. . Liiorary Serials Dept. Box 870 Chapal Hill, Local Monopoly See Edits, Page Two Weather Partly cloudy and continued warmer. Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom Offices in Graham Memorial FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1962 Complete UPI Wire Service POLICE FOLLO WING LEADS .Missing Sculpture Returned fHx'v 1 : ; ' f ; 1 i ! - IK fV f - , I 1 ' J , J : ? V ? ' j! - :: "W. :.f.:;: -4 -jtn ,r r i v -; ,; - - i -; 1 5 - r " - - : f VtWtHT , i v sv J : 4 , - ? F 1 : ':?;::::::: . ?J T ..... ........ ---v.? .--s- :: 7- . -i : -V :. ::? y ': I - . .. . - :-:-;.-..: : ' - io-ft-S frmMlMM-i i .-i-ni-i-'' '-ywuM'Mrinhan ander s John Lassiter Sanders, associate professor and an assistant director in the Institute of Government, will become the new director of the Institute on July 1, Chancellor William B. Ay cock announced re cently, with the approval of Uni versity President William C. Fri day and the Board of Trustees. Professor Sanders succeeds Al bert Coates, who retires July 1 to devote his time to ,the study and teaching of law. A native of Four Oaks, Profes 5or Sanders became a member of the UNC faculty in September, 1956, as an assistant director at the Institute. From 1954-55, he ser ved as a law clerk to Judge John J. Parker, chief judge, U. S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. During 1955-56 he served as an associate in the law firm of Man ning and Fulton in Raleigh. Professor Sanders attended Four Oaks High School. He received 'Zero, 9 New Literary Magazine. Slated For Distribution Soon ZERO, a new literary magazine, will appear on campus this week end. Published by the North American Zeropological Society, the oddly shaped magazine prom ises to "provide an identifiable forum for the free exchange of cecacious . . . ideas." Interviewd in the campus office of the NAZS, editor Myles Eric Ludwig explained that "the editors of ZERO believe that there is room '99.4 Pet. A strange advertisement ap peared one day last month in the Daily Tar Heel. A product "Kleeno" was herald ed. "The favorite soap of 99 44100 of the faculty of the School of Business Administra tion," someone wrote. The students in "B.A. 199, Man agement Simulation" were having fun. Kleeno is one of their three soap products in a detergent com pany. They are in competition with two other teams in the business school. The three companies manu facture soap, stockpile raw mate rials, distribute soap, sell it, ad vertise it, invest in plant, employ workers, pay dividends, do all the many things that must be done in a business. - The students do have a good time, but the enjoyment is just a by-product. The management "game" requires hard work, and btudonu have to call upon all the SUCCEEDS COAXES To Head a B.A. degree in history from UNC in 1950. During 1950-51, he was a graduate student in history at UNC. He received a J. D. de gree from the UNC School of Law in 1954. His research areas are in the field of state government and ad ministration, performed for state agencies, study commissions, and the General Assembly. He has been in charge of the Institute's services area research staff to (1) the Commission on Reorganization of State Government 1957-61; (2) to the General Assembly of 1961. Professor Sanders was on leave during 1961-62 to serve as secre tary to the Governor's Commission on Education (Beyond the High School. QUIET HOURS The IDC will enforce 24-hour quiet hours in all dorms during exams, beginning Monday. in Chapel Hill for a new publica tion. You see, we want to estab lish a new market for those writ ers who feel that the two existent publications do not satisfy their stylistic needs. '"I'm pretty excited about this first issue. Bart Weinhirsh has done a wonderfully simple cover for us, and we've got a tremen dously profound short story by Peter L. Van Riper. A. J. Winkel- Of BA Faculty Use Kleeno9 knowledge of business administra tion they have learned in four years at Chapel Hill. They must be diligent, painstaking, and put in many hours of laborious de tailed work. With the aid of the Univac 1105, giant electronic computer, they find out their gains and losses weekly, and are informed of their standing in contrast to competing companies. The game is based on a model originally developed by Carnegie Tech. Three teams of undergraduates participate. Although the students made many good decisions, based on sound economic facts, and improved from week to week, it was signi ficant that when they reviewed their actions, they dwelt upon some of their mistakes and what they would do about it if they had another chance. They were aiming at perfection. A second management simulation A piece of sculpture reported missing a week and a half ago was found leaning against the door to the upstairs Art Gallery on Franklin Street at 1:00 o'clock Thursday morning. Bill Norton, a senior at UNC, found the piece leaning against the rear door of the Gallery. He has a studio behind the Gallery. Norton said that he ran with the piece to the police station to re port that it had been returned. The police returned it to the Gal lery later Thursday morning. The piece, which is called "Trio," is by Robert Shannon, a well-known Chapel Hill artist. It stands 38 inches high and is con structed of welded steel. It was re ported missing from the storage room of the gallery a week and a half ago. Miss Jane Hasland, one of the operators of the Gallery, said that the price of the piece would go up from $200 to around $300 now that it had gained notoriety. Chapel Hill police said Thursday afternoon that they were still tracking down a lead as to who removed the sculpture. There was no indication as to whether or not the robbery was tied in with the recent theft of a $1,500 piece of sculpture from State College. Shannon's "Trio" was the second piece of metal sculpture to be stolen from Chapel Hill in recent weeks. The first, Mike Hall's "Bug," was stolen from Merritt's Service Station and returned shortly afterwards. Institute ' ft. J. L. SANDERS man has provided us with one of the finest short poetic statements I've seen in a long while. But per haps the highlight of the issue is a crossword puzzle for the intel lectual's intellectual." ACADEMIC AFFAIRS The Academic Affairs Committee will meet today at 2 p.m. in the Grail Room in Graham Memorial. was organized in February for stu dents in the Master of Business Administration program, working towards the MBA degree. The grad uate students report equal en thusiasm and benefit derived from the competition. There are three teams in the MBA group, too; and the contest between the companies is fierce, though friendly. The students on rival teams kid one another about the com petition. "How about buying you out?" one company president may say. Company members are careful not to let any remarks slip by that the competitors might use. They go to great lengths to prevent any competing company members from getting a tip on their pos sible actions in sales, or invest ments or new product develop ment. I One management game member Mao Tze-Tung Is Di-Phi Choice For Man Of Year i t ! ''i Mao Tze-Tung Mao Tse-Tung was named Di-Phi Man of the Year Wednesday night, a selection that annually goes to the man who in the estimation of the Di-Phi has most influenced the course of the world during the previous year. Others nominated for the honor were Dag Hammerskjold, John F. Kennedy, Milovan Djilas, Linus Pauling and Edward Teller. Arthur Hayes was re-elected Di Phi president in an executive ses sion which met after the regular session. Other officers elected were Nat Dean, president pro-tem-pore; Bob Bullard, sergeant-at-arms; Hank Patterson, parliamen tarian; Julia Steanson, clerk; Bill Phillips, treasurer. A resolution asking for the ad mission of women to the freshman and sophomore classes 4f the Gen eral College was introduced for debate in the fall. Campus i Briefs WOOLLEN GYM BASKETS All persons having equipment in baskets in Woollen Gym have been asked to remove the equipment and turn in the basket before the end of school. All baskets will be cleaned out at the end of sum mer school and new baskets issued at the beginning of fall semester. YACK POSITIONS Interviews for positions on next year's Yack will be held today, Monday and Tuesday from 1-5 p.m. in the Yack office in Gra ham Memorial. This year's Yacks will continue to be distributed at the information desk of Graham Memorial until the end of exams. LOST LOST A class ring lettered Kappa Psi, Class of '63, W. H. Fuller. A reward is offered. Call Bill Fuller at the Kappa Psi house, 963-9038. DORM ROOMS The Housing Office has an nounced that all dorm rooms must be vacated at the end of the exam ination period, May 31. Persons re maining for summer school must move to their assigned rooms by the end of the exam period. Degree candidates may remain in their rooms through June 4. summed up his impressions and got a nod from others. "I have learned a lot about compromise," he said. "Some time I would go into a meeting and was determined to push some new idea I had. Then I heard what all the others said, in finance, in production, in sales, and I found that we lacked coor dination. Communication between managers is important, one of the most important lessons I have learned." Another thing they learned: summertime is the best season for selling soap. More washing goes on in hot weather. Business men of the future have learned much in the computer programmed management simula tion in the UNC Business School, both in the way they have bested one another in certain areas of competition, and in mistakes they are resolved not to repeat. .Marine CI ioe Newman, Distinguished Professors Two new Alumni Distinguished Professors were named Monday by Chancellor William B. Aycock, bringing the total number of these professorships to eight. The two new professors are John W. Thibaut, professor and chair man of the Department of Psy chology, and William S. Newman, professor of music. A former undergraduate student at UNC, Dr. Thibaut received a B. A. degree in philosophy in 1S39. He has a Ph.D. degree from Mas sachusetts Institute of Technology. He has taught at Harvard, Boston University, the University of Michigan, and came to UNC in 1953. Dr. Thibaut, along with Profes sor Harold H. Kelley of the Uni versity of Minnesota, is the author of a book entitled "The Social Psy chology of Groups," a study of so cial interaction and group func tioning. This book was published in 1959, and was selected as one of the "fifty" outstanding books of the year, chosen by the Brun ner Book Bulletin in 1961. This bul letin annually picks out the best professional books published in areas of psychology, neurology, psychoanalysis and psychiatry. . . In 1954, Dr. Thibaut was named chairman of the Organizational Re search Group of the Institute for Research in Social Sciences at UNC, and director of the "Small Group Laboratory," engaged chief ly in behavioral studies. Dr. Thibaut has served as a member of the editorial boards of "Sociometry," a journal published by the American Sociological As sociation, and of the "Journal of Personality." In 1961, he was elected chairman of the Advisory Committee on Psychology to the Allen Pleased With Committee Turnout "This year's substantially in creased turnout for Student Gov ernment committee positions is a reflection of the new interest being taken by all students in their gov ernment," said President Inman Allen yesterday. Allen's comments come at the end of three weeks of committee appointments which were complet ed last night with Student Legis lature's approval of his appoint ees. Appreciation was extended to the 450 who applied for positions, and Allen said that all applications would be kept on file. He estimat ed that 250 appointments had been A Warm A fair showing of the fair sex turned out for the CWC and Pan-hel-sponsored watermelon feast yesterday afternoon on Mclver lawn. ! While eating watermelon, chat ting, playing bridge on the grass and even playing ouija board, the co-eds were entertained by the folk songs of Dan Brock, assisted by Guerry Matthews. "N0 men allowed" was the ori ginal rule concerning the Water melon Feast; however, there were a number of Carolina Gentlemen present helping the co-eds cut the watermelons, and several others watched the party from the edge of the lawn, while enjoying slices of watermelon thoughtfully sneaked over to them by the girls. Interviews Set The Publications Board will interview candidates for editor and business manager of the summer school newspaper and business manager of the Yack today at 4 la Graham MeasoriaL Se r Thibaut JOHN W. THIBAUT Veteran's Administration in the southeastern states. Professor William Newman joined the UNC staff in 1946, after separation from Army Air Forces Intelligence, and has been teach ing courses in music apprecia tion, music history and theory, and graduate musicology since then. He has also served as chair man of; instruction in piano. He is internationally' recognized as an author, pianist and teacher. He has taught at Western Reserve Uni versity, and during, summers, at Bennington College, University of Colortado, Columbia University and the Juillard School of Music. Dr. Newman has centered much of his research around the history and present status of the sonata. He is currently writing "A History of the Sonata Idea," of which the made, and said that additional openings would be available next year. "Those who did not get up for an interview this spring and those who wish to re-express their in terest should apply when in nouncement is made this fall," Al len said. The student body president ex pressed thanks "to the many people who worked in the com mittee membership drive." He cited particularly the publicity work done by Communications Committee Chairman Bob Spear man. IT MUST ' -; I ' ' ' v - v ' fc h - S i f - f Day-, Chicks & Watermelon ' v ' r j' -ft ' ' ' S , X- s . ... ".y-y- " - ::; ' - . - - " i 1 x . '' " f , , , : "' ' '" i.'-j; ..- --- - v-X - c : .-.'.I. : :,. j.; ,:. v jr -. - v. . a - - - j. - ; - - - - . I - Beth Wallace A- Laos Named I WILLIA3I S. NEWMAN first volume, "The Sonata in the Baroque Era," was published in 1959 by the UNC Press. The re maining three volumes will cover the classic, romantic and modern eras of the sonata. One of Dr. Newman's most suc cessful activities is his book, "Understanding Music," published by Harper and Brothers, and re vised in 1961. This book is a text at UNC. Dr. Newman has also con ducted a successful television course on WUNC-TV, Channel 4, on which he taught music apprecia tion. Dr. Newman has appeared as soloist with numerous orchestras including the Cleveland and N.B.C. symphony orchestras. He has given solo recitals in cities from coast to coast including Washington, New York, Boston, Chicago, St. Louis, University Press Is Presented Award The University Press has re ceived the "Fifty Books of the Year," 1961, award for the book entitled "The Poems of Charles Hansford" which it published for the Virginia Historical Society last October. The "Fifty Books of the Year" award, the highest honor in the graphic arts industry, is pre sented annually by The Ameri can Institute of Graphic Arts for the 50 best designed, printed, and bound books published in the United States. More than 800 entries were submitted for the current award. The Fifty Books of the Year are now on exhibit in New York City, Boston and Washington, D. C, and at the 4th Interna tional Book Fair in Tokyo, BE SUMMER Attacks A Melon With oraei British Announce They Will Send Men If Needed BANGKOK (UPI) Eighteen hundred U. S. Marines trained for jungle warfare set up bases with in striking range of the Laos Thailand border Thursday, joining 1,000 U. S. troops, Air Force planes and the 80,008-man Thai army in the job of containing Laos pro Communist rebels. Britain announced it was ready to dispatch military forces to Thailand and had alerted an Air Force Squadron in Singapore. Aus tralia and New Zealand said they woul send in token forces if asked and Pakistan and the Philippines were preparing to do the same. WASHINGTON (UPI) President Kennedy said yesterday the Unit ed States is counting on the three princes of Laos to reach politicad agreement which would avoid a shooting war in the jungles ozf Asia." Eelsewhere Soviet Foreign Min ister Andrei Gromyko said yes terday that U. S. actions in South east Asia are "very bad" and are complicating the situation there. Gromyko also repeated previous Soviet warnings that Russians will resume their nucle ar testin. But he did not say when the tests would begin. The U. S. Defense Department said in Washington a total of 5,000 U. S. combat troops would be used in Thailand to prevent direct invasion by sealing off the border and to help the Thais combat Com munist infiltration. So far no such penetration has been reported. In Laos itself the fighting ap peared at a standstill and indica tions were the three rival princes of Laos right-wing Premier Boun Oum, neutralist Souvanna Phouma and pro-Communist leader Sou phanouvong might meet soon to try to form a coalition government that could end the war. Marines Move Near Border One thoustand U. S. Army me:i already were in Thailand at start of the present crisis. The 1,800 Marines armed and ready for battle landed early Thursday by helicopters and assault ships and sped through the streets of Saigon and then flew off to the "front." The Marines, members of the 3rd battalion, 9th Regiment, 3rd Ma rine Division, began setting up tents under full field conditions in a dry plaeeau area near Nqng Han, about 20 miles east of Udorn. Udorn is 400 miles from Bangkok and about 35 miles south of Vient iane, Laos. The American troops will be deployed in a horseshoe-shaped area with a 500-mile front on the Mekong River border. They brought with them tanks, 105 millimeter howitzers, tank-like track vehicles armed with recoilless weapons. s - i Photo by Richard Unladylike Zal