1 a?!C library
53riaig Pspt.
Box 870
W'Sr-y ...
Bulgarian Information
Fair and warmer with tem
peratures in the 10's.
1
See Edits. Page Two
Seventy Years Of Editorial Freedom
Offices In Graham Memorial
CHPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH 3, 1963
UPI Wire Service
D
ean Long Says He 'Knows
Nothing' About Fraternity
Connection With Gall Girls
Dean of Men William G. Long
stated yesterday that "he had
no knowledge whatsoever" con
cerning an alleged connection be
tween some unnamed UNC fra
ternities and a local "call-girl"
operation which was broken up
here last summer.
The trial of three Negroes,
charged in connection' with a pros
titution ring that allegedly cater
ed to certain unnamed UNC fra-.
ternities, ended Friday in Hills
boro with a hung jury."
A mistrial was declared, and
two of the defendants were set
free. A third defendant pleaded
guilty and received a 12-month
suspended sentence and two years
probation.
The trial was highlighted by
testimony of four State Bureau
of Investigation agents who broke
up the "call-girl" operation.
In the two-day trial, agent E.
B. Pearce testified to a telephone
call he had last summer with a
man who identified himself as
one of the defendants. Pearce
Sino-Soviet Rift
Still Is Widening
LONDON
(UPI) Communist,
tnma nas wiuwrawn its name
from, the World Marxist Review
in the first open break with the
Moscow-led international Com
mumst movement, authoritative
sources said Saturday.
The World Marxist Review, also
iknown as "problems of peace
and , socialism,'' is the official:
Communist ideological organ and
is a remnant of the former corn-
inform, the ideological platform
oi international communism, it is
printed in Prague and serves as
a forum for Communist issues in
side and outside the Red bloc
The break came-' unannounced
recently as part of the sharpen
ing Sino-Soviet conflict. Confirms
tion came from the Communist or
gan itself which has quietly drop
ped China's name. In the past Red
China has always been listed as
No. 2 immediately after the So
viet Union in the list of sponsor
ing countries
Names Dropped
The last two issues have drop
ped China from the list without
any reference or explanation. The
break thus appears to have oc
curred in November or Decern
berr!'
Jligh Communist sources
London, pointing out the subtle
move, said it meant Red China
has withdrawn from the Mos
cow-led Communist international
platform, thus signifying openly to
the Communist world she is goin,
it alone.
The Cominform was set up
the height of the cold war
align international communism
under Russian leadership and
Boyd Collection Is
Donated ToLibrary
Southern Historical Collection
has received from Mrs. James
Boyd of Southern Pines a valu
able collection of the correspond
ence and some of the unpublished
writings of James Boyd, Ameri
can novelist and short story writ
er who died in 1944. The Boyd
acquisition was announced by
James Patten, director of the
Southern Historical Collection.
Boyd's correspondence contains
letters from a wide range of lit
erary figures, including Robert
Bridges, Sherwood Anderson,
Thomas Wolfe, John Galsworthy,
F. Scott Fitzgerald, Lawrence
Stallings, Louis Eromfield, Archi
bad MacLeish, Sinclair Lewis,
and John Steinbeck. : Some of
these letters have to do with lit
erary and patriotic associations,
but many are significant in what
they tell of their writers. The
letters from Maxwell Perkins
show Boyd at work with his edi
tor. The more than thirty let
ters from John W. Thomason Jr.,
many containing illustrations by
Thomason, are particularly illum
inating. "All ia. all,"'' says Dr.
C Hugh Ho3ran of the Univer
sity's -Eaglfoh fcepartmect, "the
quoted the man as saying anoth
er member of the ring "had been
getting girls to carry . to these
parties at the fraternity. ": houses
on the campus." . .
Two sisters, Ella Mae, 31, and
Lucille Rice, 30, won a directed
verdict of not guilty following the
mistrial. They had been charged
with entering and occupying a
building for the purpose of pros
titution or assignation.
The third defendant, Robert Lee
Quick, 25, charged with procur
ing and aiding and abetting,
pleaded guilty and received the
suspende dsentence. It was Quick
with whom agent Pearce said he
had the telephone conversation.
James Patton of Durham, at
torney for the defendants, said,
"By agreement, we disposed of
the cases ... to obviate another
trial later on." (With the first
trial ending with a hung jury, the
state could have asked for an
other trial.)
A fourth member of the ring,
Walter Dukes, 27, allegedly was
streamlie ideology and informa-
loin, u Degan puDUcation of a
regular organ dealing with "prob
lems of peace and socialism."
Seat of the publication was Bu
charest. It was later moved to
Prague.
After the Cominform petered
out, the publication was rechris
tened "World Marxist Review"
arid continued to' be" "issued in
Communist leaders worldwide.
The latest edition boasts that
copies are printed in 25 languages.
Chinese is no longer one of the
languages.
Leading Article
The leading article of the cur
rent issue takes sharply to task
the Albanians a synonym for Red
China in the current quarrel be
tween the Kremlin and Peking
Communist sources in London
who are well qualified to assess
the Sino-Soviet conflict hold that
the rift is now beyond repair. At
best a temporary truce is consid
ered feasible.
Red China has set terms for re
conciliation with Russia which
they said Premier Nikita S. Khru
shchev cannot accept. Peking de
manded earlier this week an
apology from Khrushchev that
would be tantamount to public ad
mission that his de-Stalinisation
course has been wrong all along.
Peking was expected to step up
its campaign in the weeks to
come throughout the entire Red
camp and, above all to seek sup
port in Southeast Asia and Latin
America where Communists might
be more susceptible to the tough
Chinese line than to the Kremlin's
"peaceful co-existence" strategy.
Boyd collection is a significant
increase in the library's primary
literary holdings."
The Library also has an exten
sive collection of James Boyd's
published works, according to
William S. Powell, Librarian of
the North Carolina Collection
which administers these materi
als. .These include first and la
ter . editions of Boyd's novels
which had their settings in North
Carolina or which were written
after he moved to the state. His
short stories as they first appear
ed in such popular magazines of
the day as Scribner's, Harper's,
and Century, have been extracted
and bound.
Boyd's less well known contri
butions in the form of essaj-s and
articles on history and current
events have also been preserved.
Studies of the author's life and
works, including one master's
thesis, are also available in the
North Carolina Collection. An ex
tensive file of mounted newspaper
clippings dating from the early
1920s provides excellent biogra
phical information about Boyd as
his literary accomplishments
were reported in the press.
the "headman" of the operation.
Dukes pleaded guilty last sum
mer in Chapel Hill Recorder's
Court and was given given a 12
month suspended sentence and
three years probation.
Although they denied working
as "undercover" men, the SBI
agents admitted setting up a ren
dezvous house, using at least one
phony name and wearing casual,
sports clothes. The arrests were
made at 105 Plant St. in Chapel
Hill a house rented by local
police authorities after arrange
ments for the girls had been
made by telephone.
20 Delegates
From UNC Are
Needed For Meet
Senator William Proxmire (D.-
Wisc.) will speak to students from
40 colleges and universities at
the "Focus" conference at Ran
dolph-jMacon Woman's College
March 8, 9, and 10.
"The Image of America at Home
and Abroad" is the topic of the
assembly.
J'Sr SGnd 3 de,CSa- i00 i 2?i
udents. No experience m student
students. Jo expe
government is necessary. Inter
views will be in the Student Gov
ernment offices in G.M. Monday
and Tuesday afternoon.
Other speakers include: Dr.
Russell Kirk, author of "The Con
servative Mind;" James B. Carey,
president of the International
Union of Electrical, Radio, and
Machine Workers; and Phillip
Talbott, past-president of the U.S.
Chamber - Commerce. -. -
The topic of the "Image at
Home" will be handled by speak
ers who are leaders in the fields
of Labor, Business, and Govern
ment. The "Image Abroad" will be dis
cussed by a panel of professors
from Scotland, Argentina, Poland,
and India. "The Importance of
the Image in the United Nations"
is the topic for a speech by the
U.S. Deputy Permanent Repre
Bentative to the U.N., Charles
Woodruff Yost.
Americas unfavorable images
abroad will be discussed by Pedro
San Juan, the Deputy to the Chief
of Protocol, U.S. Department of
State.
Entertainment for the delegates
will be provided Saturday night
by a program on lne image
through Music."
When Bandmasters Meet Here
Conductor
Nine nationally - known guest
conductors will direct the UNC
Symphonic Wind Ensemble in a
concert in Hill Hall Friday night
at 8 p.m., as a part of the 1963
national convention of the Ameri
can Bandmasters Association. The
public is invited; however, tick
ets, which are free of charge,
must be obtained from the De
partment of Music office in Hill
Hall.
The program will include many
works written expressly for the
wind band as well as some signi
ficant transcriptions. Original
works by Percy Aldridge Grain
ger, Gordon Jacob, William Schu
man, Houston Bright, Charles
Gross. Karl Teike, and Herbert
W. Fred, and transcriptions of
works by Eric Coates and Ed
ward Elgar will be performed.
Percy Grainger, who was an
honorary member of the Ameri
can Bandmasters Association and
one of the most significant expon
ents of the wind band, will be
represented by his Lincolnshire
Posy, a masterpiece of band son
erity. in which all of his accumu
lated skill in writing for wind in
HILLEL OFFICERS
David Sheps was recently elect
ed president of the Hillel Founda
tion. Other officers elected include
Peter Spies and Bill Feingold vice
presidents: Dianne Davidson sec
retary; and Barry Hyman treas
urer. Hillel is planning to sponsor dis
cussion meetings in conjunction
with the YMCA, various Sunday
evening cultural events ard a
Spring Sabbath lecture series.
Jr. Science Fair
Is Slated For
March 14-16
The 1963 version of a Tar Heel
junior science and humanities
symposium that mushroomed in
to a nation-wide program will be
held at UNC March 14-16.
It will.be the sixth annual edi
tion of the unique event, under
taken in 1958 on the campuses of
UNC, N. C. State and Duke Uni
versity to stir the interest of high
school students in scientific fields
From that meager beginning,
underwritten by the U. S. Army,
the symposium has spread! to 20
states and will be climaxed this
year by a national symposium
at West Point, N. Y.
In North Carolina, this year's
program is expected to attract
155 outstanding students and
about 50 teachers or advisors
from virtually all the State's 100
counties.
Highlights of the symposium is
the presentation by six students,
selected from applicants through
out the state, of theoretical sci
entific papers before the entire
assembly of delegates and sym
posium lecturers.
The six student lecturers have
not yet been announced. Coordin
ators of the program say these
selections will be of interest to
all high school students in the
state.
Visiting lecturers and noted
CfMonf icf c frnm TTATr -riJ
h centers wm also appeTr
tha
on the program.
George E. Moore, assistant di
rector of the Junior Science and
Humanities Symposia Program
of the U. S. Army Research Of
fice, Durham, said delegates will
be headquartered at the Jack Tar
Hotel in Durham.
Except for the opening dinner
in the hotel ballroom, all activi
ties during the symposium will
be- centered on the - UNC campus
or at the nearby Research Tri
angle, where laboratory units are
scheduled Friday afternoon.
Since its first year, the popu
lar symposium has undergone re
vision so that it is held on only
one of the three campuses UNC,
Duke, and State each year. Too,
private industry, attracted by its
goals, has stepped in to provide
money and technical assistance.
Word of the initial Tar Heel
symposium had spread to Temple
University by 1960, and this year
17 symposia that will attract stu
dents from 20 states are planned.
Dr. Edward Teller, prominent
nuclear physicist and father of
the hydrogen bomb, was keynote
speaker at the initial symposium
here and is also scheduled as
keynoter for the first national
symposium at West Point in April.
struments is fully exploited. The
British composer, Gordon Jacob,
has contributed an outstanding
overture for band, Flag of Stars.
It was written "as a gesture from
an inhabitant of the Old World
to those of the New." It is con
structed solidly on classical for
mal lines, but in the musical lan
guage of the twentieth century.
William Schuman, president of
Lincoln Center in New York City,
displays his ingenious craft for
composing for wind instruments
in his most recent compositions
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M----.w.. - . iriiihiMtnrirt ' r"ria-"am ?W r
The Symphonic Wind Ensemble ol hte University ol North
Carolina, above, will give a concert Friday, March 8, at S p.m. in
Hill Hall of Music, with nine guest conductors attending the
American Bandmasters' Association 1363 coventicc.
Herbert Fred conductor of the UNC Eacd, is director cf the
vie
eioortec!
ii.
Student
or ilO.OOO
Ronald Randall, a University
senior from Havelock, has filed
suit against the Town of Chapel i
Hill and Chapel Hill police of
ficers Howard Pendergraph and
George Penny for $10,000 person
al injury damages. '
Mr. Randall was injured in a
mob fight in Kenan Stadium im
mediately following the UNC
State football game last fall.
Officers Pendergraph and Pen
ny were served notice of the suit
in Hillsboro Thursday. Mayor
Sandy McClamroch, representing
the Town, has not yet been serv
ed notice of the suit. The Town
and the officers have thirty days
in which to answer the suit.
- The Town carries liability in
surance for cases such as this
with Collier Cobb & Associates.
John Manning, attorney for
Mr. Randall, said the allegations
in the suit were that Mr. Ran
dell was among the crowd fight
ing following the football game,
and that the two officers named
picked him up and threw him
over the fence.
He- was taken to Memorial
: Hospital, Mr. Manning said,
'where he remained for three
days being treated for a fractur
ed jaw and fractured sinuses.
Mr. Manning said Mr. Randall's
jaw had to be wired together,
and that Mr. Randell has been
permanently and visibly disfigur
ed ty the injuries. Mr. -Manning
added that Mr. Randall's jaw no
longer has a proper bite, and that
he has suffered continuous pain,
loss of sleep, adversely affected
school work, shock, humiliation,
and a damaged reputation.
Mr. Manning said the suit
claims Mr. Randall was "thrown"
over a wire fence on the Kenan
Stadium playing field, far
enough to hit wooden bleachers
on his head. The suit claims the
officers were negligent and used
excessive force.
"I have plenty of witnesses,"
said Mr. Manning, "including
highly regarded University of
ficials who are highly indignant
about the whole thing."
Town Manager Robert Peck
said that Town Attorney J. Q. Le
Grand and Collier Cobb would be
officially notified of the suit as
soon as Mr. McClamroch is
To
for band, the prelude, When Je
sus Wept, and the overture, Ches
ter, which are based on tunes
of the same names by the early
American composer William Bil
lings (1746-1800) Houston Bright's
Prelude and Fugue in F Minor
is a happy combination of twen
tieth century and traditional har
monic techniques. The some
times harshly dissonant prelude
is contrasted with the academic
ally correct fugue couched in
harmony of the common prac
tice period. -
X
KJ
H
orce
nes
served. Mr. McClamroch is nam-
ed in the suit only as the Mayor, j
representing the Town.
Balloon Probes
Planet Mars
PALESTINE, Texas (UPD In-,
struments raised by a giant bal-l
loon from Texas to the fringe of
space, and brought to earth in
Tennessee Saturday gave man his
first unrestricted look at Mars and
possibly an answer to the ques
tion of life on the plnaet.
Elated scientists, successful
after 15 attempts to launch the
unmanned tandem balloon and its
6,300-pound payload, said they may
have a preliminary report within
two days on whether the Martian
atmosphere can support life.
The balloon was launched Fri-'
day from Palestine and came to
earth this morning near Pulaski,
Tenn., with its intrument pack
age and 3&-inch telescope. Scien
tists in Pulaski said they were
"tickled pink" by the 12-hour
flight.
Dr. Marvin Schwarzchild, direc
tor of Project Stratosphere II ex
amined the balloon's payload at
Pulaski and said the -.. blue box
containing a recording tape was
undamaged.
"The blue box is in perfect con
dition and this is what we are
most interested in," he said. "How
wonderful it came down here."
The findings may show whether
water vapor, carbon dioxide and
possibly other gases that lend
themselves to support of life
forms are in the Martial atmos
phere.
It will be two or three months,
however, before scientists are
able to decipher all the details of
the study. The experiment was
jointly sponsored by Princeton
University and the University of
California but the U.S. govern
ment put up the $5 million so far
spent on it
The Russians have a space probe
en route to Mars but it will not be
in position to report anything be -
F riday
ead Ensemble
A work of lighter character
on the program is one by the
conductor of the Wind Ensemble,
Herbert W. Fred. Take "Spain"
and "Mexico," overlap the two
names slightly, and you will pro
duce the title to the composition
written in 1947 by Dr. Fred.
Take rythms, harmonies, idioma
tic themes of these countries,
place them' together in the same
composition and you obtain the
musical scheme employed in
Spaixico. Also on the program
will be the just published ar
Ensemble. Earl Slocum, director cf the Univerii'.y Symphony
chestra, also will be a guest conductor.
Prof. Slocum is President cf the American Bandmasters Association.
Withdrawin
Folice
iirary
ml
The $10,000 claimed is only for
injuries sustained. No punitive
damages are asked.
fore early summer. The Strato-
sphere II project balloon may have;
gotten tne same
months earlier.
information
The balloon actually two bal
loons separated by a kind of girdle
was launched from Palestine
about 5 p.m. Friday. Drifting
northeast through the night, it
reached a maximum altitude of
77.000 feet, above S6 per cent of
the earth's atmosphere.
Toward dawn, it
was
brought;
down to 44,000 feet, where the in
struments and telescope were cut
loose by remote control and drift
ed to earth oa a parachute.
The instruments landed across
a fence 10 miles north of Pulaski,
Tenn. William Pierce, a mechanic,
telephoned Sheriff Jack Cox. The
sheriff and state trooper Homer
Smith guarded them until scien
tists from Huntsville, Ala., arrived
The scientists pronounced the
instruments and telescope in per
feet condition. The plastic balloon
came down a few minutes later 14
miles west of Pulaski. It was
good condition but will not
used again to lift instruments into
space.
The instrument package in
cluded a telescope, detecting de
vices, telemetry, trackinb, and re
cording equipment and a balometer.
Tiny Instrument
The balometer, an instrument
developed by Texas Instruments,
Inc., weighs less than a grain of
rice. But it can detect radiation
signals as small as one trillionth
of a watt.
As the balloon ascended, scien
tists fixed its instrument on the
moon. They are comparatively
well acquainted with the moon and
needed the readings from it to
give a comparison
1 from Mars.
with readings
rangement by Dr. Fred of the
old German military march Alte
Kameraden by Karl Teike.
Of particular interest will be
the premiere performance of Earl
Slocum's recently completed
transcription for band of Edward
Elgar's Enigma Variations. Dr.
Slocum. President of the Ameri
can Bandmasters Association and
Director Emeritus of UNC Bands,
has selected six of the original
thirteen variations as most suit
ed for performance by the wind
band.
3
Pr,
16: j .
I
7 r
. 4
i
D
A
Or-
Cuba
But Defense Dept.
Refuses To Say
If Report True
WASHINGTON -(UPD The : De
fense Department maintained si
lence Saturday in the face of con
tinuing reports th3t large-scale
withdrawal of Soviet troops from
Cuoa has already begun.
The reports were that 2,000 or
more Russian combat troops had
left the island, the first aboard
the luxury liner Baltika which
sailed from Havana Thursday. The
reports said another 6,000 were
expected to be withdrawn in the
next few weeks.
The Pentagon, however, decided
i sfarvl rsn T")pfn.; Srrptnrv
Robcrt s aicNamara's statement
two days ago that it is "too early"
for a definite report on the with
drawal.
"The President has stated that
the Soviet government has indi
cated that within the next few
weeks by the middle of March,
approximately they anticipated
removing from the island of Cuba
several thousand military person
nel," McNamara said. "But it is
much too early to report in any
way upon tnese movements.
The 8,000 expected to be with
drawn are members of four com
bat units, of 2,000 men each,
which apparently were sent to
guard Soviet missile bases which
were dismantled last fall.
Their removal would leave about
9,000 Soviet military experts who
are not in organized umts but are
in Cuba supposedly to train Cuban
soldiers in the use of advanced
weapons, such as the "Sam" anti-
in aircraft missile.
be Soviet Premier
Nikita Khrush
chev recently promised to with
draw "several thousand" troops
after strong overtures from the
President.
Unofficial sources at the Penta
gon were inclined to accept the
reports that the withdrawal had
begun. Hiey pointed out that in
removing offensive missiles ana
bombers from Cuba, the Russians
always operated well in advance of
the deadline set by Khrushchev.
Tho White House had no com
ment on the reports. Asked if they
were true, acting press secretary
Andrew T. Hatcher said, "I don't
know."
Dormitory
Spotlight:
Stacy
M
: i
It
N
I
(This is the eleventh in a series
of articles on UNC dorms. It is
sponsored jointly by the dorm
presidents and the Communica
tions Committee).
Good grades and intramural
teams were the highlights of the
fall semester for Stacy dorm.
"Everything's been running
smoothly," said dorm president
Ed Deaton.
The dorm has a page in the an
nual with a group picture of the
members and a crebt.
New jerseys have been bought
for the intramural teams, and a
new top was put on the dorm ping
pong table.
Under intramural manager John
Williams, Stacy teams have had
active participation this year. The
basketball team fared very well.
On the social calendar, a pizza
party is planned for this spring.
Chamber Music
Is Rescheduled
"An Events of Chamber M
sic." tponsorcd by the UNC Mu
sic Department Tuesday Evening
Series, has been rescheduled for
this Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Hill
Music Hall.
Edgar AMen. Dorothy Alden,
Mary Gray Clarke, and Wilton
Mason will perform CortUi's So
nata da Camera a Tre in D Ma
jor, Opus 4. No. 4; Mendelsohn's
Trio in D Minor for violin, 'cello,
and piano, Opus 49; Martinu's
Three Madrigals for violin and
viola; and Mozart's Piano Quar
tet in G Minor, K. 463. ArJs
sicn ii free. - -