enter UNC without permission of the chancellor. Brown was a sophomore. No UNC Players No Carolina players have been named as having taken bribes. Carolina was named as having had the members of its squad contacted by Jerry Vogel, a graduate of the University df Alabama, but nothing involving Carolina players as having ac cepted them was unearthed. "The administration has co operated fully with the New YOfk '.'.police," ; Chancellor Ay cock stated. "We are open at all times to suggestions to keep things not within the rules and regulations from happening, and "we will cooperate in those re spects." 'Swing Into Spring' With IDC Tonight The Interdormitory Coun cil invites students to "Swing Into Spring" with a party tonight from 8-12 at the American Legion Hut. The Jim Crisp Combo will furnish music for the affair and refreshments will be available. A bus will furnish trans portation for all who need it and will leave from Y-Court at about 7:45 p.m. in UNC's production of "La Traviata," and is a soloist with both the Men's Glee Club and the Mixed Chorus. Last summer he participated as a singer-actor-dancer in the Lost Colony outdoor drama. Friday's program will open with a group of Italian soncs after which Mr. Williamson will sing "Salut demeure" from Counod's" "Faust." Other numbers include the Beethoven song cycle "An die feme geliebte" and "Winter sturme wichen dem Wnnnc mond" from "Die Walkurc" by Wagner. Mr. Williamson will conclude the recital with a group of modern art sonps. Robert Williamson is the son of O. W. Williamson of Cerro Gordo. TV Show Features ROTC Unit Tonitc WUNC-TV "Showcase" will feature the UNC Navy Reserve Officers Training Corps Unit in its weekly show at 9:00 p.m. tonight. The show, video taped in and around the Naval Armory, de picts the life of Carolina Mid shipmen: in- their association with the NROTC Program. A
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 28, 1961, edition 1
1
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75